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Results for The Community

The Community of Briggs

Pioneers mainly from the Old South settled here on the Aaron Boyce land grant in the 1860s and 70s. They had a school, and held church services, at Gum Springs in the 1880s. In 1888 a post office opened at ...

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Magalia Community Church / The Magalia Schoolhouse Bell

[ Upper Marker ]

This property

Magalia

Community Church

Has been placed on the

National Register

of Historic Places

By the United States

Department of the Interior

[ Lower Marker ]

The Magalia

Schoolhouse Bell

The bell now hangs in the belfry of the Old Magalia Community Church, with the original church ...

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The Beacon Community

Side 1:

The Beacon Community was the center of Decatur’s African American community until its demolition by the Urban Renewal programs of the mid-1960s. Bounded by N. McDonough Street on the east, W. Trinity Place on the north, Water Street on ...

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The Willcox Women's Community Center

Was constructed by P. Howard Pregenzer and crew

In Memory of

P. Howard Pregenzer

1894-1980

Resident of Willcox, Arizona 1927-1980

Construction began in 1934 and completed in 1936

Construction sponsored by the City of Willcox, Arizona in year 1936

United States of America work project administration ...

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The Clay Community

The clay soil of the area, first cultivated by Creek Indians, gave this agricultural community it name in 1878 when a post office was established. Clay’s historical roots date to the early 1800s through two small communities, Ayres and Self’s ...

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Welcome to the Riparian Community of Duck Creek

Duck Creek riparian community is a diverse and complex society of living organisms. Wild brown trout feed on caddisfly nymphs, which live in self-made stick and stone shelters, clinging to the rocks. Yellow warblers and flycatchers next in willow bushes. ...

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The Tobey Community Cemetery

The Nat Tobey family moved from Indiana to northeast Burnet County in the 1850s. Sons Avery and Samuel bought land here in Backbone Valley in 1868. At the death of N. W. Tobey, aged 12, this cemetery was opened in ...

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The Latino Community

Roads to Diversity

This is the heart of Washington’s Latino community. Once centered here and in nearby Mount Pleasant and Columbia Heights, the community now extends throughout the region.

As early as the 1910s, the Mexican, Ecuadoran, Cuban, and Spanish ...

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A Voice of the Community

From atop the schoolhouse, built in 1905, my voice has rung out - beckoning boys and girls to school: clanged out the call for help to fight fires: peeled forth joyous tunes of victory at wars ends: tolled the old ...

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The Pine Community Center Historic District

The Pine Community Center Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The historic buildings of the district are the LDS (Latter Day Saints/Mormon) Ward Chapel, built in 1915-1916, the Cultural Hall, completed in 1931, and the ...

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