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John Hunt Morgan Memorial

Morgan, John Hunt, Memorial
John Hunt Morgan memorial - Lexington, Kentucky - DSC09084.JPG
Location Lexington, Kentucky
Coordinates 38°2′51.4″N 84°29′54.82″W / 38.047611°N 84.4985611°W / 38.047611; -84.4985611Coordinates: 38°2′51.4″N 84°29′54.82″W / 38.047611°N 84.4985611°W / 38.047611; -84.4985611
Built 1911
Architect Pompeo Coppini
MPS Civil War Monuments of Kentucky MPS
NRHP reference # 97000704
Added to NRHP July 17, 1997

The John Hunt Morgan Memorial in Lexington, Kentucky, is a monument created as a tribute to Confederate General John Hunt Morgan, who was from Lexington and is buried in nearby Lexington Cemetery.

With the help of the state government of Kentucky, the United Daughters of the Confederacy erected the monument on October 18, 1911 on what was then the courthouse lawn. The bronze statue was cast in Brooklyn, New York, at a cost of $15,000. The state of Kentucky contributed $7,500 of the cost because the UDC was unable to raise all of the funds promised. The ceremony included a parade of 400 veterans. The pedestal is of granite. The monument was dedicated by Morgan's brother-in-law Basil W. Duke, master of ceremonies, and keynote speaker Dr. Guy Carleton Lee, a third cousin of Robert E. Lee. Also in attendance were John Castleman, and Morgan's brothers Charlton and Dick. Of the monuments of the American Civil War in Kentucky, it is the only one with a soldier on horseback.

Morgan's horse, Black Bess, was a mare, but sculptor Pompeo Coppini thought a stallion was more appropriate. Coppini said, "No hero should bestride a mare!". Therefore, Coppini added the necessary testicles. Undergraduates from nearby University of Kentucky have been known to paint the testicles of the horse in the school colors of blue and white. An anonymous author wrote the "Ballad of Black Bess", which ended with:


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