Tag Archives: Fayette County

African Cemetery Number 2 of Lexington, Kentucky

African Cemetery No. 2 is the earliest recorded cemetery organized, owned, and managed by the Black citizens of Lexington, Kentucky. Purchased in 1869 by the Union Benevolent Society No. 2 and chartered in 1870, it served as a burial ground until 1976.

The cemetery’s notable residents include Oliver Lewis, the first Kentucky Derby winner, and Isaac Burns Murphy, a three-time Derby-winning jockey. It also contains graves of over 150 U.S. Colored Troops, including soldiers from the 54th and 55th Massachusetts Regiments.

After decades of neglect, the site was declared abandoned in 1973. Plans for development ended when surveys revealed over 5,000 burials. In 1979, Rev. Horace Henry Greene lead the restoration efforts of the cemetery and founded the non-profit to manage the cemetery. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

Keys was a noted groomer and worked for the Idlehour Stock Farm.

Pine Hill Missionary Baptist Church of La Grange, Tennessee

There seems to be limited information on this church in La Grange, Tennessee. It is a historically Black congregation that began in 1913, and this building was constructed in 1925. According to obituaries, the church was active through at least the 1990s. The grounds are cared for, so the church may still hold occasional services.

La Grange School- La Grange, Tennessee

I recently took a trip to Memphis. Like most trips, I planned a circuitous route using back roads. While plotting my path on Google Maps, I noticed a building identified as the LaGrange Rosenwald School. I immediately put it as a stopping point to photograph.

When I arrived in La Grange, I immediately doubted the providence of this building as a Rosenwald. There are no hallmark windows to bring light into the building, and I wondered if it was a heavily modified building. After doing some research, I could not find any confirmation that this building is a Rosenwald. It was a one-room school named the La Grange School.

Middle Tennessee State University assessed historic Black properties in Fayette County and created an informative storyboard titled “Fayette County: Places, Perspectives: African American Community-building in Tennessee, 1860-1920.” Since they did not include it in the comprehensive report, I believe it was not a Rosenwald school.

(I did update Google Maps to edit the name without Rosenwald.)

Fraternal Lodge and Funeral Home-La Grange, Tennessee

According to what I can find, researchers at Middle Tennessee State University were told by community members that this building once served as a fraternal lodge, funeral home, and store for the Black community of La Grange, Tennessee. They later found purchase of land in 1912 by the National Mosaic Templars of America, a Black benevolent organization.

Rest Community School-Fayette County, Georgia

Located in Fayette County, this building started out as the Rest Community School. When it was vacated, the building was converted to a community store. The family who ran the store lived on the second floor.

Saddlebag Farmhouse-Fayette County, Georgia