William Preston was a leading representative of Kentucky’s slaveholding, landed gentry, the group who dominated economic, political, and social life in the commonwealth before the Civil War. Preston was heir to valuable lands adjacent to Louisville and married to the daughter of the state’s largest slave owner, and his Ivy League education and leadership abilities made him a natural spokesman for the interests of the South’s antebellum elite. As a legislator, diplomat, and soldier, Preston defended the interests of his region for three decades, and his successes and failures were linked to the fortunes of the South. Among his many accomplishments, Preston served as President James Buchanan’s minister to Madrid and, during the Civil War, as ...
The Bluegrass region of Kentucky was the only part of the slaveholding South Abraham Lincoln knew in...
By the flip of a coin, Thomas Dionysius Clark became intertwined in the vast history of Kentucky. In...
John Marion Porter (1839–1898) grew up working at his family\u27s farm and dry goods store in Butler...
Perhaps more than any other citizens of the nation, Kentuckians held conflicted loyalties during the...
John C. Breckinridge rose to prominence during one of the most turbulent times in our nation’s histo...
In his brief life John C. Breckinridge embraced the roles of lawyer, politician, statesman, soldier,...
The three Kentucky presidents—Abraham Lincoln, Zachary Taylor, and Jefferson Davis—were profoundly s...
As a border state, Kentucky occupied a unique position in the early days of the Civil War. Her neutr...
Across more than six generations—beginning before the Revolutionary War—the Breckinridge family has ...
The first comprehensive history of the state since the publication of Thomas D. Clark\u27s landmark ...
Kentucky, following in the footsteps of her parent state, Virginia, has given to America some of her...
Revisiting the Old Roman Nose, the First Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry, and the War. Dan Lee is a Civ...
The Kentucky Encyclopedia’s 2,000-plus entries are the work of more than five hundred writers. Their...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
Compiled and edited by Lowell H. Harrison, the essays in Kentucky’s Governors profile every chief ex...
The Bluegrass region of Kentucky was the only part of the slaveholding South Abraham Lincoln knew in...
By the flip of a coin, Thomas Dionysius Clark became intertwined in the vast history of Kentucky. In...
John Marion Porter (1839–1898) grew up working at his family\u27s farm and dry goods store in Butler...
Perhaps more than any other citizens of the nation, Kentuckians held conflicted loyalties during the...
John C. Breckinridge rose to prominence during one of the most turbulent times in our nation’s histo...
In his brief life John C. Breckinridge embraced the roles of lawyer, politician, statesman, soldier,...
The three Kentucky presidents—Abraham Lincoln, Zachary Taylor, and Jefferson Davis—were profoundly s...
As a border state, Kentucky occupied a unique position in the early days of the Civil War. Her neutr...
Across more than six generations—beginning before the Revolutionary War—the Breckinridge family has ...
The first comprehensive history of the state since the publication of Thomas D. Clark\u27s landmark ...
Kentucky, following in the footsteps of her parent state, Virginia, has given to America some of her...
Revisiting the Old Roman Nose, the First Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry, and the War. Dan Lee is a Civ...
The Kentucky Encyclopedia’s 2,000-plus entries are the work of more than five hundred writers. Their...
Proslavery Kentuckians Saw in the Union the Best Protections for Their Aims In the last half-century...
Compiled and edited by Lowell H. Harrison, the essays in Kentucky’s Governors profile every chief ex...
The Bluegrass region of Kentucky was the only part of the slaveholding South Abraham Lincoln knew in...
By the flip of a coin, Thomas Dionysius Clark became intertwined in the vast history of Kentucky. In...
John Marion Porter (1839–1898) grew up working at his family\u27s farm and dry goods store in Butler...