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Alice Molloy Headley was born January 15, 1926, in Lexington, Kentucky, to Hal Price Headley and Genevieve Morgan Molloy. Chandler's father owned Beaumont Farm, 4,000 acres of land in the western part of Fayette County, and was “one of the prime, and perhaps most important, of the original organizers of Keeneland,” an equine racing and sales facility in Lexington.
He owned the 4,000 acre Beaumont Farm on Harrodsburg Road at the western edge of Lexington, Kentucky as well as the 15,000-acre Pinebloom Plantation in Baker County, Georgia. [3] Hal Price Headley was one of those profiled by racing historian Edward L. Bowen in his 2003 book Legacies of the Turf : A Century of Great Thoroughbred Breeders.
The Jockey Bar now resides near the historic site in downtown Lexington, Kentucky. Cheapside Park was a block in downtown Lexington, Kentucky , between Upper Street and Mill Street. Cheapside, originally Public Square, was the town's main marketplace in the nineteenth century and included a large slave market before the Civil War .
Joseph S. Wile Sr., 86, president of the 103-year-old Wolf Wile Co., April 1992. The store, founded in 1889 by cousins of Wile’s father, Dolph, was downtown Lexington’s last department store.
Idle Hour Stock Farm was a 400-acre (1.6 km 2) thoroughbred horse breeding and training farm near Lexington, Kentucky, United States established in 1906 by Colonel Edward R. Bradley. Beginning with the sire, Black Toney , and a roster of quality broodmares, Idle Hour Farm bred great champions such as the 1929 Horse of the Year Blue Larkspur and ...
WHAT: The Oldham Gardens Christmas Market is back, bringing holiday cheer with gifts, drinks, and food in a charming greenhouse setting. Shop unique local vendors, sip on drinks from 3rd Turn ...
A development plan has been filed for the empty lot at 760 Newtown Springs in Lexington. a 122,000-square-foot Kroger Marketplace store would sit behind three other new buildings, just off ...
Skyline of Lexington A portion of downtown Lexington in 2006. Kincaid Towers along Vine Street. The urban development patterns of Lexington, Kentucky, confined within an urban growth boundary protecting its famed horse farms, include greenbelts and expanses of land between it and the surrounding towns. This has been done to preserve the region ...