This locked, fenced play area is attached to the old daycare center. It is regularly used by children in the afterschool program at the Prospect Hill Terrace Community Center.
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This large rocky outcropping may be of interest to Medicine Story when he visits Brandeis
2008/01/13 long: -71.2570877075 lat: 42.3670883179This large rocky outcropping may be of interest to Medicine Story when he visits Brandeis
2008/01/13 long: -71.2570877075 lat: 42.3670883179Busy American families may be observed every morning dropping off their pre-K children at Lemberg Childcare
2008/01/13 long: -71.2565917969 lat: 42.3673667908Prospect Hill Terrace is the largest state-subsidized public housing development in Waltham
2008/01/13 long: -71.2512054443 lat: 42.3783149719Festival of the Arts events at Brandeis often take place on this lawn
2008/01/13 long: -71.2602081299 lat: 42.3654632568If you visit Mr. Mangok Bol in his office (Brown 229) he may be willing to teach you greetings in Dinka.
2008/01/13 long: -71.2632446289 lat: 42.3724937439The only place in Usdan where Breakfast is available.
2008/01/13 long: -71.2567901611 lat: 42.3680419922The regular meeting place of Anth 1a!
2008/01/13 long: -71.2578811646 lat: 42.3698234558This Community Learning Center (63D Hansen Road) will partner with the Community Engaged Learning program and the Department of Community Service of Brandeis University
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Off of South Street, past Epstein
2007/11/24 long: -71.2629547119 lat: 42.3624916077 The Heritage Room at the Newton County Public Library contains many helpful resources for African-American family history research
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Salem Campground, founded in 1828, is site to the oldest continuous religious camp meeting in the nation. Many African-Americans have worked at Salem since the time of slavery to the present day.
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For decades, African-Americans have been employed at the hotel at Salem Camp Meeting
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From c. 1939-1994, the Kitty Cottage Museum was located at this site. The slave quarters in which Miss Kitty, an enslaved woman, had resided, was moved from its original site in Oxford, Georgia in 1939, and returned to Oxford in 1994.
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Site of the three major cotton mills and the number one employer of African-Americans in the 1950\'s & 1960\'s. The mill being owned by the Bibb Mfg. Co. of Macon, Ga. also furnished housing, and schooling for it\'s employees. The colored housing, being l...
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Original site of the home of James O. Andrew, Bishop of the M.E. Church, South. Bishop Andrew\'s ownership of slaves was the proximate cause of the great schism of the Methodist Church in 1844.
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Original site of Kitty\'s Cottage, slave quarters in which resided Miss Kitty (c. 1822-c. 1855), an enslaved woman owned by Bishop J.O. Andrew of the Methodist Church. The cottage was moved in 1939 to Salem campground, and then in 1994 was moved back to...
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Memorial tablet errected in memory of Miss Kitty (c. 1822-c.1855), an enslaved woman owned by Bishop James O. Andrew of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Errected by H.W. McCord. The wording on the tablet--as well as the precise site of Miss Kitty...
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One of the two leading historic African-American churches in Oxford, GA, established c. 1900. Located at Richardston and Emory Streets, directly across from the historic African-American cemetery
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An historic African-American church, founded c. 1867 by newly emancipated African-American residents of Oxford, GA
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Plaque and tree dedicated to the memory of Billy Mitchell and Bob Hammond, African-American custodians at Emory College/Emory-at-Oxford. On the Oxford College campus in front of the Science building
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Built by African-American stonemasons, including Israel Godfrey, in the 1870s.
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Built by African-American stonemasons, including Israel Godfrey, in the 1870s.
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Slave quarters, occupied in the 1840s-50s by Miss Kitty, an enslaved woman owned by Bishop James O. Andrew of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The cottage, originally located up the hill on the Andrew estate, was moved in 1939 to Salem Campground...
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