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Bellevue Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Danville, Kentucky. [2] It was established in the 1840s and was originally named Danville City Cemetery. [3] The Danville National Cemetery is located within Bellevue Cemetery. [1] The federal government purchased 18 lots within Bellevue Cemetery at the beginning of the American Civil War.
Emancipated slave of Revolutionary War veteran Robert Craddock, founder of first school in Danville for African-American children [1] Alfred Ryors: 1812–1858: President of Indiana University, Ohio University; professor at Centre College Hugh L. Scott: 1853–1934: Superintendent of West Point, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army in World War I ...
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The Daily Messenger began publication in Danville in 1910. [4] The Advocate-Messenger is the result of the merger in 1940 of The Kentucky Advocate and The Daily-Messenger. The paper was purchased by Schurz Communications of South Bend, Indiana in 1978. In 2013, Advocate Messenger printing operations moved from Danville to Winchester Kentucky. [5]
Wharton was born in Jessamine County, Kentucky on October 12, 1912, [1] the younger of two daughters of Joseph Felix and Mayme (née Davis) Wharton. [2] In 1916, the family moved to Lexington . Wharton graduated from the University of Kentucky in 1935 with a bachelor's degree in botany and geology .
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Danville Daily Messenger. Fackler, Calvin Morgan (1941). Early Days in Danville. Louisville, Kentucky: Standard Printing Company. pp. 187, 191–199. Harper's Weekly Magazine November 8, 1862. Heck, Frank H. (1979). A Century and a Half on Main Street: Trinity Episcopal Church 1829-1979. Danville KY: Trinity Episcopal Church. Newcomb, Rexford ...
Angered by the refusal of his daughter, 15-year-old Melba, to leave a boarding school and return home, 47-year-old Joseph Moshell went to the school and shot and killed his daughter. [91] Moshell was sentenced to death for the murder; the governor of New York later commuted his sentence to life in prison.