Mariam shares the history of Kentucky’s Separate Coach Law, and Lexington’s second African American attorney, J. Alexander Chiles, who took the fight to the US Supreme court multiple times in the 1890s and early 1900s. Kentucky’s Separate Coach Law was one of many of Kentucky’s explicitly racist Jim Crow segregation laws, and those who fought against it faced persecution, harassment and assault. J. Alexander Chiles was at the forefront of this fight for de-segregated equality.
Quilting Kentucky's Stories: Strawberry Fields Forever in My Heart by Kali Mattheus
Not Your Grandmother's DAR (2024)
Quilting Kentucky's Stories: Hope by Terry Hall
Lexington: America's Legendary Racehorse with Kim Wickens (2024)
Quilting Kentucky's Stories: The Fairy Tree by Leo York
Revisiting the 1974 Tornado Super Outbreak after 50 Years (2024)
The Life of Ella Offutt Pepper (2024)
Quilting Kentucky's Stories: Pants by Retha Hicks
Quilting Kentucky's Stories: Donna Carter's Speech for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day
Pralltown (2024)
Coming Soon: Quilting Kentucky's Stories
Anatomy of a Duel: an Interview with Stuart Sanders (2024)
Village Branch: The Little Library That Could (2023)
Kentucky and the War of 1812: the Governor, the Farmers and the Pig: An Interview with Doris Settles (2023)
Segregated Lexington: An Interview with Rona Roberts and Barbara Sutherland (2023)
Bluegrass Paradise: the History of Royal Spring with Gary O’Dell (2023)
Street Names in Lexington, Part Two: The Streets Not Named for Horses (2023)
Lexington's 1965 Fallout Shelter Plan (2023)
Gay Poems for Red States: An Interview with Willie Carver, Jr. (2023)
Street Names in Lexington, Part One: Horse Names (2023)
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