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Stephen Conrad "Connie" Keith (October 16, 1942 – January 30, 2024) was an American politician from Kentucky who was a member of the Kentucky House of Representatives from 1985 to 1995.
Lexington Herald Leader 20 January 1984, Print. Edwards, Don. "Madden Eve a Scratch." Lexington Herald Leader 12 February 1999, Print. Fortune, Beverly. "Anita Madden." Lexington Herald Leader 26 April 1998, Print. Isaacs, Barbara. "Life Beyond Revelry, There's more to Anita Madden than Annual Party." Lexington Herald Leader 30 April 1995, Print.
The Herald-Leader was created by a 1983 merger of the Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader. The story of the Herald begins in 1870 with a paper known as the Lexington Daily Press. In 1895, a descendant of that paper was first published as the Morning Herald, later to be renamed the Lexington Herald in 1905.
Lewis County Herald: Vanceburg: 1924 [56] Weekly Dennis Brown Lexington Herald-Leader: Lexington: 1870 Sun–Fri [57] McClatchy Company [58] Originally Lexington Daily Press: Louisville Defender: Louisville: 1933 Weekly Albin H. Bowman Publishing [59] Louisville Eccentric Observer: Louisville: 1990 weekly Aaron Yarmuth Free tabloid paper The ...
Silas Walker/Lexington Herald-Leader. Throughout my career, I’ve always believed the best media outlets, from daily newspapers serving their hometowns to larger outlets that cover stories from ...
J. R. Gray (July 17, 1938 – May 11, 2022) was an American politician in the state of Kentucky.He served in the Kentucky House of Representatives as a Democrat from 1976 to 1989 and from 1995 to 2007.
Wallace Wilkinson was born on a farm in Casey County, Kentucky, about 5 miles (8.0 km) southwest of the city of Liberty, on December 12, 1941. [1] The son of Hershel and Cleo (Lay) Wilkinson, he had two older brothers and a younger sister. [2]
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.