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Margie Bailey's
Scrapbook
Mary Hatton member of the Bourbon Genealogical Society has
donated this material. It was given to her by her friend Theckla Bailey. The
scrapbook was Thecla's mother Margie Bailey.
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Aged
Man's Challenge Remained Unaccepted - Part
1, Part 2
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"Beneath Gracious Home Grim Relic of
Slavery": The Grange, home of Kinzea Stone Sr.
and his sons Edward and Howard.
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Bowles
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Millersburg Yesteryears February 6, 1901 - Tom
Bowles and wife move into part of the Mrs. Sarah Lawson house.
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Obituary - Mrs. Tom Bowles
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Boyles, Wallace:
City Parcel Post Deliveryman wearing Indian headdress as a promotion
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Cane Ridge Meeting House 1801 Revival
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Devotions
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Dick Porter's House
Destroyed by Fire, Nov 1953
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Dr. Martha Petree:
"Death Released Her Story, But Put An End To Study Of Her Strange
Power Of Healing"
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Elmendorf
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First Wife of Barton Stone Once Buried
in Jackstown
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Goudy
Family
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The Gypsy's Warning
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Here We Stand Empty
Handed: A Kentucky Preacher Stands on
Historic Ground Asking People to Wake UP!
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Jackstown Story
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Jackstown Story Awaits Subsiding of
Old Hinkston
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Jackstown Story Unravels
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"Julian Rogers, New Owner oh Idle
Hour Undecided On Entering Horse Business." Paris Daily
Enterprise-dated Tuesday March 26, 1957:
Part 1,
Part 2
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Kirkpatrick Award
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Lexington Historian
is giving up Efforts to find the Maxwell Grave
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"Log
Cabin Built 143 Years Ago in County Probably State's Oldest"
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Millersburg: "A Breath of France", stone house built
in 1791 with furnishing brought from long ago
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Millersburg:
"The old gives way to the new. New
road under construction-Millersburg, Ky. July 1952"
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Millersburg
Christian Church
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Mrs. Mac Swinford:
Cynthiana - "Mother of the Year"
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Obituaries:
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Owings House
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Peter Vinegar: "Glances
Here And There"
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Pleasant Valley
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Poems
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Sister Jane Miriam:
Director of Nursing
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Stopping Places Along Old Route
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Tombstone Tales:
"Millersburg's Indian Boy"
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Waugh, Bob -"Walking
Bob": Rites Conducted Monday in Carlisle for Bob Waugh" DOD: 15
Nov 1969
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Yellow Poplar and Pine in Old Bridge at Jackstown
Withstand Many Decades

Obituary - Mrs. Maggie Horseman Bailey
Paris, Ky., Nov 26 - Funeral services for Mrs. Maggie Horseman Bailey,
who died Friday night at the home of a son Carl Bailey, near
Millersburg, will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday at the M. E. Pruitt and Son
funeral home at Millersburg, conducted by the Rev. Orville M. Skeen,
pastor of the Millersburg Christian Church.
Burial will be at 3 p.m. in the Bailey family cemetery at Owingsville.
Active pallbearers will be the following grandsons: Carl Sparks Bailey,
Clyde Bailey Jr., Noel Horseman, Billie Bailey, Marion Banta and Clyde
Douglas Bailey. Honorary bearers include Dr. V. C. Moseley, Dave
Clark, Cecil Elkins, J. E. Weathers, Charles Burroughs, Roy Lowe and Roy
and Tom Slone.
The body is at the funeral home in Millersburg.

Mrs. Alice Lawson, Dies At Age Of 102
Years (DOD 5/7/1968)
It was on May 1 that Mrs. Alice Colston Lawson celebrated her 102nd birthday.
Tuesday, the centenarian, one of Bourbon County's
residents, died at her home in Millersburg.
Bourbon County Coroner, Bruce Forsythe said Mrs. Lawson was found dead in her
bed by her grandson, Colston Madden, about 11:30 a.m.
Madden had gone to his grandmother's home about 9 a.m. to see that she had her
breakfast, Mrs. Lawson, residing alone. At 11:30 he returned to the home
to check on her, as was his practice, and found her dead.
Madden and other relatives and friends made regular checks at her home
throughout several times every day to make sure everything was in order with her
because of her advanced age.
A native of Nicholas County, she was the daughter of the late Isaac and Americus
Colston and was a member of the Woods Chapel Methodist Church in Millersburg.
In addition to the grandson, she is survived by two great grandsons, Colston Jr.
and Robert Madden, Cleveland, Ohio.
The body was removed to the Martyn-Hurley Funeral Home, however, funeral
arrangements are not complete.

GLANCES HERE AND THERE by I.D. Zern
These are really "Peter Vinegar Days" in Central Ky. Oldsters and semi-oldsters
hereabouts will remember the term formerly used as descriptive of heat waves.
It was used on occasions when the temperature mounted to a degree which might be
considered as this mundane sphere's nearest approach to the climate Peter
Vinegar used to associate with the nether regions in his famous sermons
delivered everywhere in the country and elsewhere.
The colored evangelist who lived and held forth for the part in Lexington, was a
familiar figure in Nicholas County between 40 and 50 years ago often appearing
at Henryville and at Ewing where his fiery delineations of the world to come for
sinners were of the quality that made his name a byword throughout the Bluegrass
and a synonym for heat.
The application of his name to the hottest of days persisted long after the old
preacher had gone to his reward in, I have always hoped, a far cooler region
than that which he often described in his favorite sermon entitled: " A Dam'
Hot Day"
PETER VINEGAR INFORMATION
Editor: The Herald
I noticed that more dope on Peter Vinegar is desired, following the mention of
the noted revivalist in the Demon Dopester's column.
Mrs. Anna Bell Ward of Somerset is writing a historical novel and one of her
characters is Peter Vinegar of Chitlin' Switch of Fayette Co. I believe that if
anyone interested in this matter would would drop her a line, she could furnish
the information and would be glad to do so.
REMEMBERS PETER VINEGAR
When I was a small girl down in Carlisle, Nicholas County, there came to the
community a tall, gaunt Negro man who said his name was Peter Vinegar and that
he had come to pour out religion of the Good Book on the sinners. He was known
to have a revival at Ruddles Mills, Bourbon County and several other
settlements. His sermon texts were quite unusual.
" For the bed I am too short" "Hold that Tiger" "The debbil is a porcupine"
He vanished quite suddenly, just as he had come. - Mrs. Guy R. Bell
This is information for "Folklorist" Peter Vinegar. Peter Vinegar was the Rev.
Alexander Vinegar who died July 19, 1905. Accounts of his death were carried by
both of the Lexington papers. An article concerning him by Bob Fain was
published in the Lexington Herald Leader August 20, 1953. Mrs. Nannie Bell
Taylor objected to some of the statements made in this artlcle in a letter to
the editor-Mary Hester Cooper
If " Folklorist" will contact Mrs. Jessie Vinegar, 477 West Fourth Street,
Lexington, he may be able to get a line on Peter Vinegar. I think the old
fellow is buried in the of the colored cemeteries in or around Lexington and
this Mrs. Vinegar married one of his descendants. Peter often came to Cynthiana
for camp meeting days and drew large crowds of white folks. -Reader of
Cynthiana
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