ASHLAN_100602_013
Existing comment: Agriculture at Ashland:
From the time Henry Clay bought his first 125 acres in 1804 until long after his death in 1852, Ashland was an important and successful farm. It produced some of the finest livestock and crops in Kentucky and the nation. Ashland remained a center for agricultural innovation and achievement until it was sold for development in the early part of the 20th century.
Henry Clay dreamed of developing a world class farm, and during his lifetime he realized that dream. By 1850, he had acquired over 600 acres and raised many crops. One of the most important was hemp. Ashland became a major supplier of hemp for rope and bagging. Clay also succeeded as a livestock breeder, raising some of the best Thoroughbreds in the country, introducing Hereford cattle to the US, providing some of the finest mules to southern plantations, and raising award winning pigs and sheep.
Henry Clay's descendants carried on the tradition of agricultural excellence long after he was gone. Clay's son James took up the breeding and racing Standardbreds and became one of the earliest proponents of that sport in Kentucky. Races were frequently run on his track at Ashland. Henry Clay's youngest son John inherited a part of his father's farm. John Clay's farm, called Ashland on Tates Creek, became one of the most important Thoroughbred breeding farms in the country, producing two Kentucky Derby winners and numerous stakes winners. Henry Clay's grandson-in-law Henry Clay McDowell continued James's success on the trotting track, returning Ashland to national prominence as a Standardbred farm. Henry Clay's great-grandson, Thomas Clay McDowell, capped off a century of Ashland equine success, and is remembered as one of only three people in history to breed, train, and own a Kentucky Derby winner in a single year. His horse Alan-a-Dale won the prestigious race in 1902.
Archeological excavations at Ashland suggest this area was the "working" side of the Ashland yard, where barns used for this agricultural operation were located. Excavations uncovered the foundations of several barns.
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