There is a moment, somewhere between slipping on a pair of headphones and pressing play on a decades-old recording, when the past reaches right through time and taps you on the shoulder. That is exactly what happens inside the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, tucked within the University of Kentucky’s Margaret I. King Library on the edge of UK’s gorgeous main campus in central Lexington. And once it happens to you, you will not forget it.
The Nunn Center is one of the largest and most respected oral history archives in the entire United States, housing more than ten thousand recorded interviews that span everything from Appalachian coal mining traditions to the civil rights movement in Kentucky, from the voices of World War II veterans to the personal stories of Bluegrass musicians who shaped American music. That breadth alone is staggering, but what makes visiting in person so worthwhile is the experience of engaging with those voices in a way no documentary or textbook can replicate.
The collection is free to access, and staff members are genuinely enthusiastic about helping visitors navigate the archive. Whether you arrive with a specific research interest or simply wander in out of curiosity, the team here has a gift for matching people with recordings that hit close to home. Ask about Kentucky foodways and you might find yourself listening to an elderly Eastern Kentucky woman describe making stack cake from dried apples for the first time in her life. Ask about horse racing and you may be directed to firsthand accounts from grooms, trainers, and jockeys whose names you will never find in a winner’s circle photograph but whose stories are utterly essential to understanding the sport.
The reading room itself is calm and studious without feeling intimidating. Natural light filters in through tall windows, and the atmosphere strikes a perfect balance between scholarly and welcoming. You do not need to be a historian or a student to feel at home here. The Nunn Center regularly hosts public programming as well, including listening events, panel discussions, and exhibits that bring archival recordings into conversation with contemporary Kentucky life.
From a practical standpoint, parking near the UK campus is easiest in the nearby Rose Street garage, and the library is a short, pleasant walk through a campus that is well worth a stroll in its own right. Plan to spend at least an hour, though most visitors find that two hours slips by effortlessly.
In a city famous for thoroughbreds, bourbon, and basketball, the Nunn Center offers something rarer still: the unfiltered, unscripted, deeply human voices of the people who actually built this place. Come listen. You might just hear something that changes the way you see Kentucky entirely.