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Crawfish Bottom: Recovering a Lost Kentucky Community

Contributor(s): Boyd, Douglas A (Author), Brundage, W Fitzhugh (Foreword by)

ISBN: 9780813134086

Publisher: University Press of Kentucky

Hardcover
$45.00
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Pub Date: July 25, 2011

Dewey: 976.9432

LCCN: 2011017089

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index, Maps, Table of Contents

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.90" H x 9.29" L x 6.40" W ( 1.20 lbs) 240 pages

Series: Kentucky Remembered: An Oral History

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

A small neighborhood in northern Frankfort, Kentucky, Crawfish Bottom was located on fifty acres of swampy land along the Kentucky River. "Craw's" reputation for vice, violence, moral corruption, and unsanitary conditions made it a target for urban renewal projects that replaced the neighborhood with the city's Capital Plaza in the mid-1960s.

Douglas A. Boyd's Crawfish Bottom: Recovering a Lost Kentucky Community traces the evolution of the controversial community that ultimately saw four-hundred families displaced. Using oral histories and firsthand memories, Boyd not only provides a record of a vanished neighborhood and its culture but also demonstrates how this type of study enhances the historical record. A former Frankfort police officer describes Craw's residents as a "rough class of people, who didn't mind killing or being killed." In Crawfish Bottom, the former residents of Craw acknowledge the popular misconceptions about their community but offer a richer and more balanced view of the past.

Brief description: Douglas A. Boyd, director of the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History at the University of Kentucky, is a coeditor of Community Memories: A Glimpse of African American Life in Frankfort, Kentucky.

Review Quotes:

"Winner of the Clay Lancaster Heritage Education Award given by the Bluegrass Trust for Historic Preservation" --

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