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                  <text>Slavery In Auburn</text>
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                <text>Baptist Hill Cemetery</text>
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                <text>Lee County, Auburn, Baptist, Cemetery, African American</text>
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                <text>Baptist Hill cemetery is a part of Alabama’s first separate black community and is a critical part of Auburn’s black history. According to oral history, a white man gave most of the land in the 1870’s. Currently the cemetery is four acres and has over 500 marked graves and many unmarked. The oldest grave dates back to 1879. Many of the buried at the cemetery were born into slavery but later became teachers or people in business. The cemetery gets its name from the Ebenezer Baptist Church close by. </text>
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                <text>Makayla Melvin</text>
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                <text>http://www.preservationnation.org/forum/african-american-historic-places/locations/southern/baptist-hill-cemetery.html</text>
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                <text>Makayla Melvin; MSM0041@auburn.edu</text>
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                <text>Architectural drawings; Watercolors; Houses; Dwellings; Doors &amp; doorways; Windows; Shutters; Trellises; Porches; Columns; Roofs; Stairways; Woodwork; Hand railings; Women; Trees; Landscapes (Representations)</text>
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                <text>This image is a watercolor painting of the Holliday-Cary Home, also known as the Holliday-Carey House or the Cary-Pick House, in Auburn, Alabama done by Harold W. Eaton in 1933. The home was built in 1852 by Shelton. The painting shows the front exterior of the house with its doors, windows, shutters, trellises, second story columned porch, steps, and peaked roof surrounded by trees and landscaping. There is a woman in period dress at the foot of the steps. The house is placed within framing art showing its architectural features including the floor plan, various scales, and an interior wooden staircase. In the lower right corner, there is an Alabama Polytechnic Institute School of Architecture stamp with a handwritten inscription "2nd Medal" and the artist's information block which reads: "Harold W. Eaton, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Arch 476 'measured drawing,' May 13, 1933." The painting is in fair condition with minor edge wear and is encapsulated.</text>
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                <text>Eaton, Harold W. (rendering); Turner, Matthew (house)</text>
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                <text>Auburn University Libraries. Special Collections and Archives Dept. Architecture, School of -- Architectural Renderings Student Projects</text>
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                <text>Auburn University Libraries</text>
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                <text>1933-01-01</text>
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                <text>This image is the property of the Auburn University Libraries and is intended for non-commercial use. Users of the image are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. For information about obtaining high-resolution copies of this and other images in this collection, please contact the Auburn University Libraries Special Collections &amp; Archives Department at archive@auburn.edu or (334) 844-1732.</text>
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                <text>Library of Congress (Historic American Buildings Survey): http://www.loc.gov/item/al0279/ ; Alabama Department of Archives and History: http://digital.archives.alabama.gov/cdm/ref/collection/photo/id/2328</text>
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                <text>Auburn University; Lee County, AL; Greek Revival; Civil War; Historic Homes</text>
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                <text>The Halliday-Cary-Pick House was built by James Kidd in 1848.  The home was owned by three prominent residents of Auburn.  Dickinson Halliday was a planter who had moved to the town from Georgia.  During the Civil War, the home was used as a hospital for a short time by Union troops as a hospital.  In 1897, the home was purchased by Dr. Charles Cary, founder of Auburn University's School of Veterinary Medicine.  A member of the Alabama Hall of Fame, Cary was responsible for several significant contributions to veterinary medicine and public health.  The third prominent owner, U.S. Army Lieutenant General Lewis Pick, married Cary's daughter Alice.  Pick was an engineer officer responsible for building the Ledo Road across northern Burma in World War II and who was the Chief of Engineers from 1949-1953.  After retirement, he served as chairman of the board of Georgia Pacific Plywood Company and Head of the Board of Industrial Development for the state of Alabama.  The house, located at 360 North College Street, was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage in 1976. It now serves as the offices of the Cary Center for the Advancement of Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies, part of Auburn University's College of Human Sciences. </text>
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                <text>Image: Auburn University, http://131.204.63.210/carycenter/house/&#13;
&#13;
Text: Lee County Heritage Book Committee, The Heritage of Lee County (Clanton, AL: Heritage Publishing Consultants: 2000), 23.</text>
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                <text>Auburn, AL; Lee County, AL; Civil War; East Alabama Male College; Samford, William James; Confederate Army; Baker's Creek, Mississippi; Slaton, William F.; Johnson's Island; Lake Erie; Old Main Hall; Samford Hall</text>
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                <text>When the East Alabama Male College opened its doors in 1859, William James Samford was one of the first eighty students to enroll. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Samford enlisted as a private in the Confederate Army where he was soon promoted to Lieutenant. Serving primarily in the western theater of operations, he campaigned in Tennessee and Kentucky before he was captured at Baker's Creek, Mississippi in 1863. He then spent eighteen months in prison at the prisoner-of-war camp on Johnson's Island in Lake Erie where he met his former professor William F. Slaton.&#13;
&#13;
After the war, he returned to Auburn for a year to farm and study law under his father, after which he served in both houses of the Alabama legislature and eventually in Congress where he appropriated money for the reconstruction of Old Main Hall which had burned to the ground in 1887. He became the 31st Governor of Alabama in 1900. The newly reconstructed building was named Samford Hall in his honor in 1929.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2015" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Encyclopedia of Alabama: William J Samford&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>This historic home that sits on what is now South College Street was the site where the 14th and 18th Alabama regiments were mustered in 1861. William F. Samford, known as the “Penman for Secession” for his nationally published diatribes on secession, owned the home and the connecting plantation.  </text>
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                    <text>&lt;a href="http://www.auburn.edu/academic/classes/hist/3970/m15p.html" target="_blank"&gt;Auburn University HST 3970 Pictures&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Auburn, AL; Lee County, AL; Civil War; Slavery; Antebellum South; Education; National Register of Historic Places; Auburn University; Alabama Polytechnic Institute; Luther Noble Duncan; Greek Revival Style</text>
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                <text>Wealthy planter Addison Frazer built the home in 1854 in a two-story Greek Revival style. Frazer owned over 100 slaves and grew cotton on 2,000 acres of land. He served on the board of the Auburn Masonic Female College and the East Alabama Male College. Located approximately 2.5 miles from the town center of Auburn, the property was a massive plantation that according to legend, became a makeshift hospital when Ms. Frazer took in sick and wounded soldiers. One later tale recounted that as Union soldiers reached the Addison Frazer home, Ms. Frazer gave them the Masonic sign which saved her home and her provisions from being looted. &#13;
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After the collapse of cotton prices in the 1920s the home changed hands numerous times until it was bought and restored in 1932 by J.V. Brown, superintendent of buildings and grounds at Alabama Polytechnic Institute (now Auburn University). He sold the property in 1941, to Dr. Luther Noble Duncan, president of the school, director of the Alabama Extension Service, and pioneer in the founding of the National 4-H Youth Program. The home was named in his honor by his daughter, Elizabeth Pearson. Additional structures that have been preserved are the original separate kitchen, carriage house, and smoke house. Some remains of slave quarters are found in four locations on the property.Located at 1433 Shelton Road in Auburn, Noble Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, the first site from Lee County to be added to the register. &#13;
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_Hall</text>
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                <text>Images: Home: Rivers A. Langley, Photographer&#13;
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Auburn University Library, http://www.lib.auburn.edu/archive/aghy/aces/aceshead/duncan.jpg&#13;
&#13;
Text: Lee County Heritage Book Committee, The Heritage of Lee County (Clanton, AL: Heritage Publishing Consultants: 2000), 23.&#13;
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_Hall</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/nrhp/text/72000163.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Janice P. Hand: National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.auburnheritageassoc.org/historic-markers.html#noblehall" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Auburn Heritage Association: Noble Hall Marker&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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