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| "Don't forget to bring dem Geeters" as our uncle Spot usta' say! If you don't remember or know what a Geeter is, it's 25 cents (a quarter).
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| 2020 emails related to Rosson Cemetery
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| 2021 Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Medal ... Honoring David Ehrenberg, Henry Gutman, Justin Garrett Moore, and Michael Evans. Photos by Vladimir Weinstein and Madison Voelkel.
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| 28 Days of Black Designers
A project that spotlights black designers during Black History Month The 28 Days of Black Designers project is a design project that focuses on the stories and work of African American / Black designers. The black community lack stories and accomplishments of black artists. To help facilitate this need this 28-day project will allow the awareness and celebration of black designers during Black History Month. Yes, I agree that this should be a year-long celebration but is the right marketing tool for the curation and execution of this kind of project.
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| 3 Big Ideas Shaping A Design Industry In Flux At the Fast Company Innovation Festival, Co.Design‘s editor in chief Suzanne LaBarre led a conversation with Khoi Vinh, principal designer at Adobe; Doreen Lorenzo, director of the Center for Integrated design at University of Texas-Austin; and Justin Garrett Moore, executive director of the N.Y.C. Public Design Commission, about the state of design and where it’s headed next.
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| A Saint Louis University professor’s solutions-oriented research on police shootings of black males Keon Gilbert, DrPH, joined “St. Louis on the Air” on Tuesday to discuss those steps and what people can do, even with limited resources, to reduce the number of black males killed by police. He co-authored the paper with Rashawn Ray, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Maryland.
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| Albert Coleman owned and operated Al's British Lounge, a popular spot on Indiana Avenue in the late 60's and 70's.
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| Albert Moore was the Agriculturist at Flanner House during the late 1940's Click the link below to view a timeline of his activities and accomplishments.
Flanner House traces it's beginning back to 1898. Flanner House was named after Frank Flanner (1854-1912), a local philanthropist and mortician. In 1898, he donated a piece of property containing two buildings to the Charity Organization Society, a group operating a social settlement for the city's white population. Albert Moore also traces his beginings back to 1898. In the 1910 Census, Albert appears on line 7 as a 12 year old, and his father William is on line 1 with his occupation listed as "Farmer". According to our oral family history, William Moore was born William Gordon and was enslaved. William changed his last name to Moore to better find his siblings after the Civil War. Our Oral history has be confirmed by census and marriage records. Line 89 of the 1900 Census confirms William Moore's name after he changed it in 1885. The listing of marriage records shows William Gordon making a marriage bond with my grandmother, Ella Bolton in 1885, and marrying her a year later as William Moore. Almost a half century later the arc of these two entities will intersect.
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Owner of original: various
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| AN INTERVIEW WITH THE NYC PUBLIC DESIGN COMMISSION’S JUSTIN GARRETT MOORE
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Owner of original: NYC X DESIGN Blog
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| An overview of my genealogy research presented at the 16th Anniversary Conference of the Indiana African American Genealogy Group
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| Ancestors of Keisha Marie Chesson Moore, from
Abram Saunders (Born 1773) to present. Surnames: Chesson , Costen , Gilliam , Goodman , Granbury , Granby , Griffin , Johnson , Knight , Lassiter , Leary , Saunders , Savage , Skinner , Speight , Walker , Wills , Wilson
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| Ann Cole Individual Summary provided McNairy Tennessee Office of County Archives General: Determining her year of birth was quite a problem. He death certificate showed ca 1868 which is absolutely incorrect since her only child Monroe was born ca 1864.
In 1920 Annie is living with her grandson Charles in Gibson County, Tenn. Her age was given as 66 which would make the year 1854, States born in Alabama and she is listed as a widow.
There were several slave holders by the name of Cole in Noxubee County, Miss. A Richard Cole had 11 males and 9 females, two which could be Ann and Winnie. James B Cole had five males and six females, two which could be Ann and Winnie
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Owner of original: McNairy Tennessee Office of County Archives, Nancy Kennedy, Director, January 19, 2021
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| Annual Report 2019 NYC Public Design Commission. Justin is the Executive Director The Public Design Commission (PDC) is
New York City’s design review agency.
Established as the Municipal Art Commission
in 1898, the agency was renamed the Public
Design Commission in 2008 to better reflect
its mission and purview. As an advocate for
excellence and innovation in the public realm,
the PDC works to ensure the quality and viability
of public projects, programs, and services for
New Yorkers in all five boroughs.
Justin Garrett Moore is a transdisciplinary
designer and urbanist and serves as the
executive director of the Public Design
Commission. He has extensive experience in
architecture, urban design, and planning—from
large-scale urban policies and projects to
grassroots and community-based planning,
design, and arts initiatives. At the Public
Design Commission, his work focuses on
prioritizing quality and excellence for the public
realm and fostering accessibility, diversity,
and inclusion in New York’s public buildings,
landscapes, and art. He is a member of
the American Planning Association’s AICP
Commission, the Urban Design Forum, and the
Black urbanist collective BlackSpace. Justin
is an adjunct faculty member at Columbia
University’s Graduate School of Architecture,
Planning and Preservation and the Yale School
of Architecture. His social enterprise, Urban
Patch, focuses on sustainable development
through social and environmental design
projects in the United States and Rwanda. He
holds a Bachelor of Design from the University
of Florida and a Master of Architecture and a
Master of Science in Architecture and Urban
Design from Columbia University.
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Owner of original: https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/designcommission/downloads/pdf/PDC_AnnualReport_2019_Digital_Spreads.pdf
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| Architectural Design for African Burial Ground in NYC
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| Arvelle W. Fisher
February 7, 1936-June 2, 2007
St. Louis American
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Owner of original: St. Louis American
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| Availability of U.S. Agricultural Schedules To trace census to an exact location. Column 31 gives the Farm ID in the Farm Census, most are not available, but Wilson county is. Unfortanaly, I need Smith County.
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Owner of original: https://www.thoughtco.com/agricultural-schedules-united-states-census-1422758
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| Black Enterprise Magazine 100 Men of Distinction Meet the 'Urbanist' Justin Moore.
When I tell people that I am an urban designer they usually ask whether I design clothes or jewelry. They are shocked when I tell them I design neighborhoods, and that is a shame. The design, planning, and built environment fields have so few people of color—and especially black males. It means a lot to have the kind of work that I do be highlighted in the black community in the hope that it might inspire more people to be interested.
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Owner of original: Black enterprise Magazine
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| Black Males being killed by police is a problem
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Owner of original: rashawnray.com
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| Brown Surname Migration "tracks" the M & O Railroad Notes on my Brown ancestors from Alabama, Mississippi, to Tennessee.
Click here for more details on the M & O
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Owner of original: https://www.southalabama.edu/geography/fearn/Odyssey2001.pdf
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| Canning
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| Canning
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| Canning
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| Captain William DeBow Retirement Ceremony (At least one living or private individual is linked to this item - Details withheld.)
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| Chad
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| Cole Street on Google Map
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| Coleman Family Website
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| Conferencia de Justin G. Moore en la Escuela de Arquitectura de la ULPGC el 13 de enero de 2016 Justin presented the work of his Grandfather in the 1940s and the work of Urban Patch in the 2010s.
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| Death Notice for Ed Cole
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Owner of original: http://genealogytrails.com/tenn/mcnairy/misc_news.html
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| Deed for Rosson Cemetary Plus a letter written by Kizzie Crawford in 2000
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Place: Rossons Memorial Cemetary
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| Descendants of William Carter Cole
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| Descendants of William D. Edwards Print from descendants chart of William D. Edwards
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| Design Commission Staff
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| Design commissioners and Staff
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| Did you know, that there were five African- Americans whose signatures appeared on U.S. Currency? Here is the best part, my great uncle James Carroll Napier was one of them!
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| Earlier this week I learned of the passing of Vernon Jordan. I recall hearing my brother-in-law Robert speak highly of him. Yesterday, I mentioned this to my sister and she gave the background on why Robert made his comments on Vernon Jordan.
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Owner of original: https://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/vernon-e-jordan-jr
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| Ed Cole mentioned in a 1928 will in McNairy County COLEMAN, J. D. A. DATE OF WILL: FEB 13 1928 PG363
SISTERS: M A COLEMAN; MARTHA THORTON, DECEASED; ELIZA J BASHAM,
WIFE OF TOM BASHAM; LUCINDA BARNES, DECEASED; A F LOCK
BROTHERS: P. N. COLEMAN; W. C. COLEMAN, DECEASED
OTHERS, RELATIONSHIP UNKNOWN: DAISY COLE, WIDOW OF ED COLE;
CHILDREN OF DAISY COLE: CHRISTINE COLE, WIFE OF DICK ATKINS; CLARA
BELL COLE; ANNA MAY COLE; BILLY TAFT COLE; NORA L COLE; WILLIE MABLE
COLE; TRACE V COLE; ED EARVIN COLE.,
EXECUTOR: M. E. LEE
WITNESS: W. R. NICKLES, R. N. HESTER
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Owner of original: http://www.mcnairytnhistory.com/images/Willbook_1872_-_1936.pdf
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| Ellen Norton Edwards connection to the Lost Creek settlement
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| Event highlights include an INconversation with Justin Garrett Moore of the NYC Public Design Commission in a discussion of national trends shaping the future of urban greespaces. Richard M. Fairbanks Symposium on Civic Leadership
When: Friday, March 3, 2017
Where: UIndy Hall located in the Schwitzer Student Center
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| Excerpt for the a oral history by Willie J. Moore in 1986 of her Williams ancestors. Information of Robert and Harriet parents of Laura Williams/Jackson/Lett her grandmother.
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| Federal Census Questions
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| Flanner House kicks off their 120th Anniversary Year Celebration with a Speakers Forum Albert Allen Moore was Agriculturist at Flanner House in 1948, and his son John Gilbert Moore, Sr. became a member of the Flanner House Board in 2018. The forum is intended to be a reunion of everyone with memories of Flanner House. The featured Speaker is Dr. Stanley Warren, author of High Five
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Owner of original: Flanner House
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| General Missionary Baptist State Convention of Indiana, July 1976
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| Harvey Fleniogh - A long lost history
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| Harvey Flournoy: Buffalo soldier
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| Housing as a verb Justin Garret Moore (M.Arch/MSUD '04) speaks with Rosanne Haggerty (MSRED '89) on the occasion of her lecture at the school on October 2, 2017. Haggerty is the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Community Solutions, an organization dedicated to building effective local housing systems and creating new models of housing and community development to prevent homelessness.
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| I WON! And with the second highest vote count in my race for Delegate to the State Convention!
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| In January 2021 queries were made to several counties regarding the Gordon, Cole, and Williams surnames
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| In March 1942, Life magazine published an article about the newly incorporated Tuskegee Airmen. For 10 cents, readers could buy the issue that included photos of the elder DeBow.
A sign of the times, the article, in part, read: "White instructors of the 99th agree that their Negro charges, by virtue of exceptional eyesight, courage and coordination, will prove crack combat pilots. Upon their performance and promise hang the hope of additional thousands of aspiring Negro fliers throughout the land."
Now, a Navy captain and commander of the Port Hueneme Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center, the younger DeBow won't share his story without making clear his father's role in its formation.
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Owner of original: Ventura County Star
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| In March 1942, Life magazine published an article about the newly incorporated Tuskegee Airmen. For 10 cents, readers could buy the issue that included photos of the elder DeBow.
A sign of the times, the article, in part, read: "White instructors of the 99th agree that their Negro charges, by virtue of exceptional eyesight, courage and coordination, will prove crack combat pilots. Upon their performance and promise hang the hope of additional thousands of aspiring Negro fliers throughout the land."
Capt. William DeBow is the son of Lt. Col. Charles H. DeBow Jr., a member of the first graduating class of five Tuskegee Airmen. DeBow holds a copy of Life Magazine from March 23, 1942, that has a story about the Tuskegee Airmen. His father flew combat missions during World War II.
The 99th was deployed overseas to fight in the European theater. After 52 missions aboard a P-51 Mustang, Charles DeBow was injured and lost his flight status. When he returned home, and after the war ended, the young lieutenant colonel married and continued his education and eventually worked as a high school teacher and university professor in Indiana.
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Owner of original: Ventura County Star
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