Antebellum Winchester: Pre-Civil War buildings

Often referred to as the old­est com­mer­cial build­ing in down­town, the “Dodge’s Store Rooms” build­ing was con­struct­ed by David Dodge on a lot he pur­chased in 1811. According to our ear­ly his­to­ri­an, James Flanagan, Dodge built his store house in 1813–1814. The build­ing was described in a sur­vey of his­toric sites in Clark County. “Beneath a late 19th cen­tu­ry face-lifting... 
David Dodge’s Store Rooms

Latest stories

Winchester Library in a retired railroad car (1954)
History

Public libraries in Winchester: A history of growth, expansion, and movement

From a col­lege cam­pus to the cour­t­house, and then from a rail­road car to a for­mer church, the Winchester/Clark County Public Library has had a long and sto­ried his­to­ry. The cur­rent facil­i­ty, opened in 1998, is a sprawl­ing 27,000-square-foot build­ing that boasts ameni­ties such as a children’s wing and sev­er­al meet­ing rooms. 
The Kentucky Senate Chamber
Commentary

Two horrible legislative bills loom

Two bills are hang­ing around before our elect­ed offi­cials, one in Congress and one in the Kentucky leg­is­la­ture. It’s some­what amaz­ing how some of these hor­ren­dous bills lurk in the back­ground until some­one with an inquis­i­tive nature sniffs them out and brings them to the atten­tion of the public. 
Tomb Painting
Commentary

We are one letter away from a better world

Here, on the morn­ing of March 15, the day of Julius Caesar’s demise in 44 BCE, I find myself con­tem­plat­ing whether it is okay to blind­ly com­mand any­thing. An inves­ti­ga­tion of the vocab­u­lary of dom­i­nance seems par­tic­u­lar­ly time­ly today, since muni­tions bought with our hard-earned tax dol­lars are rain­ing down from above on peo­ple in oth­er lands. 
Commentary

Oestre and the Vernal Equinox

Long before cal­en­dars were inked and before clocks began telling humans when to wake, there was a hush that came each year, a long exhale of frost and dark­ness. The rivers stiff­ened. The seeds slept. Even hope seemed to curl in on itself. And in that still­ness walked Oestre, the Dawn-Bringer of the North. 

Editorial picks

Stephen Craycraft

Craycraft stresses smart growth, fiscal stability

Had it not been for his oppo­si­tion to large-scale solar ener­gy devel­op­ment on Clark County’s prime farm­land, Stephen Craycraft might nev­er have got­ten involved in local gov­ern­ment. “I got in because of the solar issue that came about a few years ago. It was my part of the coun­ty that was going to be affect­ed,” he said. “That’s what pushed me into pol­i­tics.” Now the local busi­ness­man, who is in the last year of his first term as 3rd District mag­is­trate, is run­ning for coun­ty judge-exec­u­tive in a crowd­ed Republican pri­ma­ry race. 

Loving with your whole heart

There’s a song by Mumford & Sons called “White Blank Page” that has fol­lowed me for awhile. It’s writ­ten as a love song — raw and unguard­ed — but like most hon­est music, it refus­es to stay con­fined to one sto­ry. Some lyrics don’t just describe a rela­tion­ship. They name a ques­tion you didn’t real­ize you were car­ry­ing. Though writ­ten about roman­tic betray­al, that ques­tion echoes far beyond romance. It sur­faces in civic life. In church pews. In friend­ships that once felt unshakable. 

Podcasts

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