Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM15GG_mary-todd-lincoln-house_Lexington-KY.html
Built in 1806 as an inn. Became home of politician & businessman Robert S. Todd in 1832. Mary Todd, his daughter, born in Lexington on Dec. 13, 1818, moved to IL in 1839. There, she met & married Abraham Lincoln. They visited here in fall of 1847.…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM143O_transylvania-university_Lexington-KY.html
Pioneer in higher education in Kentucky and west. Founded by The Commonwealth of Virginia, 1780. Located in Lexington since 1789
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LH_hal-price-headley_Lexington-KY.html
Hal Price Headley embodied the image of the Bluegrass horseman. He was sophisticated in business, but always a man of agriculture, raising tobacco as well as Thoroughbreds. His lasting legacy to Lexington was his instrumental role in formation of …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LG_col-e-r-bradley_Lexington-KY.html
The activities of Col. E. R. Bradley ranged from operating Palm Beach's Beach Club casino to staging charity race days for orphans. A product of a burgeoning nation in the 19th century, Bradley worked in steel mills in Pittsburgh as a youngster, t…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LF_john-hay-whitney_Lexington-KY.html
British Prime Minister Harold McMillan proclaimed John Hay (Jock) Whitney "the best Ambassador the United States ever had here." Whitney was named to the post in 1954 by President Eisenhower, a golfing and hunting crony. Whitney was named for his …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LE_john-e-madden_Lexington-KY.html
John E. Madden named Hamburg Place, outside Lexington, for Hamburg, one of his many champion race horses. He proceeded to breed five Kentucky derby winners on the farm: Old Rosebud, Sir Barton, Paul Jones, Zev and Flying Ebony. Sir Barton also won…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LD_james-ben-ali-haggin_Lexington-KY.html
A Kentucky-born grandson of a Turkish Army officer, James Ben Ali Haggin was lured west by the Gold Rush. He and his partners eventually owned South Dakora's Homestake Mine—-the richest gold vein in North America. Haggin's group also mined o…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13LB_henry-clay_Lexington-KY.html
Visitors familiar with Lexington's Ashland, the home of Henry Clay, know it as a graceful old house, with lovely gardens and grounds. In an earlier time, when Henry Clay built it to some 2,000 acres, Ashland was also the home of Thoroughbreds. Hen…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13L9_andrew-jackson_Lexington-KY.html
George Washington's diary included references to attending horse racing and Thomas Jefferson was also an avid horseman. Their interest, however, could hardly match that of Andrew Jackson, who stabled some of his race horses on the White House Grou…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM13L8_samuel-d-riddle_Lexington-KY.html
"Lots of men might have a million dollars, but only one man can have Man o' war," said Will Harbut, the faithful groom of the great stallion. The one man who had Man o' War was Samuel D. Riddle, who once handed back the check of a wealthy Texan wh…
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