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Kentucky State Parks

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Isaac Shelby Cemetery State Historic Site
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ISAAC SHELBY CEMETERY STATE HISTORIC SITE
ISAAC SHELBY CEMETERY STATE HISTORIC SITE
6725 KY Hwy. 300
Junction City, Kentucky   40484

Phone: 502-564-4940
The smallest park in the park system where the -acre burial grounds of the Shelby family sits amid the peaceful countryside of Lincoln Country. The stone-walled cemetery contains the monument and resting place of Kentucky's first and fifth governor, Isaac Shelby 1750-1826, along with the 22 graves of his wife and family. They rest in what Shelby once called, the most beautiful land he had ever seen when first visiting KY as a surveyor in 1775.

Before leaving the area, he cleared cane, planted corn, and improved the grounds so that he could secure his claim to it. The 1,400 acres were officially granted to him in 1780 and his home, Traveller's Rest, was completed in 1786. Upon his death, Shelby was buried in the cemetery of his estate.

The home was destroyed by fire in 1906, but the original detached brick kitchen still stands on private property and can be seen from a distance while visiting the site.
History of the Area
Isaac Shelby, soldier, statesman, and surveyor, was Kentuckys first governor. He served from 1792 to 1796 and was re-elected in 1812. Shelby came to Kentucky in 1774 when he was hired by the Transylvania Company to survey the new Kentucky territory. In exchange for his services as a surveyor, Shelby was given his choice of land in the new territory and chose the surrounding land, which he called Travellers Rest.

In 1783, Shelby married Suzanna hart, daughter of Capt. Nathaniel hart, one of the first settlers in Kentucky and one of the owners of the Transylvania Company. After their marriage, Isaac and Suzanna began building their home on the land Shelby had claimed several years before. Travellers Rest was designed by Isaac Shelby and is thought to have been one of the first stone houses in Kentucky. The main wing was two stories high with single story wings extending from either end, one containing the master bedroom and the other the kitchen.

Travellers Rest was accidentally burnt in 1905 when the current owner tried to smoke a wasp nest out of the attic. An engineer on a passing train saw the blaze and blew his whistle to alert the neighbors. However, the lack of water and a shortage of people to fight the fire resulted in the destruction of the house. Shelby was a prominent member of the early Kentucky society. He was a member of the constitutional conventions which lead to Kentuckys statehood. Shelby was a trustee of Transylvania Seminary, Kentuckys first college, and chairman of the board of trustees of Centre College in Danville. He was one of the founders of Kentucky Society for Promoting Useful Arts, which supported agricultural education and promoted the distribution of materials on the most innovative farming techniques.

Shelbys military record was well known. He fought in the Revolutionary War at the famous Battle of Kings mountain and in the War of 1812 where he led a regiment to the rescue of Kentucky troops during the Battle of the Thames near Detroit. He achieved some fame for his performance during the battle that people from Michigan, Ohio and Kentucky stood along the roadside to catch sight of the hero upon his return to Kentucky.

Even after his official retirement from politics in 1816, Shelby was asked to serve as Secretary of the War by President Monroe however he declined. In 1817, he was commissioned by Andrew Jackson to negotiate with the Chickasaw Indians for purchase of the lands west of the Tennessee River. Shelby remained active in political affairs until his death at Travellers Rest in 1826 at the age of 76. Shelby, his wife Suzanna, several of their children and close family relatives are buried here. The original kitchen can be seen from a distance, on private property, when visiting the cemetery. In May 1938, complete restoration of the Shelby burial ground was undertaken by Judge and Mrs. Samuel M. Wilson of Lexington, Kentucky, Miss Susanna Preston Shelby Grigsby and Colonel Evan Shelby. During this restoration, the stone wall surrounding the burial ground and the individual markers were restored by the Lexington Granite Company. The Travellers Rest slab, dated 1820, was removed from the original wall and reset in the present wall.

In September, 1991, the Kentucky Department of Parks completed major restoration of the Isaac Shelby Cemetery. The restoration included stabilization, resetting, cleaning and conservation treatments of the existing grave markers and identification of the unmarked gravesites. The wall surrounding the cemetery was also restored by cleaning, recapping and tuck-pointing of the stone.


Location
Isaac Shelby Cemetery State Historic Site is located near Danville, Harrodsburg and Lancaster


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