Henry A. Tandy Centennial Park, Lexington, Kentucky
Henry A. Tandy (c. 1853–1918) was an American building contractor and entrepreneur, specializing in decorative stone masonry and brickwork. Of African-American descent, he was born enslaved in Estill County, Kentucky, and rose to become one of the wealthiest African Americans in Kentucky by the early twentieth century.[1]
He was responsible for the grand Richardsonian Romanesque courthouse, completed in 1900, which features a dome structure and arches as well as artistic features incorporated into the stonework.[4] An example of adaptive re-use, the building now houses the Lexington Visitor Center as well as several restaurants.[5]
In Lexington, 1867, he first worked for local photographer John Mullen. However, he found his lifelong success through the building and contracting firm of Garrett D. Wilgus. There, he began as one of over 200 employees and was promoted to foreman in 1892. Tandy and Albert Byrd, his future business partner, ran the company beginning in the 1880s as Wilgus's health declined. After Wilgus's death in 1893, the two established Tandy & Byrd where Tandy was business manager and the face of the business and Byrd was the foreman. By 1894, the firm employed about 50 workers, both Blacks and whites. The Lexington Opera House, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, was among the firm's projects.[6] Other notable projects of the firm are the 1894 First National Bank building; the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning (previously known as the Carnegie Library); the Natural Science Building at the State College now known as Miller Hall at the University of Kentucky; original structures at Eastern Kentucky University, Roark Hall and Sullivan Hall. He was known nationally, presenting papers and speaking at the National Negro Business League on the subject of contracting and building.[4][2][7]
Personal life and death
He married Emma Brice, born 1855.[1] He was a trustee of Historic St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church, Founded in1826, the church was active in the Underground Railroad.[8] Post emancipation in 1865, the church maintained the station just in case hiding places were still needed, which in Jim Crow Kentucky, they often were. Tandy was also involved in the Masonic Order.[9]
In 1918, Tandy died of a septic infection in Lexington and was buried in Greenwood Cemetery, later named Cove Haven Cemetery.[7][10] The couple's son, Vertner Woodson Tandy (1885-1949), became the first African American architect in the state of New York and a founder of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity at Cornell University.[7]
Legacy
The impetus for the park renaming was started by a grassroots movement, Take Back Cheapside.
Cheapside Park was the site of one of the largest slave markets and was known for the sale of "fancy girls," women of mixed race sold for sexual purposes.[11]
The Lexington-Fayette Urban County Council voted unanimously in June, 2017 to move both statues to the Lexington Cemetery. In August, 2020 the council unanimously renamed the park for Tandy.[2]