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# The Week Lexington Lined Up on Main Street to See a Dead Whale  
**Published:** 2026-07-02T03:30:35.000Z  
**Source:** [The Lexington Herald / Lexington Herald-Leader (April 1930 archive, Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330008)  
**AI-generated:** yes (claude-fable-5)  
**Canonical:** https://feeds.lexingtonky.news/article/goliath-whale-lexington-1930

On the morning of April 17, 1930, readers of The Lexington Herald found an unusual promise on the front page: the city was about to receive &#8220;the largest guest in its history.&#8221;

The guest was a whale. A dead one.

&#8220;Goliath,&#8221; a finback caught off San Clemente Island, about 65 miles southwest of Long Beach, California, was traveling America in a 72-foot, glass-enclosed railway car, courtesy of the Pacific Whaling Company, Inc. He arrived in Lexington from Louisville &#8212; &#8220;where for the past 10 days he has been shown to thousands of interested Kentuckians&#8221; &#8212; and was parked on the C&O spur tracks at East Main Street, on view from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. through Thursday. The company&#8217;s display ad promised that a giant searchlight would sweep the sky to guide Lexingtonians to the siding, where they would learn &#8220;more about this strange mammal that lives in the sea in 20 minutes than you can learn in a year from books.&#8221;

How big was Goliath? It depended on the day you bought a paper. The Herald&#8217;s first story said 55 feet and &#8220;more than 60 tons.&#8221; The next day he had grown to 70 tons. By Saturday he had settled at 66. What no one disputed was the spectacle: an embalmed leviathan &#8220;in a wonderfully preserved condition,&#8221; attended by Captain Lee Teller of the whaler *Hawk* &#8212; the man billed as having caught him &#8212; and two mates who lectured around the clock.

&#8220;&#8217;Have you seen the whale?&#8217; will be a Lexington slogan this afternoon,&#8221; the Herald wrote on April 21, over a photograph of the railcar, its slats painted in enormous letters: TRANSCONTINENTAL CAPTIVE WHALE.

The city obliged. Three thousand people filed past the first night alone, in a city of roughly 45,000. The Herald&#8217;s April 23 dispatch is a small masterpiece of the genre: &#8220;Jonah may or may not have been swallowed by a whale,&#8221; it began, &#8220;but according to Capt. Lee Teller last night, &#8217;Goliath&#8217; ... does not have a throat large enough to swallow anything but shrimp and sardines.&#8221; (Earlier in the week, readers had learned that &#8220;an ordinary grapefruit would choke it to death.&#8221;) The paper pronounced Goliath &#8220;the best looking whale ever to visit Lexington in his beautiful palatial railroad car,&#8221; adding, generously, that he &#8220;behaves very nicely.&#8221;

The whale-men worked the town like a political campaign. Col. Bill E. Green, traveling with the exhibit, turned up at the Lions Club luncheon at the Lafayette Hotel on April 23, explained &#8220;the habits of the whale,&#8221; and invited the entire club to come inspect Goliath as his guests. (He shared the program, in a pairing history could not improve upon, with University of Kentucky law professor Roy Moreland, lecturing on &#8220;The Right of Privacy, or The Right To Be Let Alone.&#8221; Goliath had neither.)

Teller&#8217;s lectures doubled as a portrait of an industry at its most mechanized and most doomed: 1,000-horsepower motor boats, harpoon cannons, hand grenades, compressed-air machines to inflate the carcass for towing, spotter airplanes, and factory mother ships that swallowed whales whole at the bow &#8220;as the whale was supposed to have swallowed Jonah.&#8221; There were 27 kinds of whales, he told crowds; only the sperm and killer whales had teeth. Goliath, a finback, had baleen.

Nobody in the rail yard seems to have dwelt on the arithmetic, but Lexington&#8217;s editorial readers got it anyway. That same week, the Herald-Leader&#8217;s opinion page reprinted an Atlanta Journal editorial on the international conference for the preservation of whales, noting some 30,000 were being killed a year &#8212; &#8220;whales cannot last at the present rate of extermination.&#8221; The finback that 3,000 Lexingtonians lined up to see was both an advertisement for that slaughter and, in embalmed retrospect, a preview of its endpoint.

By Sunday, Goliath had passed into local comedy. A Herald humor columnist recounted his wife announcing, &#8220;We are going to have a visit ... from a whale,&#8221; and his relief: &#8220;Thank the Lord, we thought you meant the stork.&#8221; Then the railcar rolled on &#8212; one stop on a barnstorming circuit of preserved whales that crisscrossed inland America around 1930, bringing the ocean&#8217;s largest animal to people who would never see the ocean.

Ninety-six years later, the visit has left no trace in Lexington&#8217;s public memory: no marker on Main Street, no mention in the standard local histories. Just four days in April when the biggest thing ever to visit the city sat on a siding downtown, smelling faintly of formaldehyde, behaving very nicely.

_Newspaper page images: original newsprint digitized by Newspapers.com; pages of this era are in the public domain._

## Sources

- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 17, 1930, p1 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330008)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 18, 1930, p2 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330046)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 19, 1930, p2 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330082)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 20, 1930, p27 display ad (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330159)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 21, 1930, p2 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330173)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 23, 1930, sec2 p6 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330257)
- [Lexington Herald-Leader, Apr 23, 1930, p18 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/686991869)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 24, 1930, p7 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330272)
- [Lexington Herald-Leader, Apr 15, 1930, p4 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/686990843)
- [The Lexington Herald, Apr 27, 1930, p25 (Newspapers.com)](https://www.newspapers.com/image/681330405)

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This local-history feature was researched and written by AI (claude-fable-5) from the April 1930 archives of The Lexington Herald and Lexington Herald-Leader, read page-by-page in the Newspapers.com archive. Every quotation is transcribed from the original newsprint; each source clipping is linked. Clipping links may require a Newspapers.com subscription.

