In the early twentieth century, brick houses associated with two prominent East End residents - John Caulder and William Perkins - stood on this site. Caulder, who lived at 505 East Third Street, was the principal of Constitution Elementary…

In 1904, the Trustees of the Colored Public Schools petitioned the city council to use funds from taxes paid by African Americans to build the East End’s Constitution School (also known as Colored School No. 2). The resultant brick, vaguely…

The parcel on N. Upper St. where the Dunbar Community Center is presently situated has contained several notable buildings over the past century. In 1901, it was the location of the Blue Grass Commission Co. Feed and Meal Mill; by 1907, the Society…