MY BOOKS

Books I have published

Caves of Rockcastle County, Kentucky (with James R. Rebmann)

1972, privately printed.

This book was the product of three years of cave exploration and surveys made independently by teams led by Gary O’Dell and Jim Rebmann, who decided to collaborate and combine their efforts to provide an examination of regional caves. Because caves and the life forms they contain are vulnerable to damage from visitation, the book was not published for a general audience but only in a limited edition of sixty copies. Most copies went to participants in the surveys or to those personally known to the authors. The contents of this book will not be provided on this website. Persons interested in Rockcastle County caves should contact the Rockcastle Karst Conservancy or regional chapters of the National Speleological Society, the Blue Grass Grotto of Lexington or the Greater Cincinnati Grotto. Links to these organizations may be found on my home page.

Bluegrass Paradise: Royal Spring and the Birth of Georgetown, Kentucky

2023, University Press of Kentucky.

In the earliest days of the United States as settlers made their way west and into what would eventually become Kentucky, they were faced with many challenges in the task of surveying and claiming new and unknown land.

Among the highest priorities for new residents was to determine if their chosen homestead could provide the fertile soil and fresh water they needed to sustain life and service their agricultural needs. Kentucky, with its underlying base of predominantly limestone rock―perfectly suited to the natural formation of caves, sinking streams, and springs of cool water―proved the ideal location on which to build their new lives.

In Bluegrass Paradise: Royal Spring and the Birth of Georgetown, Kentucky, author Gary A. O’Dell tells the story of the Royal Spring, the largest spring in central Kentucky. Practical and essential to the creation of a successful settlement, the spring and its location became the primary reason pioneers would eventually congregate here and found the city of Georgetown as one of the earliest Kentucky communities. In the ensuing 250 years, the Royal Spring has faithfully served the water needs of the community and the locale remains a cherished cultural and historical asset that provides greenspace within a rapidly growing city.

Sample Chapter

Here is a sample chapter from the
book, called “McClelland’s Station.”
Click image above To download

BOOK REVIEW:
Patricia Kambesis, “Review of Bluegrass Paradise: Royal Spring and the Birth of Georgetown, Kentucky,” NSS News (National Speleological Society) 82 (June, 2024), 14-15.
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

BOOK REVIEW:
Glen Edward Taul, “Review of Bluegrass Paradise: Royal Spring and the Birth of Georgetown, Kentucky.“ Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 122 (Winter 2024), 105-107.
CLICK TO DOWNLOAD

Reinventing the American Thoroughbred: The Arabian Adventures of Alexander Keene Richards

Forthcoming Spring 2025, Louisiana State University Press.

Most equine authorities consider Alexander Keene Richards (1827–1881) one of the nineteenth century’s most significant Thoroughbred importers and breeders. Born in Georgetown, Kentucky, and orphaned as a toddler, Richards was adopted by his grandfather, from whom he inherited not only the family farm in Georgetown but also Transylvania, a cotton plantation in East Carroll Parish, Louisiana. Horses fascinated Richards from an early age, and as his passion deepened, he became convinced that the key to improving the stamina of the Thoroughbred, in an era when American racing consisted of grueling long-distance competitions, was to crossbreed American horses with the magnificent steeds of the Middle East.

As Reinventing the American Thoroughbred recounts, Richards traveled thousands of miles on expeditions into the heart of the Syrian desert to obtain Arabian stock of the purest blood. He became the first American—indeed the first Westerner—to venture into the desert to bargain directly with nomadic tribesmen for their horses. Richards transported the animals back to his grandfather’s farm near Georgetown, which he transformed into a premier breeding establishment called Blue Grass Park. He also used his Transylvania plantation in Louisiana for similar purposes. Richards relied on Ansel Williamson, an enslaved horse trainer, to prepare his Thoroughbreds for racing. Williamson developed a reputation as one of the best handlers in the nation.

The Civil War interrupted Richards’s equine breeding experiment. Dependent on southern cotton produced by enslaved labor for his wealth, Richards sided with the Confederacy and was appointed volunteer aide-de-camp by General John C. Breckinridge. During his brief military career, he served at Vicksburg and later in the attack on Baton Rouge. In late 1862, he received Breckinridge’s permission to travel to England to purchase artillery for the general’s Kentucky brigade. Richards remained in London for the remainder of the war, returning to the United States after receiving amnesty. Bankrupt, he spent the rest of his life attempting to rebuild Blue Grass Park as a nationally  recognized Thoroughbred facility.

Richards’s life story, chronicled here for the first time by Gary A. O’Dell, is an epic tale of adventure, experimentation, and devastation that illuminates the grand history of the American Thoroughbred industry in fresh and fascinating ways.