12d
Daily Local on MSNMarker will recognize graveyard at former AME Church site in WesttownAt one point the Westtown site was the hub of the Black community with many tenant farmers and support staff at Westtown School residing there. At least 16 Black families were property owners and ...
At the top of a tree-covered hill off South Pifer Road, a little known but significant piece of history lies hidden beneath ...
A fascinating photograph has surfaced showing a steam train crossing a bridge on the long-closed Bordon Light Railway - but ...
From cherry blossoms at Salem’s Capitol Mall to kayaking across Netarts Bay, poke around western Oregon from the valley to ...
7d
ExplorersWeb on MSNWhy Feral Camels Once Haunted the American SouthwestDuring the late 19th and early 20th centuries, camels wandered the Sonoran Desert. How they got there, and what happened to ...
14d
Al Jazeera on MSNSearching for Africa’s lost World War soldiers, a name and grave at a timeNakuru and Kisumu, Kenya – Ogoyi Ogunde belonged to a proud family. His father had carved a home for their clan out of the ...
Curling into a ball on the ground, Sam wrapped her arms around her veiny legs, scooching her body until it tumbled over the tip of the hill. Her body rolled and rolled and rolled, the large setting ...
Under 16 tons of granite, a farmer sleeps with a mystery at one of the most grandiose burial monuments in rural America.
Over thirty years later, the Arizona State Highway Department erected a monument over his plain wooden grave marker. The stone pyramid, topped with a camel-shaped weathervane, is still there today.
African-American cemeteries across the nation are being neglected, leading to decay and erasure of Black history. Mount Auburn Cemetery is a notable exception.
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