Photos from the Lexington Herald-Leader archives updated daily

Alydar wins Blue Grass Stakes, 1978

Alydar with Jorge Valasquez up ran away from the field coming down the stretch to win the Blue Grass Stakes by 13 lengths on April 27, 1978 at Keeneland. The chestnut colt was bred just down the road from Keeneland at Calumet Farm. The Blue Grass Stakes win set up a meeting with his west coast rival Affirmed in the 104th Kentucky Derby. Alydar went on to finish a close second to Affirmed in all three Triple Crown races. The 94th running of what is now the Toyota Blue Grass Stakes takes place this afternoon at Keeneland Race Course. Photo by Ron Garrison | Staff

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Keeneland Spring Meet preparations, 1961

Eight-year Keeneland employee Roy Carter prepares for the start of the Spring Meet, April 6, 1961. The meet lasted 14 days with no racing on Mondays. The highlight of the meet, the Blue Grass Stakes, took place on the last day of the meet and featured a $25,000 purse – $209,000 today adjusted for inflation. This years $1 million Toyota Blue Grass Stakes takes place on opening weekend of the Spring Meet. Total attendance for the 14-day 1961 Spring Meet was 94,895. On-track attendance for the 2017 15-day Spring Meet, was 252,247. In 1961 the on-track handle was $3.3 million, adjusted for inflation that would be $27.6 million today. The 2017 Spring meet had on on-track handle of $17.7 million and all-sources wagering of $140.6 million. Herald-Leader file photo

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Keeneland tote board, 1993

Preparations for the Keeneland Spring Meet, April 1, 1993. The tote board shown here was initially put up in 1978 but had to be quickly rebuilt before the 1986 Spring Meet after being destroyed by a March storm. It was then torn down after the 2006 Spring Meet and was replaced with the LED tote and video board used today. That new board displays Trakus video race technology, a first for a track in the U.S. From sensor chips carried in saddle cloths and antennas positioned around the race track, the Trakus system would then track each horse in a race electronically and digitally in real time on the video board. The 2018 Spring Meet starts Friday. Photo by Frank Anderson | staff file photo

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Martin Luther King, Jr. rally in Frankfort, 1964

March 5, 1964, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., baseball legend Jackie Robinson and Kentucky civil rights leaders led 10,000 people to rally at the Kentucky State Capitol in Frankfort in a peaceful demonstration, calling for a “good public accommodations bill” to prohibit segregation and discrimination in stores, restaurants, theaters and businesses. Click here to see a picture of King speaking and click here to see another image of the size of the crowd. Today in Frankfort a MLK Memorial March to Move is being held to honor the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the 50th anniversary of his death. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Thousands rally for Kentucky schools, 1988

An exuberant crowd of 15,000 to 20,000 education supporters marched on the Capitol March 17, 1988, lashing out at Gov. Wallace Wilkinson and demanding more money for Kentucky schools. The crowd, which overwhelmed legislators and exceeded everyone’s expectations, was thought to be the largest ever to demonstrate in Frankfort. City police Capt. Lawrence Hoover, in charge of crowd control, said his estimate of 15,000 to 20,000 was conservative. Classes were called off in about half of Kentucky’s school districts so teachers could come to Frankfort. As marchers circled the Capitol, Wilkinson stayed in his office but Lt. Gov. Brereton Jones spoke to the crowd. Wilkinson had prepared a speech for the rally but delivered it instead to reporters. At the news conference, he said that education was his No. 1 priority and that he was being blamed for a financial crisis not of his making. A special session of the Kentucky legislature was called in November of that year in which the lottery bill was passed and money from it was earmarked for education. On April 2, 2018, thousands of public school teachers again marched on the Capitol, but this time in protest to changes to their pensions and education cuts. Photo by Charles Bertram | staff

Teachers, school administrators, parents and others walked around the Capitol March 17, 1988 waving colorful signs as marching music blared from speakers. Through all of it, Gov. Wallace Wilkinson was the target of the crowd’s ire. Some of the signs the teachers carried expressed their frustration with Wilkinson, who had proposed an austere budget and no new taxes. Among them were placards that said: “If you can’t read this, thank Wally,” “We voted for you, now do for us,” “Can Kentucky education afford Wally’s World?” and “Arizona did it, we can do it: Impeach.” Two men walking side by side carried a joint message. One sign said, “Send Wally to college.” The other said, “In another state.” Click here to see how big the ‘We’ve had enough’ teacher protest from April 2, 2018 was. Photo by Charles Bertram | staff

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Kentucky fans welcome national champions home, 1948

A crowd of 15,000 fans greeted the University of Kentucky’s 1948 NCAA national championship team, April 2, 1948 outside Lexington’s Union Station on Main Street after their arrival from New York. It was the schools’ first NCAA title and the team was met by politicians, three bands and football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant when they stepped of the train. Coach Adolph Rupp and members of the squad were assembled on a platform in front of the door of the station for a brief ceremony. The crowd overflowed all standing room on the ground level around the station, covered building roofs and filled windows furnishing vantage points. Center Alex Groza, the NCAA Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player, was met with a roar of approval after he told the vast crowd, “We said we’d bring home the bacon and we just hope we brought enough.” After the bands played “On, On, U of K,” the team climbed aboard a fire truck for a ride through a decorated downtown Lexington to campus before at least 5,000 more fans. Photo by John C. Wyatt | Staff

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Ben Snyder’s Easter advertisement, 1968

Full-page advertisement in the April 12, 1968 Lexington Herald for an Easter sale at the Ben Snyder department store. At this time Lexington had two Snyder’s locations; one downtown and the other at Eastland, the city’s first shopping center. Some of the items promoted in the ad include a boys’ Easter sport coat for $12.98, girls’ laminated Orlon Easter coats starting at $7.88 and and women’s shoes available in seven neon colors to choose from for $5.97. Click on the image for a closer look. The downtown store was at 113 East Main St., now the site of the Fayette County courthouse plaza. It operated there from 1935 until 1980, leaving Wolf Wile’s as the only downtown department store. The Eastland location opened in 1964 and closed in 1985. The store was founded in 1913 and had locations in Louisville, Paducah, Elizabethtown, Bowling Green and southern Indiana. In 1987 Hess’s Department Stores bought the remaining Snyder’s.

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Dr. Carl O. Lange and his barographs, 1950

In April 1950 Dr. Carl O. Lange, a University of Kentucky physicist, shown with one of his barographs, that he made for glider pilots. The instrument is designed to measure altitude at a given time and was also attached to research balloons to study the upper atmosphere. When the balloon bursts the instrument was parachuted to earth recording the altitude and time it reached and remained at a given altitude. Dr. Lange made them in his laboratory on Richmond road and sold them for $200 each to the U.S. Weather Bureau, Army, Navy, Air Force and various universities for research projects. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Cincinnati Reds opening day, 1993

A sellout crowd of 55,456 turned out for the Cincinnati Reds opening day game against the Montreal Expos at Riverfront Stadium, April 5, 1993. The Reds, shown here with the Expos during the National Anthem before the game, won 2-1. Manager Tony Pérez, shown first from left in the line of Reds players, was fired 44 games into the season and replaced by Davey Johnson. Shortstop and future Hall of Famer Barry Larkin is fourth from left. Cincinnati finished the season 73-89, 5th in the NL West. The Reds played in this stadium until they moved into Great American Ball Park in 2003. Photo by Ron Garrison | staff

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WLEX-18’s Nancy Cox, 1992

Nancy Cox, after she was hired to anchor WLEX-18’s Saturday morning newscast, June 23, 1992. The then-24-year-old Cox was a producer/reporter for WKYT-TV (Channel 27), WLEX’s top rival. A Campbellsville native and 1990 Miss Kentucky winner, she has been with WLEX ever since. In Jan. 1994 she joined Tom Kenny as anchor of the 6 and 11 p.m. newscasts and almost three years later, the pair were married in a small ceremony at Lexington’s Bodley-Bullock House. Some viewers, once they learned of the pair’s wedding plans, told Kenny and Cox that they suspected it all along, because of the pair’s ease with each other. Kenny now delivers the news on WTVQ-36 while Cox still anchors at WLEX. However Cox, who has won four Emmy Awards for anchoring and reporting, will undergo major back surgery in April and be off the air for an extended time. Photo by Charles Bertram | staff

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