Photos from the Lexington Herald-Leader archives updated daily

Coldstream on Keeneland’s backside, 1947

Coldstream, a Chesapeake Bay retriever who was the mascot of the Coldstream Stud stable, looked over the backside at Keeneland before start of the 10-day 1947 fall race meet. This year’s fall meet ended Saturday. Herald-Leader Staff Photo

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Kentucky-Tennessee Beer Barrel, 1985

The Beer Barrel in the Tennessee locker room at Commonwealth Stadium after the Volunteers’ 42-0 victory over Kentucky on Nov. 23, 1985. The Beer Barrel went to the winner of the annual game between the SEC schools. Kentucky and Tennessee began playing football in 1893, but in 1925 they also decided they should have a trophy to enhance their rivalry. Rollie M. Guthrie, then a Kentucky student, remembers drinking Cokes with friends in Casey Jones’ Lexington Drug Store. “We were talking about Purdue having the Old Oaken Bucket and Michigan the Little Brown Jug,” Guthrie recalled in “The Wildcats,” Russell Rice’s history of Kentucky football. “We decided to come up with something symbolic of both states. We immediately thought of moonshine whiskey and started to hunt for a whiskey barrel. When the Women’s Christian Temperance Union got wind of what we were going to do, their protests were vigorous, so we settled for a beer keg.” After the students learned that the temperance group also found the beer keg objectionable, they carried the orange, blue and white barrel onto Stoll Field on Thanksgiving Day 1925 with “ice water” painted on it. Surrounded by bands from Kentucky and Tennessee playing “How Dry I Am,” student representatives from each school drank water from the barrel. Over the years, the barrel was “kegnapped” several times in student raids. The blue-and-orange barrel stayed at the home of the winning team from 1925 until 1998, when an alcohol-related crash killed a Kentucky player and an Eastern Kentucky University student, and injured the driver, also a Kentucky player. The crash occurred a week before the Kentucky-Tennessee game. At the time it was retired, the barrel had been in Tennessee’s possession since this 1985 game, which was the first win in their 26-game streak over the Cats. Click here to see another image from our archives of the Beer Barrel, this time in Kentucky’s hands. Photo by Frank Anderson | Staff

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Crowd greets John F. Kennedy at Blue Grass Field, 1960

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John F. Kennedy greeted supporters on Oct. 8, 1960, at Lexington’s Blue Grass Field. A crowd estimated 3,000 to 4,000 people greeted Kennedy when his private plane arrived at the airport about 12:45 a.m. He had just come from Washington, D.C., where that night he had participated in a second TV debate with Vice President Richard Nixon, the Republican nominee. Kennedy, 43, a Massachusetts senator, gave a brief talk to the cheering crowd. He said Kentucky Democrats “who left the fold in 1956 are returning this year. I have always understood that Lexington is the home of beautiful women, fast horses and Democrats.” Several hundred people were at downtown’s Phoenix Hotel to welcome Kennedy. The candidate stopped several times to shake hands as he moved up the front steps and through the lobby to a waiting elevator. Kennedy and most of his party were quartered on the sixth floor. Two Lexington patrolmen guarded Kennedy’s room throughout the night. The next day, approximately 20,000 people lined downtown streets for a campaign parade that ended at the University of Kentucky, where Kennedy gave a 15-minute speech. He won the presidential election over Nixon a month later. Three years after this photo was taken, he was assassinated in Dallas. Click here to see the front page of The Lexington Herald on Nov. 23, 1963, the day after he was shot. On Oct. 26, the National Archives was scheduled to release ‘secret’ JFK assassination records. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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The Reds’ Rose, Flynn visit Keeneland, 1976

During Keeneland’s fall meet in October 1976, two members of the Cincinnati’s Big Red Machine, Pete Rose and Doug Flynn, paid a visit to the Lexington track. The Reds had just won the National League Championship Series against the Philadelphia Phillies and were about to make history in the World Series, sweeping the New York Yankees in four games, to win back-to-back World Series. The group at Keeneland included, from left, Flynn, the Red’s utility infielder, Mario Nunez, a friend of Rose’s, known as The Cuban, Tom Hammond, then sports director for WLEX-TV, Teri Rubio, a friend of Rose’s, and Rose, one of the stars of the Big Red Machine. Photo by David Perry | Staff

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Downtown Lancaster, 1982

Downtown Lancaster in Garrard County, looking from Lexington Road (U.S. 27) at Richmond Road, on Oct. 25, 1982. To the left is the Garrard County courthouse, which today houses the offices for the county clerk, judge and sheriff. At the time of this photo, the population was just over 3,300. Today it is slightly more than 3,800. Photo by Frank Anderson | Staff

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Presidential candidates visit ‘key state’ Kentucky, 1992

Democratic vice-presidential nominee Al Gore spoke to the crowd on Oct. 24, 1992, at a rally in Goebel Park at the Carroll Chimes Tower in Covington. Gore, a Tennessee senator, later went to Louisville to speak to Kentucky AFL-CIO members. Photo by Frank Anderson | Staff

Democratic vice-presidential candidate Sen. Al Gore looked at his watch while campaigning in Covington on Oct. 24, 1992. He asked the crowd, “What time is it?” They responded, “Time for Bush to go.” Gore later told Kentucky AFL-CIO members in Louisville, “This is as close to a key state as you’ll find.” A week and a half later, Kentucky’s eight electoral votes went to Gore and Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, giving them the White House over incumbent George H.W. Bush and Dan Quayle. Photo by Frank Anderson | Staff

A crowd of about 1,500 people greeted Air Force One as it arrived at Lexington’s Blue Grass Airport at 11 a.m. Oct. 23, 1992. Twenty minutes after landing, President George H.W. Bush boarded the Marine One helicopter for a rally in London. He returned to the airport about 1:15 p.m., moving from the helicopter back to Air Force One and taking off for his next campaign stop in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Photo by Frank Anderson | Staff

President George H.W. Bush spoke to a crowd at South Laurel High School in London on Oct. 23, 1992. Speaking to several thousand supporters, the feisty Republican incumbent invoked the name of Col. Harland Sanders and questioned the character of Gov. Bill Clinton. “I think the colonel would have approved of our offering for America, our own original recipe. Ideas. Experience. And, yes, character.” Photo by Charles Bertram | Staff

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Keeneland fall meet, 1950

Spectators viewed a close race during Keeneland’s 1950 fall meet. Crowds were generally 5,000 to 6,000, but some days there would would be 12,000 people during the 10-day fall meet. Seven races were held each day except for the two Saturday cards, which featured nine. General admission was $1 for men and $.50 for women. Greyhound had seven scheduled bus routes from downtown directly to the track. The meet featured one stakes race, the Breeders’ Futurity, one of the nation’s fall headliners for juveniles. The winner took home almost $28,000, which would be about $280,000 in today’s dollars. Among the stories making headlines that meet was a 19-year-old Chicagoan who admitted that he took part in a $13,000 Chicago robbery and lost all of his share — $3,000 — during a day at the track. After the fall meet ended, racing shifted to Churchill Downs for its 18-day session. The 2017 Keeneland fall meet, which features 17 days of live racing, ends Oct. 28. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Rex Chapman, Mike Pitino before NBA exhibition game, 1992

Rex Chapman, Washington Bullet guard and former University of Kentucky player, talked with Mike Pitino, 14, a son of UK Coach Rick Pitino, before an NBA exhibition game on Oct. 21, 1992, at Rupp Arena. Chapman played only two years at Kentucky and is 50th on UK’s all-time scoring list with 1,073 points. Washington beat short-handed Milwaukee 123-99 in the battle of rebuilding NBA teams before a crowd of 4,526. Chapman finished with 10 points and seven assists. One day earlier, at 9:25 p.m., Chapman’s first child, Zeke Everett Chapman, was born at Central Baptist Hospital. Zeke weighed 7 pounds, 1 ounce and was 19 1/2 inches long. “That doesn’t compare with anything,” Chapman said of his son’s birth. “It’s the best. It’s a miracle.” In 1988, he was the first player drafted by the expansion Charlotte Hornets with the eighth pick. The Hornets traded Chapman to Washington midway through the 1991 season, his fourth in the league. He finished his 12-year NBA career in 2000 with the Phoenix Suns. He is now a commentator on the UK Sports Network’s Kentucky basketball pregame show. Click here to see other images from our archives of Chapman. Photo by Janet Worne | Staff

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Centre College football, 1959

Centre College football coach Joe Brummett sketched out a play on the ground for quarterback Don Huber on Oct. 31, 1959. The Colonels played rival Sewanee University to a scoreless tie in Centre’s homecoming game. The school’s 2017 homecoming is Oct. 21 against Rhodes. Brummett was inducted into the school’s hall of fame in its inaugural year, 1992. He was a four-year letterman in football and basketball, and he coached football, basketball, and track at Centre from 1952 to 1961. He died in 2012. Published on Nov. 2, 1959, in the Lexington Herald. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Bryan Station-Dunbar football, 1992

Bryan Station’s Antoine Smith tried to drag Dunbar quarterback Jahid O’Neal down by the jersey during a season-opening game on Aug. 28, 1992. The Defenders won the game, 14-6, and reached the quarterfinals of the playoffs that year, finishing the season 10-3 and undefeated against Lexington rivals. Dunbar posted a 3-7 record that year. The 2017 Dunbar and Station teams are two of the three squads (Seneca) that have yet to win a game this year in Class 6A. The two face each other Oct. 20. Photo by Tom Marks | Staff

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