New York Post

Kentucky fryer sale

Col. Sanders’ home price slashed to $4.9M

- By LISA FICKENSCHE­R lfickensch­er@nypost.com

Col. Sanders’ old Kentucky home has been on the block for nearly a year, and the price is getting cut to chicken feed.

After 10 months with no takers, the $9 million price for the legendary KFC founder’s former mansion and three-acre estate in Shelbyvill­e has been slashed by nearly half to $4.9 million.

Col. Harland Sanders lived out his final 25 years with his wife, Claudia, at the historic property called Blackwood Hall. The lot also includes the Claudia Sanders Dinner House, which has been a tourist destinatio­n and local hot spot since 1959.

But the current owners of the property, personal friends of the Sanders family, bundled Col. Sanders memorabili­a and the intellectu­al property of the dinner house into the $9 million price, which ultimately scared off some buyers, as The Post reported exclusivel­y.

“The owners have decided to separate the . . . memorabili­a and the trademark and likeness of Claudia . . . from the sale of the restaurant business and physical real estate,” Six Degrees Real Estate said.

Jonathan Klunk of Six Degrees declined to discuss plans for selling the intellectu­al property and memorabili­a, which includes one of the original KFC buckets and flags, a letter to the colonel from President Richard Nixon, the colonel’s wristwatch, personal Bible and money clip.

KFC’s owner YUM!, the $6.8 billion conglomera­te headquarte­red in Louisville, was not interested in acquiring the property, Klunk told The Post last year.

YUM! is highly sensitive to any uses of its trademarks, which include “Colonel Sanders’ Original Recipe,” “Col. Harland Sanders” and “It’s Finger Lickin’ Good.”

The company shored up its portfolio of KFC trademarks at the Patent & Trademark Office just days after Blackwood Hall was listed. Six Degrees advised potential buyers, “If you want to use the Claudia Sanders brand you have to have a team of intellectu­al property lawyers,” Klunk told The Post last year.

The estate has been owned by Tommy and Cherry Settle since the 1970s. Cherry, 79, was a hostess at the Dinner House and Tommy ran a plant that supplied hams to the restaurant.

The couple want to downsize as they retire.

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