Showing posts with label Central Kentucky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Central Kentucky. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

My eBook "Chasing the Triple Crown"

Here's a link to my article length eBook, Chasing the Triple Crown, which is available on Amazon.com!

I hate to engage in shameless commerce, but check it out!

My Editor and Publisher, Judy Clabes, says:


Bob Treadway is a storyteller -- and an engaging, entertaining one. He'll draw you in and keep you there right to the end. Whether you love horses, as I do, or you just plain love a good story well told, Bob delivers. His love of history, Kentucky, horses and turn of phrase . . .well, it's just part of the package. Enjoy!

-- Judith Clabes, Editor and Publisher, KyForward.com,
and member, Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

John Cabell Breckinridge



This statue of Kentucky's Vice President and Presidential candidate John Cabell Breckinridge, who was a supporter of slavery,  stands at Main Street and Cheapside, not far from the location of Lexington's slave market.  In my column today on KyForward.com, I dicuss the history and legacy of Breckinridge, one of Kentucky's three Vice Presidents.

Monday, October 1, 2012

The Battle of Bryan's Station, 1782


Here's an excerpt from my latest column on Vice President Richard Mentor Johnson, born in Kentucky in 1780, about his surviving of the Siege of Bryan's Station by Simon Girty and his Native American mercenaries in 1782:


Richard Mentor Johnson, for whom counties would be named in five states, was born in 1780 (or ’81 by other accounts) on the frontier of what was then Kentucky County, Va., at a settlement called Beargrass, near modern day Louisville. Johnson’s family soon moved to Fayette County, where they were caught up in Simon Girty’s Raid on Bryan’s Station, a fort that gives its name to modern day Bryan Station Pike.

Girty was a Scots-Irish mercenary, leading a band of Native Americans fighting for the British during the Revolutionary War. In August of 1782, they surrounded Bryan’s Station. The settlers had no water, and Jemimah Johnson, Richard’s mother, decided that the women of the fort should pretend that they didn’t know the Indians were there, go to the nearby spring, fill their buckets, and bring them back to the fort.

The plan assumed that Girty’s forces would not attack the women, and open themselves to fire from the fort. The plan worked beautifully, and the water was brought in to the fort. Girty’s forces tried to set the fort on fire with burning arrows. One of those arrows landed in the straw-filled crib containing the infant Richard Mentor Johnson. However, with the water fetched by Mrs. Johnson and the other women, the settlers were able to put out not only that arrow, but the fires set by all the rest, and hold off the attackers until help arrived. Johnson and his family escaped the battle unscathed. A historic marker commemorates the event on Bryan Station Pike today.

Richard Mentor Johnson, Kentucky's First Vice President, Larger than Life

In my column on KyForward.com this week, I begin a three part series on Kentucky's three Vice Presidents, Richard Mentor Johnson, John Cabell Breckenridge, and Alben W. Barkley.

This week's column is about Kentucky's first Vice President, Richard Mentor Johnson, a man who survived an Indian attack as an infant, killed the famous Indian chief Tecumseh in battle, and was elected Vice President by the United States Senate, after the Electoral College could not produce a victor.

Johnson was a larger than life figure even in an age full of them.

Enjoy!

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

The Last Colonel

Here's a link to today's column on KyForward.com, in which I give the curious story of Col. Phil T. Chinn, the last of the Kentucky colonels of racing!

Enjoy!

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Abby Marlatt's Peace Leaflet: Kentucky History Photo of the Week



This is the pamphlet that Abby Marlatt handed out in Lexington fifty years ago this week. It cost Dr. Marlatt her career. It looks almost innocent, compared to political polemics today.

Abby Marlatt: Still a Hero Fifty Years Later

Fifty years ago this week, Abby Marlatt, a white professor of home economics at the University of Kentucky, who had descended from Kansas abolitionists, handed out leaflets urging peace and nuclear disarmament. In my February 24 column about her, I described the incident as follows:

"On August 5, 1962, the day before the anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Dr. Marlatt, along with a fellow faculty member, passed out leaflets which pointed out the fact tha
t the Cold War was then in full swing, and that the nuclear weapons in existence in 1962 were far more powerful than those used on Japan. The leaflet, prepared by a peace group in Cincinnati, encouraged students to withhold payment of income taxes as a protest, to refuse to work in war plants, or to register for the draft, or as the pamphlet put it, to return their draft cards if they had registered for the draft already. I suppose in those innocent days, no one thought of burning a draft card."

Because Dr. Marlatt had urged students to resist the draft, and to withhold taxes, she was attacked by some in the University of Kentucky's administration, who sought to have her removed from her position. Ultimately she was removed from her position as head of the home economics department at UK, but through the intervention of Bert Combs, Kentucky's progressive governor, she retained her position, and taught at UK through her retirement.

In this column, I share why she is one of my personal heroes of the civil rights movement. I don't imagine you'll read about this anniversary anywhere else. I will see if I can post a picture of the leaflet she handed out: It is almost innocent by today's standards, but it was enough in 1962 to ruin a career.



http://www.kyforward.com/2012/02/robert-treadway-abby-marlatt-protester-ignited-a-firestorm-that-changed-a-university/

Friday, July 20, 2012

How Lexington Put Lexington On the Map


I wanted to share a link to my latest  column on KyForward.com!

We talk about the origins of the Thoroughbred breeding industry in Kentucky in the 19th Century, and about the great stallion Lexington, who put Lexington (the town) on the map.

Enjoy!



Monday, July 9, 2012

Man O'War: Was he the Greatest Thoroughbred of All?

Most of my Kentucky history columns on KyForward.com concern the Thoroughbred horse industry. This one is about Man O'War, arguably the greatest runner ever.

Enjoy!



Man O'War: The Greatest Thoroughbred Ever?

Historic Kentucky Photo of the Week

This week's Kentucky historic photo of the week is this portrait of Kentucky Court of Appeals Judge E. C. O'Rear, one of the most important Kentucky jurists of the turn of the last century.

Judge O'Rear, while in private practice, is said to have developed the concept of the broad form deed, which allowed for the sale of the mineral interest in real estate aside from the surface rights, a form of conveyance that has been severely limited in modern times.

Judge O'Rear was one of the best known lawyers and political figures of his day.


The Theft of Asteroid and Other Civil War Oddities

As we celebrate, if that's what we're doing, the sesquicentennial of the fighting of the United States Civil War, I have examined the war's impact on my own great great great grandfather, Capt. E. B. Treadway. I also wrote an article that discusses the Civil War's impact on Thoroughbred racing.

Enjoy!

The Civil War's Impact on Kentucky's Thoroughbred Industry

Honest Dick Tate: A Victorian Crime

Here's a link to my column on one of the great crimes of Kentucky history, when Kentucky state treasurer "Honest Dick" Tate got on a train with most of the state's money, and neither he nor the money was heard from again . . .

Honest Dick Tate: He Took the Money and Ran