Inscription
African Americans were sold as slaves at Cheapside Auction Block on the public square in the 19th century. Lexington was the center of slave trading in Ky. by the late 1840s and served as a market for selling slaves farther south. Thousands of slaves were sold at Cheapside, including children who were separated from their parents.
[Reverse]
Slavery in Fayette Co. - On the N.E. corner of the Fayette Courthouse lawn stood the whipping post established in 1847 to punish slaves for such offenses as being on the streets after 7 p.m. Fayette Co. was one of the largest slaveholding counties in Kentucky. By 1860, one in four residents of the city of Lexington were slaves. Presented by the Lexington Alumni Chapter Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity.
Dedicated October 25, 2003.
Location
Sources
More markers in Fayette
Joyland Amusement Park
Lexington, KY
Joyland, Paris Pike, 1923-64 Home of the Wildcat rollercoaster, Joyland Railroad, a midway, Fayette Co.'s first public swimming pool & a...
Paul Laurence Dunbar High School, 1922-1967
Lexington, KY
The first school for black Kentuckians to be accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.
Rotary Club of Lexington
Lexington, KY
Established as the 3rd Rotary Club in Kentucky and 182nd in the world,it first met on June 23, 1915.
Mentelle Park
Lexington, KY
Charlotte and Waldemarde Mentelle fled their native Paris during the French Revolution.
Historic Botherum
Lexington, KY
Major Madison C. Johnson, a lawyer and friend of Henry Clay, commissioned Lexington architect John McMurtry to construct Botherum in 1851.
