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Two photographs of Anna Burge Muir, attributed to Standiford studio and borrowed from a 1927 Louisville Herald-Post article, appear in a website about The Little Colonel, a series of stories for children by Annie Fellows Johnston. One photo is of Anna Burge Muir as a child and one is of her as the grownup wife of lawyer Edward Porter Humphrey.
Kentucky Women Remembered is an exhibit in the Kentucky State Capitol that honors the contributions of women from the Commonwealth. The exhibit consists of over 60 watercolor portraits of outstanding Kentucky women. The Kentucky Commission on Women receives nominations and selects two to four honorees each year to be included.
Editor of the Louisville Evening Post and co-editor of the Louisville Herald-Post [10] Born and reared in Louisville, Kentucky: Robert Kirkman (born 1978) Comic book writer, co-creator of The Walking Dead [11] Raised in Cynthiana [11] Bobbie Ann Mason (born 1940) Author [12] Born in Mayfield [12] Robert K. Massie (1929) Pulitzer Prize-winning ...
Olivia Cochran scored 14 points, Nyla Harris added 11 and No. 19 Louisville beat No. 23 Washington 59-51 on Wednesday night. Louisville closed the first half on a 6-0 run, with the last four by ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 20:59, 20 September 2021: 697 × 377 (136 KB): Jchs08: Uploaded a work by American Institute of Architects from Catalogue of the First Exhibition, Louisville Chapter, American Institute of Architects, Held in the Starks Building, Six Hundred and Fifty-two South Fourth Street, April Twelfth to Twenty-sixth, Nineteen Hundred and Twelve.
The Herald-Leader has cited messages or the experiences of six different women, as well as some of Grossberg’s college writings, over the course of three weeks of reporting.
Susan Look Avery (née Look; October 27, 1817 – February 1, 1915) was an American writer, suffragist, pacifist and supporter of temperance as well as a single tax. She hosted Lucy Stone and husband Henry Blackwell when they came to Louisville, Kentucky for the American Woman Suffrage Association meeting—the first suffrage convention in the South—in 1881.
Prior to last week’s story about the strip club ban, the Herald-Leader has also reported on the adverse experiences six women, all anonymous at the time, had with the Louisville legislator. Many ...