User:Erinod333/sandbox

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/04/books/review/hoobler-president-correspondence.html

https://www.shapell.org/historical-perspectives/exhibitions/americas-first-ladies/

https://www.jstor.org/stable/41944994

https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=138953

James G. Birney

https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/11/01/hannah-craft-gregg-hecimovich/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2017/04/04/meet-miss-stanley-the-forgotten-buffalo-beauty-who-first-introduced-equal-pay-legislation-in-congress/

James W. Wadsworth Jr.

https://www.ket.org/program/facing-an-uncomfortable-truth-14354/

10 minutes in

https://everyday-reading.com/lions-of-little-rock-by-kristin-levine/

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth

Stephen Badin

Basilica of St. Joseph Proto-Cathedral

Mary Elizabeth Lange

Martin John Spalding

Pope Gregory XVI

Martin de Porres

Nathaniel e green author

https://www.jstor.org/stable/25025139

https://www.state-journal.com/news/ku-klux-klans-attack-on-mail-carrier-suspended-postal-service-in-frankfort/article_dcbca284-ad66-11ed-8332-a373de02e1b1.html

During the summer of 1866, the War Department began the process of closing Camp Nelson. A small number of African Americans refused to be displaced and a small village called Ariel grew out of the refugee home site at Camp Nelson. While there are no buildings that date to the Refugee Home era, the modern hamlet of Hall contains several historic buildings and a small population which includes some descendants of refugees and soldiers who still maintain strong connections to Camp Nelson

Cora Wilson Stewart was born in Farmers, KY and attended Morehead Normal School (later Morehead State University) and the University of Kentucky. Stewart began teaching in 1895 at age 20.

In Kentucky she challenged old-school politicians such as Congressman Ollie James state Senator J. Campbell Cantrill. She is probably best known for a retort to then Governor James B. McCr eary, “Kentucky women are not idiots---even though they are closely related to Kentucky men.”

https://www.kentucky.com/news/politics-government/article240189367.html Charles young

https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/counties/fayette-county/article268085522.html Zirl

https://www.kentucky.com/search/?q=Zirl+

https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/counties/fayette-county/article96183627.html Young https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/article268408997.html

Another source states that about 1842, Hayden was threatened, also by Clay, with the sale of his second wife, Harriet Bell Hayden and her son Joseph who he had adopted Joel Strangis, Lewis Hayden and the War against Slavery (New Haven, CT: Linnet, 1999), 27.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/05/14/zora-neale-hurstons-story-of-a-former-slave-finally-comes-to-print m

Under an agreement with the city, the United Way of the Bluegrass will soon take over the property at 400 E. Fifth St. and will turn it into a neighborhood resource center. https://www.kentucky.com/news/local/counties/fayette-county/article272238448.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHr2UsLzYzw BG Trust,tour oral history As late as Dec. 1845, H. Clay had me stripped and tied up, and one hundred and fifty lashes given me on my naked back: the crime for which I was so abused was, I failed to return home on a visit to see my wife, on Monday morning, before 5 o’clock. My wife was living on another place, 3 miles from Ashland. During the 9 years living with Mr. Clay, he has not given me a hat nor cap to wear, nor a stitch of bed clothes, except one small coarse blanket. Yet he has said publicly his slaves were “fat and slick!” But I say if they are, it is not because they are so well used by him. They have nothing but coarse bread and meat to eat, and not enough of that. They are allowanced every week. For each field hand is allowed one peck of coarse corn meal and meat in proportion, and no vegetables of any kind. Such is the treatment that Henry Clay’s slaves receive from him. I can truly say that I have only one thing to lament over, and that is my bereft wife who is yet in bondage. If I only had her with me I should be happy. Yet think not that I am unhappy. Think not that I regret the choice that I have made