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Thursday, March 15, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Asheville History, Events, Local History

Event: “The Eclectic Lives of Two Asheville Women”

In Celebration of Women’s History Month Wednesday, March 21, 2018 from 6:00 to 7:00 Pack Memorial Library, Lord Auditorium Come Hear Ashevillians: Esther Manheimer Asheville City Mayor And Sheneika Smith Asheville City Councilwoman Talk About: Growing up in Asheville and Their Lives as Mothers, Professionals & Women And Why They Decided to Enter Public Service
asheville city councilEsther ManheimerSheneika SmithWomenWomen's History Month
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Friday, March 09, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Asheville History, Buncombe County History, Forgotten People, Local History

The Highly Qualified Teachers of Stephens-Lee

The Faculty of Stephens-Lee High School: A Tribute Stephens-Lee teachers had a sense of collective pride that students, parents, and the black community could share. A major source of pride was the academic degrees the teachers held. Black high school students sometimes boasted that their teachers were better educated than the teachers at the all-white
Arthur V. LindenAsheville High SchoolHistorically Black Colleges and UniversitiesIntegrationMarian Goudlock DennisonSouth French Broad High School. Legalized SegregationStephens-Lee High SchoolStephens-Lee High School FacultyTeacher's College at Columbia University
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Thursday, March 01, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Asheville History, Buncombe County History

The Social Context of Teaching at Stephens-Lee High School

The Faculty of Stephens-Lee High School: A Tribute     Elynora Foster was the kind of teacher her students and colleagues remembered. Mrs. Foster’s work as a U.S. history and social studies teacher put her in a perfect position to tell her students about the contributions African Americans had made to the nation and the
Alfred J. WhitesidesAsheville African American CommunityElynora M. FosterLacy T. HaithLegal SegregationStephens-Lee High SchoolStephens-Lee High School Faculty
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Tuesday, February 20, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Exhibits, Local Heroes and Heroines, Local History

The Faculty of Stephens-Lee High School: A Tribute

Stephens-Lee High School, known of as “The Castle on the Hill,” was designed by Asheville architect Ronald Greene at a cost of $115,000 and opened on March 7, 1923. It was designed for a capacity of 900 students and it opened with 856. It was the only public high school for blacks in Asheville. Some
Black EducationBlack History MonthDesegregationElynora M. FosterHood HuggersIntegrationMadison C. LennonMiss Gladys I. Pierce ForneyStephens-Lee High School
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Tuesday, February 13, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Local History, Manuscript Collection, New Donations

Incredible New Collections for the North Carolina Room

We’ve been so busy processing special collections, we haven’t been very good at letting you know what is new in the North Carolina Room. Donations are the life-blood of our collection, and we are so appreciative to our donors and to those who help push collections our way. And the variety of these new collections
Asheville Needle ExchangeConnie BosticEliada OrphanageHazel RobinsonHhillcrest BandHillcrest Enrichment ProgramJohn Brooks and Marjorie DendyJohn HayesMichael HarneyMontford Park PlayersPatton/Parker FamilyTench and Sarah Potter Coxe
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Thursday, February 01, 2018 / Published in Events, Local History, Photograph Collection

  JUST A LITTLE FRIENDLY REMINDER:  Monumental Decisions: The Legacy and Future of Civil War Markers in Our Public Spaces Monumental Decisions: The Legacy and Future of Civil War Markers in Our Public Spaces Date: Saturday February 3rd Time: 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm Where: Pack Memorial Library, Lord Auditorium, lower level. This event is free
AsheviileAsheville HistoryBuncombe County HistoryConfederate MonumentsFitzhugh Brundage
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Sunday, January 21, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Local History, Photograph Collection

How Black and White is Asheville?

Do you prefer to live in a segregated city? What could you do to change that? Would you seek out some people of the opposite race to go to dinner with–an idea, I believe, from Date My City? If enough of us did that, would it change what is happening in our city? If we
African American HistoryAsheville HistoryAsheville Race RelationsBlack History MonthBuncombe County HistoryCommunityDate My CityHood HuggersRacismSegregated CitiesUrban NewsUrban Renewal
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Tuesday, January 09, 2018 / Published in African Americans, Events, Local History, Photograph Collection

Event. Monumental Decisions: The Legacy and Future of Civil War Markers in Our Public Spaces

Monumental Decisions: The Legacy and Future of Civil War Markers in Our Public Spaces Date: Saturday February 3rd Time: 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm Where: Pack Memorial Library, Lord Auditorium, lower level. This event is free and open to the public. Sponsored by the Friends of the North Carolina Room Like any local history room,
Asheville HistoryBuncombe County HistoryConfederate LandscapeConfederate Monument CandlerConfederate MonumentsDaughters of the ConfederacyProfessor Fitzhugh BrundageRobert E. Lee Dixie Highway MarkerVance Monument
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Thursday, December 28, 2017 / Published in Local History, Post Card Collection

New Year’s Greetings for 2018

  In the early years of the twentieth century postcards were at their peak of popularity. Postcard publishers printed cards  for any and every occasion including Easter, Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, and the New Year. John Winsch, an important postcard publisher in  Stapleton, New York (from 1907 to 1915) copyrighted this one in 1910. He
New YearNew Year's Eve
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