Frankfort Heritage Press
Historic Frankfort: Yesterday and Today
$39.95 + shipping
"This book is formatted as a visual trip down some of Frankfort's most used byways. The reader automatically gets updated from the past, confronted by historic images of trolley tracks, horse-drawn vehicles, unpaved streets, awning-covered entrances, telephone poles, and wooden bridges. Through the photography of Dr. Gene Burch we explore the 21st Century Frankfort of today." Russell Hatter
This book was the best seller at the 2009 Kentucky Book Fair. Order online or by calling (502) 223-1671.
Introduction
This book is about change. In a very unsystematic, hit-and-miss fashion it documents change in Frankfort, Kentucky. By comparing images made long ago and recently, it is easy to see change. It is harder to see progress. While some comparisons do reveal what any rational person would perceive as improvements, far too many of them -- in the view of the dedicated historic preservationists who have prepared this book -- reveal loss to the community. Loss of fine old buildings; loss of neighborhoods; loss of community; loss of inspiration; loss of memory; loss of individuality and variety; loss of creativity.
In selecting the scenes shown on these pages, we genuinely tried not to be crusaders for the cause of historic preservation. We left out a lot of images available to us that were -- especially in the modern views -- just too dull, unattractive, and unappealing. Similarly, we have tried not to preach the preservation cause overmuch in the text and captions. But in some instances, the examples of bad planning, poor taste, over-zealous commercialism, and wrong-headedness just could not be ignored -- visually or verbally.
Our intent is most certainly not to offend. Our intent is to give pause. We hope most fervently that someone faced with a decision that will change the appearance of this town -- change the environment in which we live -- will pause long enough to think through his or her plans fully. Perhaps a little of what makes Frankfort such an appealing place in which to live and to visit will thus be preserved. Perhaps another link to the lives and times of our ancestors will be saved. Perhaps something meant to be permanent will be allowed to fulfill its fate. It is good to note that many groups of images here reveal little change in areas where it wasn’t needed or desired -- some good things do stay the same. We are convinced that there are enough of these views to make this book a pleasure for most anyone who turns its pages.
Please do not accuse us of being lovers of things that are old just because they are old. We recognize the need for human beings to change the settings in which they live and work. We understand the past well enough to know that we do now want to live in it -- we don’t long for the "good old days" of cholera epidemics, slavery, buildings without electric lighting and air conditioning, and horse manure on the streets. But we do like seeing structures and scenes that remind us of from whence and from whom we have come.
Two-Page Spread Sample
In writing this book, the need for human beings to be particularly careful about how we treat our built environment became obvious to us, because we saw resting heavily upon the history of this community the peril that so destructively threatens people, their buildings, and their objects. Fire has touched nearly every block in this town, and we encountered accounts of fires time after time in doing the research and writing the captions for this book. With the danger of unreasoning, sudden, inhuman destruction so close by so often, it behooves us to demolish with extraordinary prudence.
It behooves the word-crafters who have worked on this book to salute the member of our little team who has done so much to make the book possible. Dr. Gene Burch repaired the damage time had done to many of the vintage images shown here, and he made every single one of the modern-day photographs -- nearly all expressly for this project. He spent a lot of time on the sidewalks of Frankfort -- not to mention old staircases and nearly inaccessible rooftops -- trying to duplicate as exactly as possible the perspectives revealed in the historic photographs. We think he did a remarkably good job. He even shed blood for the project, crunching his cranium against a beam in a dark attic. While Mr. Hatter and I certainly toiled and came near to shedding tears now and then, Dr. Burch did most of the sweating and all the bleeding.
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