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Report: Document changes

         Description: Veranderingen van de laatste 90 dagen in documenten, ZONDER de gelinkte personen.
Documents/histories changed within the last 90 days (listing *without* linked individuals)


Matches 151 to 200 of 600  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# mediaID mediatypeID Description Notes Last Modified Date
151 11622  documents  Short story: Rescue at the Crossroads    2021-07-12 23:54:57 
152 11621  documents  Poem: Five boro bike tour    2021-07-12 23:53:20 
153 11610  documents  Past Forward: Roots and Recovery in the American City  This Special Topic Article: Community Gardening Works! ACGA 2011 Conference is brought to you for free and open access by the Center for Urban Resilience at Digital Commons @ Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cities and the Environment (CATE) by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons at Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. For more information, please contact digitalcommons@lmu.edu.  2021-06-23 15:56:45 
154 11609  documents  The Monuments Project  Presentation on the monuments project  2021-06-14 10:41:31 
155 11595  documents  In loving Memory of Charles W. Tabor   September 10, 1924 - March 18, 2021  2021-04-26 13:24:41 
156 11593  documents  Sophie is telling the story of her life by responding to a series of monthly prompts. This is part one of three.  Justin provided a StoryWorth account that sends monthly story prompts to help craft a life story.  2021-04-24 21:19:24 
157 11594  documents  Sophie was active in the N. B. G. Club as a young person.  A part of Sophie's life story.  2021-04-24 21:11:32 
158 11578  documents  Joyce Moore comments on racial controversy at the Indianapolis Museum of Art (Newfields) in the Indianapolis Recorder Newspaper.  Here we go again! Enough! My personal response to the Newfields misstep By JOYCE L. MOORE February 24, 2021

https://indianapolisrecorder.com/71319-2/
 
2021-03-15 23:36:57 
159 11565  documents  Fourth cousin DNA Query    2021-02-22 15:17:48 
160 11562  documents  Mammie Beatty Scott Funeral Program    2021-02-13 16:39:45 
161 11556  documents  Senate passes bill that paves way for formation of African American Burial Grounds Network  The bill, which authorizes the Department of the Interior to conduct a comprehensive study of Black burial grounds nationwide, paves the way for Congress to establish the African American Burial Grounds Network — a project that would enable historians, archaeologists and preservationists to coordinate efforts, create a nationwide database, receive grant funding and more.

Few Black burial grounds remain intact in Charleston. Gullah Society wants to save them.
LOCAL AND STATE NEWS 
2021-02-03 09:33:56 
162 11556  documents  Senate passes bill that paves way for formation of African American Burial Grounds Network  The bill, which authorizes the Department of the Interior to conduct a comprehensive study of Black burial grounds nationwide, paves the way for Congress to establish the African American Burial Grounds Network — a project that would enable historians, archaeologists and preservationists to coordinate efforts, create a nationwide database, receive grant funding and more.

Few Black burial grounds remain intact in Charleston. Gullah Society wants to save them.
LOCAL AND STATE NEWS 
2021-02-03 09:33:56 
163 11555  documents  Justin Garrett Moore Named Inaugural Program Officer for The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation's Effort to Bring More Voices into Public Spaces
December 3, 2020 
  2021-02-02 09:57:15 
164 11511  documents  group of files related to copywrite submission    2021-01-18 22:24:14 
165 11510  documents  Writing classes 2020    2021-01-18 16:56:26 
166 11509  documents  Example pages from book Robert Leslie Edwards    2021-01-18 16:45:25 
167 11508  documents  Skeleton book version Jan 16, 2021    2021-01-18 12:14:54 
168 11489  documents  Goodbye wishes from Justin's coworkers December 2020  Justin, as you move on to your next adventure at the Mellon Foundation, we wanted to take a moment to look back on our work together at the PDC. We will miss you but are also very happy for you and know that you will continue to do great work for the city!

 
2020-12-14 22:16:39 
169 11486  documents  In early December 2020 I took a walking tour of Indiana Avenue. My reflections and impression of the tour.    2020-12-11 14:43:07 
170 11487  documents  A biography written in December 2020 by John Moore  In the November IAAGG meeting, members were asked to write a biography. I condensed the middle portion of a book I've been working on this year and submitted it to the group. Much like 2020, it's all over the place.  2020-12-11 14:38:24 
171 11473  documents  Sol Shatz owned a mercantile business in Kenton, Tennessee, and employed William Cole.    2020-11-14 14:12:26 
172 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
173 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
174 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
175 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
176 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
177 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
178 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
179 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
180 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
181 5100  documents  History of Cole - Brown Family     2020-10-12 21:46:47 
182 11465  documents  Thoughts while reading a story about the closing of a NYC Laundry in the NYT due to Covid-19    2020-10-12 21:43:20 
183 11462  documents  Query of information on Robert and Harriet Williams in Culpepper, Virginia   Last month (9/18/2020) I attended a genealogy webinar hosted by the Sotterley Plantation. The presenter mention that she had done extensive research in Culpepper, and would be open to follow queries. I intend to follow-up this month.   2020-10-05 22:18:14 
184 11462  documents  Query of information on Robert and Harriet Williams in Culpepper, Virginia   Last month (9/18/2020) I attended a genealogy webinar hosted by the Sotterley Plantation. The presenter mention that she had done extensive research in Culpepper, and would be open to follow queries. I intend to follow-up this month.   2020-10-05 22:18:14 
185 5006  documents  Oldest 1972 Kenton Resident born in Kenton, William Carter Cole  Kenton's oldest 1972 resident born in Kenton is also Kenton's oldest Black citizen. William Carter Cole's life seems to go much farther back in history than his ninety-three years suggest with the revelation that he is the grandson of slaves.  2020-10-05 22:17:21 
186 11459  documents  A presentation on the migration of Zoe's ancestors. Family tree information of significant life events have been placed on an interactive map.   About the map. In some cases, all that is known is what the dependent indicated on a census, “Father was born in Alabama”. In other cases we know quite a bit.
Significance may not be placed on how long the ancestor was in a place. Harvey Flenough was only in Utah for six months.
The earliest timepoint is 1773, so many of the changes in location were of enslaved persons. Only two names are recorded for the ninth generation; imagine the names missing since 1619.
 
2020-09-15 17:09:04 
187 11456  documents  Generations of Black Leaders Watching over This Neighborhood  A story focused on Cleo's Bodega. Cleo’s Bodega is not the first grocery store Flanner House has run. Albert Allen Moore arrived in Indianapolis with a family and a bachelor’s degree in agriculture in 1934. He found work as the agriculture director at Flanner House, where he taught others from the Great Migration how to farm vacant lots within the city.   2020-09-09 21:59:48 
188 11456  documents  Generations of Black Leaders Watching over This Neighborhood  A story focused on Cleo's Bodega. Cleo’s Bodega is not the first grocery store Flanner House has run. Albert Allen Moore arrived in Indianapolis with a family and a bachelor’s degree in agriculture in 1934. He found work as the agriculture director at Flanner House, where he taught others from the Great Migration how to farm vacant lots within the city.   2020-09-09 21:59:48 
189 11453  documents  My reflections during the Covid Pandemic 2020 on the Grandparents I never knew.  Back to the grandparents I never met. My grandmother Ella Bolton Moore was said to have been born in “Indian Territory”, I haven’t found a birth certificate for Grandma Ella, but over time “Indian Territory” would have many meanings. However, I did find Ella and William’s marriage documents. The marriage documents provide the confirmation of my mother’s story that William Moore was born William Gordon, and when given a chance he changed his last name to make it easier for his siblings to find him.  2020-08-22 15:46:17 
190 11453  documents  My reflections during the Covid Pandemic 2020 on the Grandparents I never knew.  Back to the grandparents I never met. My grandmother Ella Bolton Moore was said to have been born in “Indian Territory”, I haven’t found a birth certificate for Grandma Ella, but over time “Indian Territory” would have many meanings. However, I did find Ella and William’s marriage documents. The marriage documents provide the confirmation of my mother’s story that William Moore was born William Gordon, and when given a chance he changed his last name to make it easier for his siblings to find him.  2020-08-22 15:46:17 
191 11453  documents  My reflections during the Covid Pandemic 2020 on the Grandparents I never knew.  Back to the grandparents I never met. My grandmother Ella Bolton Moore was said to have been born in “Indian Territory”, I haven’t found a birth certificate for Grandma Ella, but over time “Indian Territory” would have many meanings. However, I did find Ella and William’s marriage documents. The marriage documents provide the confirmation of my mother’s story that William Moore was born William Gordon, and when given a chance he changed his last name to make it easier for his siblings to find him.  2020-08-22 15:46:17 
192 11452  documents  I recall my family talking about soldiers doing maneuvers in the field adjacent to their house in Lebanon. The soldiers would give my brother and sister candy ( they were 5 and 7 at the time). Finding this item documents their story.   A few years ago, I mentioned military helicopters doing takeoffs and landing drills in the park at 37th and Clifton to Sophie, and recalled seeing maneuvers as a young child in Lebanon. The Army held four more Maneuver phases in 1943, beginning
April 26, July 5, September 13, and November 22. The last phase of the Tennessee Maneuvers began on January 31, 1944, and future exercises were suspended because of the great need for troops in Europe. Middle Tennessee was not without an Army presence between Maneuver phases. Besides the regular training being conducted in the area, Signal Corp and Engineer troops came in before and stayed after the combat troops. The Signal Corps strung miles of wire for field communications and outfitted the message center that connected the Maneuver Director Headquarters in Lebanon with the Second Army Headquarters in Memphis and with officials in Washington, D.C. The Signal Corps also maintained messenger pigeons to carry messages between headquarters and front line troops. The photographic section of the Signal Corps maintained a visual record of the Tennessee Maneuvers. The engineers had the task of repairing some of the damage to area farms, roads, bridges, and anything else that the mock fighting had damaged. Landowners could also file claims for compensation for damage incurred. Army inspectors settled claims as quickly as possible (Sloan 1995). Some of the troops left behind for damage repair were black soldiers. A resident of Bellwood in Wilson County remembers black troops camping near his farm after a Maneuver phase. They were in the area to repair fences.
 
2020-08-18 22:15:58 
193 11452  documents  I recall my family talking about soldiers doing maneuvers in the field adjacent to their house in Lebanon. The soldiers would give my brother and sister candy ( they were 5 and 7 at the time). Finding this item documents their story.   A few years ago, I mentioned military helicopters doing takeoffs and landing drills in the park at 37th and Clifton to Sophie, and recalled seeing maneuvers as a young child in Lebanon. The Army held four more Maneuver phases in 1943, beginning
April 26, July 5, September 13, and November 22. The last phase of the Tennessee Maneuvers began on January 31, 1944, and future exercises were suspended because of the great need for troops in Europe. Middle Tennessee was not without an Army presence between Maneuver phases. Besides the regular training being conducted in the area, Signal Corp and Engineer troops came in before and stayed after the combat troops. The Signal Corps strung miles of wire for field communications and outfitted the message center that connected the Maneuver Director Headquarters in Lebanon with the Second Army Headquarters in Memphis and with officials in Washington, D.C. The Signal Corps also maintained messenger pigeons to carry messages between headquarters and front line troops. The photographic section of the Signal Corps maintained a visual record of the Tennessee Maneuvers. The engineers had the task of repairing some of the damage to area farms, roads, bridges, and anything else that the mock fighting had damaged. Landowners could also file claims for compensation for damage incurred. Army inspectors settled claims as quickly as possible (Sloan 1995). Some of the troops left behind for damage repair were black soldiers. A resident of Bellwood in Wilson County remembers black troops camping near his farm after a Maneuver phase. They were in the area to repair fences.
 
2020-08-18 22:15:58 
194 11449  documents  Willie and Albert William Moore sitting on the construction site of their new house being built on Sparta Pike in Lebanon, TN ca. 1938
Link to see photo 
  2020-08-02 22:34:03 
195 11449  documents  Willie and Albert William Moore sitting on the construction site of their new house being built on Sparta Pike in Lebanon, TN ca. 1938
Link to see photo 
  2020-08-02 22:34:03 
196 11447  documents  Sparta Pike Property recorded sales 1923 and 1936   William J. Moore was listed on Sparta Pike in the 1920 census and Albert Moore was listed on the 1940 census. I am not sure if it was the same location. Oral history is that a house was constructed on Sparta Pike in 1937. The lot was adjacent to woods that family friends would hunt in on weekends. Sophie confirms it was on the same property, but built not the existing house that was occupied by aunt Willie and her husband in the late '30s. The seller was Mary Ellen Moore (Wyatt), A. A. Moore's sister. My sister recalls a dairy farm that was adjacent to the woods where her father's friends from Nashville (Fisk & TN A & I) would come to hunt. She doesn't recall the Baubor Family, possibly they had moved by the mid-'30s, they weren't there in 1940.  2020-08-02 22:07:22 
197 11447  documents  Sparta Pike Property recorded sales 1923 and 1936   William J. Moore was listed on Sparta Pike in the 1920 census and Albert Moore was listed on the 1940 census. I am not sure if it was the same location. Oral history is that a house was constructed on Sparta Pike in 1937. The lot was adjacent to woods that family friends would hunt in on weekends. Sophie confirms it was on the same property, but built not the existing house that was occupied by aunt Willie and her husband in the late '30s. The seller was Mary Ellen Moore (Wyatt), A. A. Moore's sister. My sister recalls a dairy farm that was adjacent to the woods where her father's friends from Nashville (Fisk & TN A & I) would come to hunt. She doesn't recall the Baubor Family, possibly they had moved by the mid-'30s, they weren't there in 1940.  2020-08-02 22:07:22 
198 11447  documents  Sparta Pike Property recorded sales 1923 and 1936   William J. Moore was listed on Sparta Pike in the 1920 census and Albert Moore was listed on the 1940 census. I am not sure if it was the same location. Oral history is that a house was constructed on Sparta Pike in 1937. The lot was adjacent to woods that family friends would hunt in on weekends. Sophie confirms it was on the same property, but built not the existing house that was occupied by aunt Willie and her husband in the late '30s. The seller was Mary Ellen Moore (Wyatt), A. A. Moore's sister. My sister recalls a dairy farm that was adjacent to the woods where her father's friends from Nashville (Fisk & TN A & I) would come to hunt. She doesn't recall the Baubor Family, possibly they had moved by the mid-'30s, they weren't there in 1940.  2020-08-02 22:07:22 
199 11448  documents  Three Scholars Discuss Racism and Whiteness in the Built Environment  Justin and two other scholars discuss racism in the Architectural Record.  2020-07-31 15:38:23 
200 11438  documents  A Statement from the Black Faculty of Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Furthermore, we demand that the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation set precise goals for becoming an anti-racist institution.
 
Amina Blacksher
Lance Freeman
Mario Gooden
Jerome Haferd
Malo Hutson
Gordon Kipping
Justin Garrett Moore
Mabel O. Wilson
 
2020-07-01 09:46:13 


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