Fillies History

There are Derby parties and balls, and then there is The Derby Ball. A registered trademark of The Fillies, Inc., the Derby Ball has been the royal kick-off of the Kentucky Derby Festival since before the modern Festival was formed in 1956.

By 1920, well-dressed revelers were attending the Derby Ball - an early version of the Fillies' Derby Ball - at the Seelbach Hotel. According to a Louisville Magazine article, there also was a "fancy dress" dance at Camp Zachary Taylor and many of the well-heeled visitors bivoucacking on private train cars at Louisville's Union Station threw private parties as well.

The dinner of the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels was first held in 1934, after then-Governor Ruby Laffoon ordered "Honorable Order" added to the name and had it incorporated as a charitable organization. The Colonels' annual Derby Eve Dinner (which ceased being a Derby Festival event in 1996) is now followed up by a Sunday afternoon barbecue in Bardstown.

Led by Mayor Neville Miller, the Kentucky Derby Festival Association set up its first week-long festival in 1935, including a parade, riverfront regatta and an orchestral concert. In 1937, a Derby Festival king and queen - Orris Reynolds and Ellen Bentley - were crowned, marking the start of a royal tradition.

The Derby Ball, at which the Derby Festival Queen is crowned, was first held in 1957 and was then known as the Coronation Ball. It was during Derby Festival Chairman Frank Rankin's term - 1959 - that Mrs. William Golden Davis created the Fillies organization and staged the first Fillies' Ball. She was aided by Rankin, Gen. Dillman Rash, Mrs. B.L. Lenihan and a quickly-formed committee of seventeen.

Nowadays, five young women are selected by a Fillies screening committee to serve as Derby Festival Princesses, with one chosen as Queen on the night of the Fillies' Derby Ball. The Queen is chosen by the traditional spin-of-the-wheel, performed by the reigning Fillies President. The gala evening, fit for a Queen, is a grand affair representing the tradition of southern hospitality. Ball-goers enjoy cocktails and a gourmet dinner of several courses before the entertainment begins after the entree.

At each Ball, selected individuals are recognized for their contribution to the Derby Festival and the community by being awarded "Knights & Dames" of the Derby Festival Court. As the newly-crowned Festival Queen and her court lead the celebration on the dance floor, guests are truly treated to a "Royal" evening.