robinklaene – Kenton Library https://www.kentonlibrary.org A BiblioWeb Site Mon, 24 Feb 2025 21:42:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://cor-liv-cdn-static.bibliocommons.com/images/KY-KENTON/favicon.ico?1747311345106 robinklaene – Kenton Library https://www.kentonlibrary.org 32 32 Foundation Celebrates Achievements in 2024, Paves Way for Future https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/foundation-celebrates-achievements-in-2024-paves-way-for-future/ Mon, 24 Feb 2025 21:42:23 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=31566 Written by: Emily Wherle, Director of Communications and PR/St. Elizabeth Healthcare; KCPL Foundation Board member 

The Kenton County Public Library Foundation has a lot to celebrate from 2024, which happened to be my first year on the Foundation board.

Some highlights of our work last year include:

  • Promoting childhood literacy: Last fall, we sorted and hand-delivered more than 2,200 books to kindergartners at public and private schools throughout the county. Additionally, last spring, we entered into a partnership with the Dolly Parton Imagination Library to provide books to children up to age five at no cost, mailed monthly to their homes for them to keep.
  • Honoring a local educator: We presented the Mary Ann Mongan Literacy Award to Shawna Harney, Chief Academic Officer with the Kenton County School District. In her 27 years in education, Harney has led efforts around safety, literacy and staff development. And her staff pulled off a surprise award presentation at River Ridge Elementary in November!
  • A new library branch in Latonia: We provided financial support towards the library’s new branch in Latonia. The new space will feature a large meeting room, multiple small study rooms, a generous children’s, teen and adult areas, and a comprehensive collection of materials.

The 12 members of the Foundation board share a common understanding that libraries are more than just a place for reading, they can help connect and empower communities.

The Foundation is a charitable organization created in 2001 to support, encourage and enhance library programs. It can provide a source of funding for library programs outside of the county library tax and other government funding streams.

If, like me, you’ve benefited from the resources and programs at the library, I encourage you to support the Kenton County Public Library Foundation’s work in 2025 and beyond. As a community-driven institution, libraries rely on our support. Consider making a donation to invest in this work and help ensure the library’s stability to serve future generations.

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Lifelong Educator Shawna Harney Honored with Mary Ann Mongan Literacy Award https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/lifelong-educator-shawna-harney-honored-with-mary-ann-mongan-literacy-award/ Mon, 18 Nov 2024 19:21:41 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=30434 Shawna Harney, Chief Academic Officer for the Kenton County School District, was presented with the Mary Ann Mongan Literacy Award today in recognition of her exceptional contributions to literacy and educational excellence in Kenton County. The award ceremony highlighted Harney’s 27 years of dedicated service to the district and her unwavering commitment to improving student outcomes.

“I am honored to win this award,” stated Harney.

The Mary Ann Mongan Literacy Award, established in 2009, honors individuals who have demonstrated outstanding dedication to literacy in Kenton County. Named after Mary Ann Mongan, the first Executive Director of the Kenton County Public Library, this award celebrates the legacy of her work in education and literacy. Harney’s leadership in driving literacy initiatives, including the implementation of the Read to Succeed Act and the Multi-Tiered System of Support (MTSS), aligns perfectly with the values Mongan instilled in the community.

“I can’t think of anyone more deserving of this award than Shawna,” said Dave Schroeder, Executive Director of the Kenton County Public Library. “Her tireless work has transformed the educational landscape in Kenton County. Shawna’s commitment to student literacy, safety, and overall academic excellence has made a profound impact on the lives of countless children, educators, and families. She embodies the spirit of the Mary Ann Mongan Literacy Award and continues to inspire us all.”

Under Harney’s leadership, the Kenton County School District has seen significant growth in student literacy, particularly with the district’s implementation of Kentucky’s Read to Succeed Act, which aims to ensure students are reading on grade level. She has also spearheaded initiatives to improve special education services and behavioral support, as well as foster professional development opportunities for educators throughout the district.

Harney’s leadership has been instrumental in the development of MTSS, a framework that addresses the diverse academic and behavioral needs of students, ensuring that all students receive the individualized support they need to succeed. In addition, her work with the district’s Community-Based Accountability System has brought together educators, students, parents, and community members to collaboratively assess student progress and improve educational outcomes.

The presentation took place Friday, November 15, at Kenton County Independent School District’s River Ridge Elementary School.  To see a complete list of recipients visit, https://www.kentonlibrary.org/mary-ann-mongan-award-winners/

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Author visit with Crystal Wilkinson https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/author-visit-with-crystal-wilkinson/ Tue, 13 Aug 2024 21:04:25 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=29032 Join us at the Erlanger Branch on Tuesday, August 27, as Crystal Wilkinson, former Kentucky Poet Laureate, reads from her new book Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts and discusses the themes of families, stories, and bonding in the kitchen. A reception for Crystal will begin at 6:30 p.m., and her talk will begin at 7 p.m. Q&A and a book signing will follow the presentation. 

Years ago, when O. Henry Prize-winning writer Crystal Wilkinson was baking a jam cake, she felt her late grandmother’s presence. She soon realized that she was not the only cook in her kitchen; her ancestors were also stirring, measuring, and braising alongside her. These are her kitchen ghosts, five generations of Black women who settled in Appalachia and made a life, a legacy, and a cuisine.

As the keeper of her family’s stories and treasured dishes, Wilkinson shares her inheritance in Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts. She found their stories in her apron pockets, floating inside the steam of hot mustard greens and tucked into the sweet scent of clove and cinnamon in her kitchen. Part memoir, part cookbook, Praisesong for the Kitchen Ghosts weaves those stories together with recipes, family photos, and a lyrical imagination to present a culinary portrait of a family that has lived and worked the earth of the mountains for over a century.

Visit the list below for a list of books by Crystal Wilkinson and similar authors. Click on the title to place a hold. 

African American Cooking: Recipes and Stories

List created by Robinck

 











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Historic Tour Recounts Covington’s Scandals & Mayhem https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/historic-tour-recounts-covingtons-scandals-mayhem/ Fri, 13 Oct 2023 14:11:53 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=23472 Staff of the Local History & Genealogy Department conducted a tour a few years ago entitled Scandals & Mayhem. This tour featured some of the more infamous stories of Covington residents. The following are the notes from the history staff who led the tour that you can follow if you would like to do your own tour. To learn more about future history programs and events, call (859) 962-4070, email history@kentonlibrary.org or visit the events link on the website at kentonlibrary.org

Warning! This tour will discuss adult content including murder, suicide, and scandals!

Licking Riverside Neighborhood 

Licking Riverside Historic District boundaries are Fourth Street to the north, Scott Street, Eighth Street to the south, and the Licking River. Bungalow/Craftsman, Second Empire, and Italianate are the primary architectural styles of the district.

The City of Covington was founded in 1815 with 6th Street as the southern boundary. The area was largely undeveloped until the 1840s. The first major building, which still stands today on Sanford Street, was built by Reverend William Orr for his Female Academy.

In the 1850s, we begin to see prominent Covington residents constructing large family homes on Greenup.  The area along the Licking River and Garrard is developed by Jonathan Hearne in the 1870s with homes being built through the early 1900s. Then by the dawn of the 20th Century the multifamily homes and apartment buildings become new additions to the neighborhood.

The neighborhood officially becomes part of the National Register of Historic Places in August 1975. Other prominent houses in this district include the Ernst House and the Grant House. This neighborhood also includes the Baker Hunt Art Academy, LaSalette Academy, and First United Methodist Church.

Hearne House - 5th and Garrard Streets

The Hearn house is a two and one-half story, red-brick home constructed in 1874. It is a Georgian style home. The home was built for Jonathan David Hearne. Hearn was a successful businessman who moved to Covington around 1861.        

In the 1960’s a bridge over the Licking River at Fifth Street was proposed by the Northern Kentucky Area Planning Commission. By 1973, controversial meetings were held by the Highway Department to construct a 5th Street Bridge between Covington and Newport. The plans called for the demolition of the Hearn House. Newport was in support of the bridge, and Covington was deeply divided.

Residents of the neighborhood were deeply opposed to the demolition of the Hearne House. To combat the demolition of the 100-year-old home in 1974 neighborhood residents listed the Hearne House in the National Register of Historic Places. In 1975, the Licking Riverside Neighborhood was listed on the National Register of historic places. By listing the neighborhood, residents could argue that the proposed bridge would destroy the historic character of the entire neighborhood.

A small group of business owners in Covington and interested parties in Newport were in favor of the Hearne House being demolished. Traffic studies were conducted that said that moving the bridge to 5th street would enhance traffic flow and spur economic development between the neighboring cities. Luckily, the bridge never became a reality.

Mr. Wesberry Galvin – Suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning, 425 Garrard Street

     

In the early morning hours of April 26, 1938, L.M. Highhouse and William Crumbley were walking down Sanford Alley when they noticed smoke leaking out of the closed garage behind 425 Garrard Street. They broke open the garage doors and to find Wesberry Galvin - the 32-year-old son of Maurice L. Galvin, a prominent attorney and Republican leader in Kentucky, in the back seat of the running car. They notified the police and Life Squad, and he was taken to St. Elizabeth, but he was dead on arrival.

His father had been on a business trip to Louisville, but his stepmother was in the house at the time of his death. Wesberry was a control operator for the WCKY radio station, which was owned by his uncle L.B. Wilson, and had ended his shift at 1:00 am, according to friends. According to his friends, Wesberry had been in good spirits in the weeks leading up to his death. He was fond of bird dogs and kept a kennel on his father’s farm on Shaw Road in Independence.

Several months later in November his estate was settled in Kenton County and was valued at $3,125 ($56,282 - 2018 value).

 4th Street Bridge – Dr. John Mackoy Leaped into Eternity

On Thursday, November 5, 1885, Dr. John Mackoy Jr. committed suicide by jumping from the Covington and Newport Bridge into the Licking River. He committed the deed while under a temporary fit of insanity brought on by excessive use of alcoholic drinks.

The death of his mother Elizabeth two years before his suicide weighed heavily on Dr. Mackoy. Elizabeth died from a fall down the stairs at their home at 907 Madison Avenue. Town gossip ran wild, and rumors swirled that Dr. Mackoy had pushed her down the stairs to her death in a drunken fit. Gossip was that she had to have been pushed and suffered a fractured skull on the way down the stairs.

Witnesses to his leap, stated that he looked nervous and excited as he walked toward the bridge. He went out on to the bridge without paying his toll. He walked to the middle of the bridge, took of his coat, mounted the railing and leaped. He struck one of the telephone-wires on the way down, which caused him to turn wildly before he reached the water. His body never rose to the surface. In fact, his body was never found, and his grave remains empty at Linden Grove Cemetery.

Drawing from the Cincinnati Enquirer, November 6, 1885.

We have several papers and documents related to the Mackoy family in our GeNKY database. We also have Mackoy family photographs in our Faces and Places online collection

 

Governors Point Neighborhood - Garrard and Park Place (Alley)

The act incorporating the town of Covington was signed into law by Governor Isaac Shelby on February 8, 1815.  Land sale of lots began in the month following and the first official plot, marking many of the same property lines if not buildings that we will talk about today on the northern part of this tour, were filed in the Campbell County Courthouse in August of that year. 

Covington’s rapid growth led to its official status as a city by 1834 and the first city council election occurred that same year.  Mortimer Benton served as the city’s first mayor, and the council proceeded to divide the growing area into wards in addition to naming the streets in honor of the Governors of Kentucky.  Shelby, Garrard, Greenup, Scott, and Madison are all a testament to that time. 

Some of this early neighborhood is also referred to as The Point or Governor’s Point. Houses range in age from the mid-1800s to the early 1900s. Prominent houses include the Carneal House, Shinkle Mansion (later the site of Booth Memorial Hospital), the Graziani House, Dabney House, Uriah Shinkle House, and the Louise Southgate House, among many others.

 Mrs. Esther Traylor – Suicide by poisoning at 225 Garrard Street

Esther Traylor (nee Bivin) was born around Lexington, KY to Thomas O. and Augusta Bivin in 1905. She lived at 225 Garrard Street.

She was an employee of the Gibson Hotel on Jackson Street in Cincinnati. On July 7, 1934, a bartender of the hotel, Mr. Hugh Meyers, age 31, escorted her home. Upon arriving home, she went into her kitchen, came out a few minutes later, laughed, and remarked “I’ve taken poison.” Mr. Meyers said that he laughed also, after which Esther said, “I’ll show you.” She went into the kitchen again, returned with another bottle and drank the remainder of its contents before Mr. Meyers had time to stop her.

He called the police, and as she was being taken into St. Elizabeth Hospital, collapsed and died as a result of the poison. According to the coroner’s report, Esther drank Lysol and Fowler’s Solution of Arsenic. 

She left behind her husband, Joseph H. Traylor, and a 10-year-old son Joseph H., Jr., who lived with her parents in Lexington. She was buried in Lexington Cemetery in Lexington, KY, and her headstone reads: “Our Darling Esther Mae Bivin Traylor.”

 Thomas Conry - 202 Garrard Street 

Thomas Conry, resident of 202 Garrard Street, was found dead a little bit after midnight on January 1, 1943, at his Liquor Store at 417 Pike Street. He was 73 years old.

Conry had been shot in the neck. He was discovered around 12:30 AM by William C. Devere, a guard at the Covington Filtration Plant in Fort Thomas. He was in Covington looking for two men who failed to show up for work. (They were probably out drinking on New Years Eve.)

The robbers failed to take any money from Conry’s store. There was still $100 in the cash register and additional money hidden elsewhere in the store was accounted for by police.

For several months the case went unsolved until 15-year-old Clara Minch came forward. Clara was the young wife of 20-year-old Oliver Minch. Clara confessed to authorities that her and Oliver had entered the store on New Years Eve. Her husband became enraged when he thought Thomas Conry was flirting with his wife. He demanded money from Conry, who refused, and Minch shot him.

Oliver Minch pled guilty to the murder of Thomas Conry as well as four other indictments. The other four consisted of two for armed robbery, and two for automobile thefts. He was sentenced to life in prison. He served only 12 years in Eddyville Penitentiary before he was released on parole. For unknown reasons he returned to Eddyville prison, and he died there at the age of 47 of cancer.

Clara Minch was charged with being an accessory before and after the fact of murder. She also was held under a charge of delinquency. Charges were eventually dropped against her.

Booth Hospital – Shinkle Mansion

Image: di27950 - Shinkle
Shinkle Mansion from Faces and Places

93-Year-Old Peter Shinkle caused quite the scandal in 1883. How does a 93-year-old man cause quite a stir you ask? Peter Shinkle decided to marry Martha Bedgood, a woman 43 years his junior! To understand this scandal, you need to know more about the Shinkle family.

Peter Shinkle was born in Brown County, Ohio around 1795. In 1813 at the age of 18 he married Sarah “Sally” Day in Clermont County, Ohio. They had at least six known children. The family moved to Covington around 1847. Peter and Sarah’s son Amos, was the most prosperous of the children. Amos made a lot of his fortune in the coal, and steamboat business. His father and brothers were not as successful in business, but they remained a strong and close family. In the 1860s Amos bought a property at the corner of 2nd and Kennedy and constructed a large Gothic Revival Mansion. The mansion was torn down in the 1920s to create the present Boothe Memorial Hospital. The building is now luxury condos.

Sarah Shinkle died in 1874. Almost seven years later, Peter Shinkle meets Martha Bedgoode, a widow, who is 43 years younger than Peter. Amos and his siblings do not approve of the match. In fact, they conspire against the couple by bribing the local county clerks to not issue a couple a marriage license. Peter and Martha decide to board a train for Louisville and get married there on April 2, 1882.

Amos and his siblings are livid, and because Peter had been living with Amos and working for Amos for the last several decades, Amos decides to kick his father out of his house. Peter in retaliation decides to sue his son Amos for back wages for working for Amos without pay from 1849-1883.

A judgment was settled between Amos and his father Peter in which was due $18,840. Amos had only paid his father $2,111 by the time Peter died in November of 1886. Peter had only been married for 4 years when Peter died. Martha became the executrix of his estate, and for two years demanded in court the $16,729 be paid immediately to the estate by Amos. The newspapers referred to Martha as Amos’s mother. Which I’m sure insulted and angered Amos Shinkle. Martha was 15 years younger than him!

Grey Lady Urban Legend - Carneal House

The Carneal House is the oldest historic residence in Covington, located at 405 E. 2nd Street. Thomas D. Carneal built the sprawling structure in 1815, the same year the city of Covington was founded. The home is a two story and built in the Italianate-Federalist Style. The rear wing was added in 1835, and the home has been remodeled numerous times since.

The “Lady in Grey” is said to haunt the Carneal Estate. Popular legend states that a young lady committed suicide on the property after being rejected for a dance with the visiting Marquis de Lafayette.

This story sounds spooky, and romantic, but it’s actually just a historically inaccurate urban legend. The Marquis de Lafayette did visit Kentucky between 1824-1825. William Wright Southgate and his family were living in the house at the time of his visit. However, historians believe that Lafayette did not visit this house, in fact, he may have never come to Covington at all! He actually visited the home of William Southgate’s wife Mrs. Adelizza Keen Southgate in Lexington!

Mr. Hobert L. Bingham – Suicide at the Riverview Hotel

We know this house as the Graziani House. It was built in French Victorian style by Howell Lewis Lovell of the Lovell & Buffington Tobacco Company, whose factory once sat on the 200 block of Scott Boulevard (where the parking garage is today).

Benjamin F. Graziani, a prominent Covington attorney in the late 19th and 20th centuries, who lived in this house until the early 1900s. It later became the Riverview Hotel, where Mr. Hobert L. Bingham, a 39-year-old divorced man who worked as a helper to a plumber, resided. On January 5, 1947, Mr. Hobert was found in the basement of the Riverview Hotel by Mary Jane Griffin, daughter of the hotel owner, when he did not show up for breakfast that Sunday morning. He had shot himself in the forehead with a .22 caliber rifle, though the shot did not end his life. He was still alive when Ms. Griffin found him, and he was taken by the Life Squad to Booth Hospital, where he died several hours later at 3:00 pm.

According to the coroner, he had a phone conversation with his mother, Mrs. Maude Bingham, around 11:00 pm the night before. The coroner, Dr. Riffe, inferred that Mr. Bingham was despondent over the death of his father and brothers. His father had died of a heart attack just a few months prior in September of 1946; his oldest brother William died in 1944 of pulmonary tuberculosis; and his youngest brother Ernest died while serving in WWII in 1942.

As if three deaths in the family were not tragic enough, Hobert’s mother Maude passed away just a year and a half later (in May of 1948) of thyroid cancer. In a span of 6 years, this family lost 5 loved ones. Mr. Bingham was buried in his native Grant County, KY in Gardnersville Cemetery.

We found Hobert L. Bingham in the Kenton County Coroner Inquest Records in GeNKY. 

Kentucky's Mayhem, Scandals & Spooks

 
















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Read to Your Baby & Bond with Your Baby https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/read-to-your-baby-bond-with-your-baby/ Tue, 01 Mar 2022 10:00:59 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=9724 As a new parent, there is nothing more important than bonding with your baby. The Kenton County Public Library has partnered with the St. Elizabeth Healthcare to provide you with a few tips to help in that journey.

Read to your Baby

Cuddling with a book allows babies to hear sounds, rhythms and words and use their senses—listening, seeing, touching. Soon your baby may begin cooing or making noises when reading together. Reading is Fundamental has a great resource for developmental milestones you may achieve by introducing books early on in their life. 

Have a Library of Books

Ask for books as gifts for your baby. Visit the library's used book sales and ask friends for any they no longer need. 

Get a Library Card

You, and your baby, can each get a free library cardAnyone over the age of 18 living in the Commonwealth of Kentucky or within the Greater Northern Kentucky/Cincinnati area can get a library card for Kenton County. Residents under 18 will be issued a limited card unless there is a parent or guardian to sign permission for a full-service card. 

There are never fines on overdue books at KCPL. However should an item become lost or damaged, the patron will be charged a replacement fee. 

Visit a Storytime

Developmentally appropriate books, songs and playtime are part of this fun, free weekly activity for babies. Visit kentonlibrary.org/events for details. To glance at the month's worth of programs, click here

Make Reading a Habit

Get into a habit of reading daily. Maybe it's when the baby wakes up, or after bath time, or before bedtime, or all of those times! Getting into a habit of reading will be something you both look forward to daily. 

Have more questions? Please contact the library at (859) 962-4000 or chat with us during business hours online. 

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Library Receives Grant to Help Get People Back to Work https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/library-receives-grant-to-help-get-people-back-to-work/ Thu, 23 Sep 2021 17:27:01 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=4194

The Kenton County Public Library is the recent recipient of a Dislocated Workers Grant from the U.S. Department of Labor. According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s website, the Dislocated Workers Grants are discretionary grants awarded by the Secretary of Labor, under Section 170 of Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA). DWGs provide resources to states and other eligible applicants to respond to large, unexpected layoff events causing significant job losses. The grant awarded to the library was $46,500 and will run through June 2021.

The Kenton County Public Library has a strong program for job seekers of all levels of employment, from entry-level to tenured professional. The library was selected because of its proven track record of success and commitment to educational and enrichment opportunities for those looking for employment or changing careers. In December 2020 alone, the library assisted more than 1,000 people through its programs, services, and classes for job seekers.

Grant funding has allowed the library to hire three part-time individuals titled Career Change Navigators. Natalie Ruppert, MLIS oversees the library’s Workforce Development program and states how this opportunity will help those in our community. “Since the pandemic disrupted so many businesses, we have more and more people every day contact us about our programs relating to employment opportunities. With the Dislocated Workers Grant, we can now double the number of staff we have to better assist jobseekers.”

Career Change Navigators are able to help individuals with:

  • Creating and updating resumés
  • Learning job search techniques
  • Developing interviewing and networking skills
  • Identifying job opportunities
  • Researching companies that are hiring
  • Suggesting library classes and courses to build their skills

The Career Change Navigators hired with this Dislocated Workers Grant bring a broad range of skills to job seekers. Nancy Knauf of Newport, Kentucky arrives at the library after a 20+ year career in marketing and advertising. She worked with Turfway Park, Cincinnati Bell, and most recently as a Kindermusik business owner and teacher. Nancy’s background in marketing will help job seekers highlight their best attributes as they look for employment.

Garry McGuire of Florence, Kentucky, has spent most of his career in the Human Resources and Employee Relations area. The last stop on his corporate career journey was with the Cincinnati Reds. Garry has hired hundreds of employees for numerous employers over the past 30 years and knows what employers are looking for in employees.

Dawn Shoemaker has been working 10+ years in library services within several different states and systems. She began her library career in Spartanburg, South Carolina, shelving books while in college and continued from there. Dawn moved from South Carolina to the Northern Kentucky area and worked at Clermont County Public Library. Beyond the library world, Dawn most recently worked for Amazon where she was a Problem Solver and Ambassador.

“I’m very excited to work with the Kenton County Public Library and bring my many years of library service experience to my role here,” said Dawn.  “I genuinely love helping people, building relationships in the community, and promoting libraries as vital parts of that community.  I believe what Kenton County Public Library has accomplished with workforce thus far is an amazing example of that, especially considering the pandemic and I am grateful to now be a part of that.”

Anyone needing more information about the Career and Job Services programs at the library, or want to meet with a Career Change Navigator please contact us!

For a complete listing of resources, classes, job fairs and more, please visit kentonlibrary.org/job-search-central.

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Over 100,000 Local Historical Photos Available Online https://www.kentonlibrary.org/blogs/post/over-100000-local-historical-photos-available-online/ Fri, 04 Jun 2021 18:23:42 +0000 https://www.kentonlibrary.org/?p=1076

They say a photo is worth a 1,000 words. If that’s true, then the Kenton County Public Library has 100 thousand stories to tell!Covington Kindergarten

The Library’s online historic photo album, Faces and Places, just added the 100,000th photo to its database. The photo, from the former Kentucky Post, is dated March 14, 1975 and features a man named Bill Penick. Why is Bill Penick’s photo important? Because he, most likely inadvertently, is now forever a part of Kentucky history. This photo is just one of thousands preserved digitally for all to see, and share, online via the Faces and Places website, www.kentonlibrary.org/facesandplaces.

March 2016 marked the 10th anniversary of Faces and Places, a unique online historical photo album that highlights the people, places and events of Kentucky (and some Cincinnati).  Since its inception a decade ago, the Faces and Places website has received over 9.2 million views. There are 100,411 images, 6,508 subject headings and 2,023 comments on the photos. “Comments are important,” stated Elaine Kuhn, Local History & Genealogy Services Coordinator for the Library. “They give us information that might help someone discover something new when doing research.”

This online album was created when the history staff at the Kenton County Public Library began digitizing some of its resources. They were digitizing documents and family files so that genealogy researchers around the world could obtain the information they needed without having to incur the cost of travel expenses. The staff then added photos to the mix, therefore creating Faces and Places.

The popularity of the photograph collection easily lent itself to a digital format. As such, staff scanned the photos and staff and volunteers did the indexing. When the Kentucky Post, a daily newspaper, ceased publication they donated over 60,000 photographs to the Kenton County Public Library. Staff and volunteers began adding those to the database, using keywords and subject headings to make searching easier.

Girl Scout Troop 1947Faces and Places is searchable by keyword, surname, address, city, or subject. As the database became more well-known in the community, other area residents began donating photos to the library. One of the more significant collections was a local photography studio who donated over 1,000 photographs of greater Cincinnati scenes from the 1910’s to the 1950’s. Because of the accessibility of the photographs through the database, many have been used by local authors, in local history books, by the media, by teachers and students and by museums and local businesses.

Steven J. Rolfes has used Faces and Places for his “Images of America” books.  “The Faces and Places database has provided several wonderful photos for each of my books. A lot of the photos are not available any other place, or if they are available, the cost for using the photos is astronomical,” said Rolfes. “This is a fantastic resource, and I am very thankful for it.”

Located in the former Coppin’s Department store, developers for the Hotel Covington used Faces and Places to remind guests of hotel’s original purpose. “The Faces and Places database was an immensely helpful resource for our work in developing an authentic and true identity for Hotel Covington,” stated Michelle Spelman, Brand Strategy Consultant for Hotel Covington. “Historic images of  Coppin’s department store helped us to capture the essence of Coppin’s role in the community. We were inspired to find ways to celebrate that heritage in the property’s physical renewal and in the crafting of tailored customer experiences at Hotel Covington. Those images also helped us create a beautiful website, inspired original artwork, and printed materials that authentically tell the story of Hotel Covington and Coppin’s.”

With images of Riverfront Stadium, former presidents, historical homesteads and families, the most viewed photo is not one you would expect.  You can also check out the most viewed photos

As social media flourished, so did sharing of photos online through avenues such as Facebook. People would search their family name and see photos of their great grandparents and share. The Library’s IT department created the interface to be very user friendly. It allows patrons to make comments on the photos, to post them directly to social media and to send them to others via email. Photos have appeared on Facebook and Instagram. All photos have a KCPL watermark to signify the collection belongs to the library.

The Library’s Local History and Genealogy Department are continually looking for photos to add to the Faces and Places collection. They encourage people to donate photos or film negatives to add to the collection. Those wanting to share their photos but not donate them can send in scanned digital images on CD or through email. Digital images must be scanned at 300 dpi and saved in JPEG format.

Kenton County Public Library serves 163,000 people and has invested significantly in serving the Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati region. It also houses one of the largest collections of local history in Kentucky in its Covington Library, located at 502 Scott Boulevard. Call (859) 962-4070 to learn more about the Library’s Local History and Genealogy Department.

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