Photos from the Lexington Herald-Leader archives updated daily

Keeneland spring meet race fan, 1980

Harry Hanna of Cincinnati checked out the Daily Racing Form on opening day of the Keeneland spring meet, April 5, 1980. A crowd of 16,732 attended the first day of the meet, and jockey Julio Espinoza won the six-furlong Phoenix Handicap on Zuppardo’s Prince. Photo by Ron Garrison | Staff

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Karate champion Schlondia Jackson, 1986

Schlondia Jackson, 12, a sixth-grader at Russell Elementary School, demonstrated her karate moves in April 1986. Jackson took her first karate lesson in fall 1985 and was at that time a junior champion. She won first place in the open-hand kata, first place in kumite and fourth place in precision kata with partner Anthony Adams at the Kentucky Junior Karate Championship on April 12, 1986, at Eastern Kentucky University in Richmond. She was selected girls grand champion and won a 4 1/2-foot trophy. Photo by Ron Garrison | Staff

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Main Street markings, 1950

State Highway Department employees marked the center of downtown Lexington’s Main Street, April 1950. The double row of yellow plastic discs ran down the two-way road from the railroad tracks at Midland Avenue to Jefferson Street. Main Street became one way in 1971. The marquees for the State Theatre and the Kentucky Theater can be seen in the background. “Cheaper by the Dozen” was showing at the Kentucky. Published on April 28, 1950, in the Lexington Herald.

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Pulaski County Sheriff Sam Catron’s funeral, 2002

Pulaski County/Somerset Rescue Unit No. 5 carried the casket of Pulaski County Sheriff Sam Catron down U.S. 27 during the processional of his funeral on April 18, 2002, in Somerset. Along the road, at the funeral and at the gravesite, thousands mourned the longtime police officer renowned for his dedication. Catron was shot and killed five days earlier, during his campaign for a fifth term, while attending a political rally and fish fry near the Shopville Fire Department. The city showed its grief community-wide. Mourners, including representatives from police agencies in several states, almost filled the 1,900 seats at the Center for Rural Development auditorium, where the funeral service was held. Thousands more stood on sidewalks, on front lawns, on front porches, and even perched on roofs along the route of the funeral procession as it moved from the development center to the cemetery. Many businesses along U.S. 27 put up signs in memory of Catron; others closed in a show of respect. Photo by Mark Cornelison | Staff

Pulaski County Sheriff Sam Catron, 48, was campaigng for a fifth term when he was assisinated on the night of April 13, 2002, during a political rally and fish fry held by the Pulaski County Fire Department near Staab, a community about 80 miles south of Lexington. Photo by the Commonwealth-Journal

Danny Shelley, left pleaded guilty in January 2003 to the murder of Catron in return for a sentence of life in prison without a chance for parole for at least 25 years, avoiding a possible death sentence. Shelley testified that he waited in hiding for hours in woods near the fire station until he got a chance to shoot Catron, and that he carefully aimed at Catron’s head so he wouldn’t risk shooting anyone else. After the shooting, he fled on a motorcycle. Police quickly caught Shelley, and he implicated two other men: Kenneth White, a drug dealer, pictured center, and Jeff Morris, a former deputy running against Catron. Shelley and White were helping Morris in his campaign. Morris said White hoped to install an ally in the sheriff’s office to protect his drug dealing and came up with the idea to kill Catron. Morris also pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life without parole for at least 25 years. A jury convicted White, 58, of masterminding the plot, and he was sentenced to life in prison without parole. Shelley has said he got hooked on painkillers after getting hurt at a factory where he worked. Shelley said White gave him drugs, and, with Morris’ assistance, manipulated him into pulling the trigger at a time when he suffered impaired judgment. Photos by Trevor Frey, The Commonwealth Journal

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Bicycle safety parade, 1949

About 60 children lined up at the start of a bicycle safety parade on June 16, 1949, in downtown Lexington. The parade started at Midland Avenue, shown here looking east down the road. Today, Thoroughbred Park is on the left side, where the car dealership is shown, while the offices for the Herald-Leader are on the right. The parade went down Main Street, then past a judges’ reviewing stand on Mill Street. Lexington Mayor Tom Mooney spoke to the kids about bike safety and awarded prizes for the best-decorated bikes. The parade was sponsored by Montgomery Ward and Co. store, which gave participants literature on safety practices and materials for decorating their bicycles. Bobby Cornelison, 11, won first prize, a table radio. Other winners, all between ages 8 and 15, received prizes including a bike speedometer, a horn and a directional signal. Click on the image for a closer look. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Easter egg hunt, 1984

Jessie Pippen, 2, cautiously received some help from the Easter Bunny at an egg hunt April 21, 1984, at the Charles Young Community Center. The bunny is Toya Jackson, an employee of the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Division of Parks and Recreation. The local government sponsored nine egg hunts that day, giving away about 20,000 pieces of candy. Photo by Charles Bertram | Herald-Leader Staff

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Lexington Leader’s coverage of Titanic sinking, 1912

The front page of the April 16, 1912, Lexington Leader, with news about the sinking of the RMS Titanic the day before. The largest passenger liner in service at the time, she sank four days into her maiden voyage from Southampton in England to New York City. An estimated 2,224 people were on board when she struck an iceberg on the night of April 14. She sank two hours and forty minutes later, claiming more than 1,500 lives. The Lexington Leader was the afternoon newspaper, and the Lexington Herald was circulated in the morning. The two merged in 1983, creating the Lexington Herald-Leader. Click on the image for a closer look.

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University of Kentucky students square-dance, 1950

University of Kentucky students square-danced in Lexington’s Loudoun House, April 1950. They were dancing a “birdie in the cage” move. The photo ran with other images highlighting the rise in popularity of old-fashioned square dances. The popularity spread across Central Kentucky, with groups of youngsters, collegians and adults forming clubs. The return of the square dance also influenced styles of clothing. The story said clothing reminiscent of the Old South became popular with young women in high school and college, replacing the untidy garments of the war years with quaint, ruffled calico frocks with swirling skirts, basque waists and dropped shoulders. Levis, bright plaid shirts and galluses were in order for their escorts. Published April 16, 1950, in the Sunday Herald-Leader

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Family dog lying in state in custom-built casket, 1950

Wanda, a 15-year-old white Spitz, lay in state April 27, 1950, in a custom-built casket at the home of her master, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pinkston, 828 Tremont Avenue, in the Chevy Chase neighborhood. Beside the satin-lined pink casket with Mrs. Pinkston is Dally, the household’s 11-month-old cat, which was “practically raised” by Wanda, Mrs. Pinkston said. Wanda died after a two-week illness and was buried in the backyard. The casket was made three months earlier, when the pet dog appeared to be near death. Published in the April 28, 1950, Lexington Herald. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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Sculptor Herbert Haseltine with Man o’ War statue, 1948

Sculptor Herbert Haseltine stood beside his statue of Man o’ War at its unveiling on Oct. 16, 1948, at Samuel Riddle’s Faraway Farm, where the great red horse was buried. Haseltine returned from France for the unveiling. The sculptor began working on the statue in 1941. He spent one to two hours a day for six months with the horse and made three consecutive models, each progressively larger than the first. The 3,000-pound statue was cast in bronze in nine pieces. It was brought to Lexington from New York two weeks before the unveiling and was mounted on its pedestal under the supervision of Danny Carter, Haseltine’s assistant. Herald-Leader Archive Photo

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