Tag Archives: Lexington

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.

Beth Salem Presbyterian Church in Lexington, Georgia

The Beth Salem Presbyterian Congregation was founded in 1785 in Oglethorpe County, a mile outside Lexington, making it the oldest Presbyterian Church in the area. In 1822, the congregation had a church built in Lexington. In 1893, the second building on this site was constructed. Until recently, it was the oldest Presbyterian congregation in the state, but membership dwindled over the years. In 2017, the town of Lexington purchased the church and now uses the Gothic Revival building for events.

Willingham-Watkins House of Lexington, Georgia

The Willingham-Watkins House was built by Thomas Brewer in 1832 as a plantation plain. It was converted to a Greek Revival home in the 1850s.

The photo below is from the Library of Congress’s Historic American Buildings Survery collection.