From NKAA, Notable Kentucky African Americans Database (main entry)

Murry, Philip H. [The Colored Kentuckian]

(born: 1842) 

Philip H. Murry was born in Reading, PA, the son of Samuel and Sarah Murry. His family was free-born and had never been slaves. Murry was a school teacher and advocate for the education of African American children; he taught school in Kentucky and several other states. 

Murry was also a journalist and newspaper publisher, recognized along with J. P. Sampson for establishing the first African American newspaper in Kentucky in 1867: The Colored Kentuckian (though the Colored Citizen newspaper was published in Louisville in 1866).

For more see "Philip H. Murry" in Men of Mark [available full-text at Google Books], by W. J. Simmons and H. M. Turner; and "He prefers Sherman," Titusville Herald, 8/10/1887, p. 1.

Outside Kentucky Place Name

Item Relations

Cited in this Entry

NKAA Source: The Colored Kentuckian (newspaper)
NKAA Source: The Colored citizen (newspaper) (Louisville, KY)
NKAA Source: The Titusville herald (newspaper)

Related Entries Citing this Entry

NKAA Entry: Louisville Weekly Planet (newspaper)

Cite This NKAA Entry:

“Murry, Philip H. [The Colored Kentuckian],” Notable Kentucky African Americans Database, accessed July 26, 2024, https://nkaa.uky.edu/nkaa/index.php/items/show/2043.

Last modified: 2020-10-09 18:02:52