| The
Encyclopedia of Louisville contains most anything you'd ever want
to know about the city and is a valuable resource for both research
and trivia. Click image for more.
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The University
Press of Kentucky and the Thomas D. Clark Foundation have assembled
what appears will immediately become the standard first-stop reference
book for research relating to anything Louisville.
The brand
new Encyclopedia of Louisville, a hefty, hard cover volume, contains
contributions from a staggering roster of over 500 writers. The book
is comprised of 1,800 separate entries dealing in broad categories
people, places, things, events ranging in categories from art
and architecture to communications to politics to women. Forty-percent
of the entries are biographical sketches of people. The complete story
of Louisville comes together like a jigsaw puzzle whose pieces are spread
across 1,100 pages, then augmented with 350 photos, 60 maps, and an
alphabetical index.
The Encyclopedia
of Louisville is packed with everything you'd expect to find in a book
of this sort. Obviously included are histories of landmarks and events
like Corn Island, Muhammad Ali, Fort Nelson, the construction of City
Hall, and the Chenoweth Massacre. More general information is added
in the form of entries with titles such as "Epidemics," "Iron
Foundries," "Painting," and "Brick Industry."
The balance of the blanks are filled in with essays on every imaginable
topic relevant to the development of the city. "Film-Making,"
"Cato Watts," "Douglass Hills," "Brown-Gordon
Murders," "Rev. A.D. Williams King," "Kaden Tower."
Special
efforts were made to include topics relating to women, minorities, and
other cities of Jefferson County. Fifteen consulting editors were employed
to manage topics that were of a somewhat subjective nature art,
politics, ethnology, music, literature, et cetera.
The true
magnitude and detail involved must be witnesses to truly be appreciated.
It's all too easy to sit down with the intention of looking up a specific
fact, and then find yourself an hour later reading about something else
entirely, having been lured in by other stories while flipping the pages.
One intriguing
segment investigates the origins of people referring to the city as
"Lou-a-vul," a trend that is documented to have begun as early
as the late 19th Century. In the same regard, another piece explores
the first uses of the word "Kentuckiana" by the local media
as early as the 1940s.
The namesakes
of Louisville area locations are among the most interesting yet
unexpected bits of information the reader stumbles upon. George
Hikes (Point). John Baxter (Avenue). James Grinstead (Drive). Dr. Elisha
D. Standiford (Field). William Fontaine (Ferry Park). William McAlpine
(Locks and Dam). Henry Watterson (Expressway). John Buechel. Dominic
Ehrler (-'s Dairy). Robert, John, Alexander, and James Breckinridge
(whose Lane has since become misspelled as "Breckenridge").
The Encyclopedia
of Louisville debuts November 25th at Hawley-Cooke Booksellers in Shelbyville
Road Plaza. A release party and book signing session will take place
from 2:00 to 3:30 pm. With a surprisingly affordable retail price of
$39.95, expect that more than a few of these will end up under Christmas
trees.
As the
public begins to discover the book and the widespread enthusiasm for
the project is reaching its peak, the intensity is winding down for
Dr. John E. Kleber. As the book's editor, the Louisville native and
his staff of experts from assorted fields of Louisville history embarked
on the four-year journey to create this book in 1996.
Now one
of Kentucky's most respected historians, John Kleber was a member of
the third graduating class of Trinity High School in 1959. Four years
later he earned a history BA at Bellarmine College, graduating summa
cum laude. By 1969, Kleber had earned his Master's degree and PhD from
the University of Kentucky. At Morehead State University, he became
associate professor of history, director of the Academic Honors Program,
and dean of the Caudill College of Humanities.
Having
previously edited the equally gargantuan Kentucky Encyclopedia
a project that consumed his life from 1988 to 1991 - Kleber was an obvious
choice for editor of The Encyclopedia of Louisville. In 1996, as he
was retiring from Morehead, Kleber was invited to coordinate and edit
the The Encyclopedia of Louisville.
Kleber
accepted the offer, returned to Louisville, and set up shop in an office
on the University of Louisville's Belknap Campus. This room with three
computers and a tree-lined view of the downtown skyline provided the
perfect setting for the project.
Kleber
is quick to clarify that he is not the author of the Encyclopedia. "This
is a community effort. I simply coordinated it. With five hundred writers
and fifteen other editors, this is something community did for itself
and gives to itself." He imagines that the total personality of
Louisville comes across through its pages. "The strengths and weaknesses
of the writers and editors reflect the strengths and weaknesses of Louisville."
Three associate
editors assisted Kleber in assembling and fine-tuning the Encyclopedia:
George Yater (author of 1987's Two Hundred Years at the Falls of the
Ohio: A History of Louisville and Jefferson County), Bellarmine University's
Clyde Crews (author of Spirited City: Essays in Louisville History),
and state historian laureate Thomas Clark.
"Several
cities around country have done urban encyclopedias," Kleber recounts.
"The first was Cleveland. The closest to Louisville is Indianapolis."
The early motivation for Louisville's version came "
came
from the University Press of Kentucky and the Thomas D. Clark Foundation.
Because of success of the Kentucky Encyclopedia, and because other cities
had done it, they thought Louisville could use one as well." Cities
such as Memphis have been trying for years to start such a project,
but either the funding or community cooperation hasn't come together.
Kleber believes the simple fact that The Encyclopedia of Louisville
exists is a testament to the city's uniqueness.
"Accuracy
was our greatest concern," Kleber explains, "but it's inevitable
that there are going to be mistakes in the book. We selected writers
who knew their material. We had a fact checker [for each piece] and
then it was read by the editor in the field. Everything was then read
by Clyde Crews, George Yater and Mary Jean Kinsman, the managing editor,
who all flagged things they caught. Some of the topics were so historically
specific that it comes down to the fact that only the person who wrote
[certain pieces] knows the truth. There are also occasions when records
have been passed down in an erroneous manner." Kleber credits the
Filson Club of Louisville with being responsible for much of the city's
records having been preserved.
As for
Kleber's hopes for how the book will be received, he's delighted that
the Mayor's Office is planning on giving them as gifts to visitors and
dignitaries. "It pulls together a lot of information about the
metropolitan area that's hard to find, and presents it in an easy manner
as one reference source. I would hope that it would be used by the people
of Louisville and give them a greater appreciation and understanding
of their city. I really want to see it in the hands of students. My
hope is that the things [people learn] will lead to raising more questions
and more future research."
©2000
Louisville Magazine, Inc / louisville.com / by Scott Ritcher
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