This Day in Lexington
This day in Lexington history, on May 14, we remember two moments that shaped Kentucky in very different ways.
In eighteen oh four, William Clark and forty-two men pushed off from Camp Dubois, heading downriver to meet up with Meriwether Lewis in Missouri. That journey up the Missouri River became one of America's greatest expeditions, opening the West and changing the nation's course. Clark, of course, was a Kentuckian through and through, and the whole enterprise started with Kentucky know-how and Kentucky grit.
But May 14th also holds a harder memory. In nineteen eighty-eight, a drunk driver going the wrong way on Interstate seventy-one near Carrollton collided with a converted school bus carrying a church youth group. Twenty-seven people lost their lives in the crash and the fire that followed. It remains one of the deadliest traffic accidents in Kentucky history, a tragedy that shook our state and reminded us of how fragile things can be.
Two very different stories, two very different lessons.
That's your history for today.
Listen live: The Lexington Times runs a 24/7 local news livestream — watch on YouTube or on Facebook. This transcript is from a recent on-air segment.