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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1SF7_civil-war-laurel-oak-tree_Montgomery-AL.html
This Laurel Oak Tree from Battle Fields of Virginia, 1861-65 Planted by Gov. Thomas G. Jones 1893
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1SF6_washington-elm-tree_Montgomery-AL.html
Washington took command of the American Army under grandparent of this elm Cambridge, Mass., July 3, 1775 ———— Raised and given by Maryland D.A.R. and Alice Paret Dorsey as part of 200th anniversary of birth of…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1SF1_montgomery-county-circuit-court-sit-ins-and-marches-at-the-montgomery-county-courthouse_Montgomery-AL.html
Montgomery County Circuit Court Site of Major Civil Rights Cases 1956-1960 In 1956, 89 persons were indicted for violating an anti-boycott law; Rosa Parks' conviction was appealed; the Montgomery Improvement Association car pool was enjoined; …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1RRR_major-lemuel-purnell-montgomery_Montgomery-AL.html
Brilliant lawyer, valiant soldier, in whose honor Montgomery County, Alabama was named
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1RRP_train-shed-1897_Montgomery-AL.html
Few sheds of this type, once so much a part of the urban scene, remain. Designed by railroad engineers, it illustrates the beginnings of that technology which made possible the skyscrapers and bridges of today.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1Q5C_the-five-points-area-a-unique-blend-of-communities-in-1965_Montgomery-AL.html
Located at the hilltop overlooking Downtown Montgomery, Five Points is an intersection of history and humanity. Here the historic black communities of West Montgomery meet the Cottage Hill neighborhood featuring Montgomery's most preserved Vic…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1Q5B_an-intersection-of-history-court-square_Montgomery-AL.html
At the intersection of Commerce Street and Dexter Avenue, Court Square is arguably the most historic location in America. As the center of 19th century Southern economic and political power, Montgomery's Court Square was host to a massive slave m…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1PZ3_chantilly-plantation_Pike-Road-AL.html
Chantilly Plantation was purchased in 1832 at public outcry by Dr. Thomas Burge Taylor of Columbia, SC as a wedding gift for his bride, Harriott Pinkney Raoul. John Ashurst, its original owner, had moved further west. Harriott, a French woman…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1PY0_a-refuge_Montgomery-AL.html
The City of St Jude, always a refuge for African Americans, hosted the marchers on the last night of their journey. This religious complex—named for the patron saint of impossible situations—housed a school church and hospital and had …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1PXZ_heroes-welcome_Montgomery-AL.html
The ranks of marchers swelled enormously by the last leg of the trip on Wednesday, March 24, 1965. By the time they arrived at the last campsite, only two miles from the city limits at the Saint Jude complex, they were 10,000 strong. Dirty and…
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