This is an article from Essence Magazine called "Stolen Girls" by Donna Owens: "Arrested after a series of protest marches in the summer of 1963, almost three dozen girls from Americus, Georgia, were held for weeks in an abandoned Civil War-era
stockade. Never formally charged, the girls banded together in horrific
circumstances, even as their frantic families searched for them. Now their story
of courage, faith and resilience is finally being told."
This document provides a timeline of key events and developments in American history from 1862 to 1931. It highlights major political, social, and technological changes including the Homestead Act, establishment of the Buffalo Soldiers regiment, completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, Wounded Knee massacre, and immigration through Ellis Island. Many entries focus on the changing relationship between the U.S. government and Native American tribes over land and cultural assimilation.
Red Ryder Comics, Comic book of the week on Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Free downloads available here. Visit us for more incredible content.
The document provides details from various chapters of the Jesuit Relations about the French missionaries interactions with Native American tribes like the Montagnais, Hurons, and others in North America in the 17th century. It describes their customs, beliefs, languages, and ways of life. It also recounts some first encounters and expeditions by missionaries like Father Marquette exploring the Mississippi River region.
plains all american pipeline 2003 Annual Report 2003 10-K3finance13
- The document discusses the governance structure of Plains All American Pipeline, L.P., noting that it does not directly have officers or directors, as these functions are managed by its general partner, Plains All American GP LLC.
- The board of directors of the general partner effectively governs the partnership. It has various committees including an audit committee, compensation committee, and conflicts committee.
- Biographies are provided for the executive officers and board members of the general partner, including their roles and backgrounds. The document also notes relationships between some board members and other energy companies.
plains all american pipeline 2004 10-K part 3 finance13
1) The document discusses the governance and management structure of Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. As a limited partnership, PAA does not have its own officers or directors - these functions are performed by the general partner, Plains All American GP LLC.
2) The board of directors for the general partner consists of 8 members elected by the owners of Plains All American GP LLC. Certain large owners can each designate one board member.
3) In addition to the board, PAA has committees including an audit committee, compensation committee, and governance committee that perform typical oversight functions.
Largo Resources aims to become a leading producer of vanadium and tungsten. It owns two large vanadium deposits in Brazil, Maracas and Campo Alegre, which have the potential to be the highest grade vanadium deposits in the world. Maracas already has a resource of over 23 million tonnes at 1.27% V2O5 and could be one of the lowest cost vanadium producers. Largo also owns the large Northern Dancer tungsten-molybdenum deposit in Canada and has near-term plans for low-cost tungsten production from its Currais Novos property in Brazil. The company aims to finance project development at Maracas to begin van
Sheena's Place is a non-profit organization that provides support groups and services free of charge to individuals affected by eating disorders. In 2011, they helped over 969 people through 83 support groups and other services. Their annual report highlights that 46% of clients are aged 20-29, showing the need for their young adult support group. It also discusses the success of their new strategic plan and two-year Expressive Arts campaign. Client surveys show high satisfaction with the support and sense of community provided at Sheena's Place. The organization relies on donations and fundraising to continue their programs.
The Black Canyon of the Gunnison
National Monument
By Richard G. Beidleman*
Colorado's Black Canyon of the Gunnison certainly ranks
among the foremost chasms of the world in terms of dimensions
and renown. Starting at Sapinero, where the ancient preCambrian
rock complex first becomes evident, the Gunnison
River has cut an ever deepening gorge to westward for a distance
of some fifty miles until, swinging northwest, the river
leaves its walled confines and joins the North Fork of the
Gunnison River in the North Fork Valley near Delta.
The deepest and most spectacular portion of this chasm,
a twelve-mile length, has been included within the boundary
of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument,
which was established by the presidential proclamation of
Herbert Hoover thirty y ears ago on March 2, 1933. Here the
gorge depth ranges from 1,730 to 2,725 feet, while the width
narrows to 1,100 feet at the rim and as little as 40 feet at the
bottom, at the latter site the river completely inundating the
chasm floor. The depth and narrowness of the Black Canyon
is emphasized by the sheer, black-stained, lichen-covered,
variegated pre-Cambrian walls and the periodic gloom that
shrouds the depths.
This document provides a timeline of key events and developments in American history from 1862 to 1931. It highlights major political, social, and technological changes including the Homestead Act, establishment of the Buffalo Soldiers regiment, completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, Wounded Knee massacre, and immigration through Ellis Island. Many entries focus on the changing relationship between the U.S. government and Native American tribes over land and cultural assimilation.
Red Ryder Comics, Comic book of the week on Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Free downloads available here. Visit us for more incredible content.
The document provides details from various chapters of the Jesuit Relations about the French missionaries interactions with Native American tribes like the Montagnais, Hurons, and others in North America in the 17th century. It describes their customs, beliefs, languages, and ways of life. It also recounts some first encounters and expeditions by missionaries like Father Marquette exploring the Mississippi River region.
plains all american pipeline 2003 Annual Report 2003 10-K3finance13
- The document discusses the governance structure of Plains All American Pipeline, L.P., noting that it does not directly have officers or directors, as these functions are managed by its general partner, Plains All American GP LLC.
- The board of directors of the general partner effectively governs the partnership. It has various committees including an audit committee, compensation committee, and conflicts committee.
- Biographies are provided for the executive officers and board members of the general partner, including their roles and backgrounds. The document also notes relationships between some board members and other energy companies.
plains all american pipeline 2004 10-K part 3 finance13
1) The document discusses the governance and management structure of Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. As a limited partnership, PAA does not have its own officers or directors - these functions are performed by the general partner, Plains All American GP LLC.
2) The board of directors for the general partner consists of 8 members elected by the owners of Plains All American GP LLC. Certain large owners can each designate one board member.
3) In addition to the board, PAA has committees including an audit committee, compensation committee, and governance committee that perform typical oversight functions.
Largo Resources aims to become a leading producer of vanadium and tungsten. It owns two large vanadium deposits in Brazil, Maracas and Campo Alegre, which have the potential to be the highest grade vanadium deposits in the world. Maracas already has a resource of over 23 million tonnes at 1.27% V2O5 and could be one of the lowest cost vanadium producers. Largo also owns the large Northern Dancer tungsten-molybdenum deposit in Canada and has near-term plans for low-cost tungsten production from its Currais Novos property in Brazil. The company aims to finance project development at Maracas to begin van
Sheena's Place is a non-profit organization that provides support groups and services free of charge to individuals affected by eating disorders. In 2011, they helped over 969 people through 83 support groups and other services. Their annual report highlights that 46% of clients are aged 20-29, showing the need for their young adult support group. It also discusses the success of their new strategic plan and two-year Expressive Arts campaign. Client surveys show high satisfaction with the support and sense of community provided at Sheena's Place. The organization relies on donations and fundraising to continue their programs.
The Black Canyon of the Gunnison
National Monument
By Richard G. Beidleman*
Colorado's Black Canyon of the Gunnison certainly ranks
among the foremost chasms of the world in terms of dimensions
and renown. Starting at Sapinero, where the ancient preCambrian
rock complex first becomes evident, the Gunnison
River has cut an ever deepening gorge to westward for a distance
of some fifty miles until, swinging northwest, the river
leaves its walled confines and joins the North Fork of the
Gunnison River in the North Fork Valley near Delta.
The deepest and most spectacular portion of this chasm,
a twelve-mile length, has been included within the boundary
of the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument,
which was established by the presidential proclamation of
Herbert Hoover thirty y ears ago on March 2, 1933. Here the
gorge depth ranges from 1,730 to 2,725 feet, while the width
narrows to 1,100 feet at the rim and as little as 40 feet at the
bottom, at the latter site the river completely inundating the
chasm floor. The depth and narrowness of the Black Canyon
is emphasized by the sheer, black-stained, lichen-covered,
variegated pre-Cambrian walls and the periodic gloom that
shrouds the depths.
Black Wall Street, Tulsa Oklahoma Race Riot of 1921: A Documentary Film and C...RBG Communiversity
This document is the final report of the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. It includes the commission's findings on each item assigned by statute and explains their methods. The majority of commissioners recommend reparations for survivors and descendants such as direct payments, a scholarship fund, and establishing an economic development zone in the historic Greenwood district. While commissioners have different views on reparations, the majority agrees they are appropriate. The recommendations are intended to guide policymakers rather than dictate a specific solution.
To Kill a Mockingbird takes place during the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s. During this time, the United States was experiencing severe economic hardship due to the stock market crash and years of drought. Millions were unemployed and homeless, living in shantytowns called "Hoovervilles." The Dust Bowl led to massive dust storms that destroyed farmlands and crops in the Midwest. Racial segregation and discrimination against African Americans was also widespread in the South under the system of Jim Crow laws.
TO BE HUMAN, IT SEEMS, IS TO SEEK PURPOSE IN OUR
TRANSIENT lives. Many people find meaning in the eyes of their children
or in the words of Scripture, but I discovered it on a beach outside a Hyatt
Regency in Aruba. I had journeyed south that winter of 1998 to escape the
snows of Boston and, more notably, to take in nature’s grandest spectacle, a
total solar eclipse, which would cross the Caribbean on a Thursday
afternoon in late February. As a science journalist, I thought I knew what to
expect. For 174 seconds, the blue sky would blacken, stars would appear,
and the sun would manifest its ethereal outer atmosphere, the solar corona.
What I had not anticipated was my own intense reaction to the display.
For three glorious minutes, I felt transported to another planet, indeed to a higher plane of reality, as my consciousness departed the earth and I gaped at an alien sky. Above me, in the dim vault of the heavens, shone an incomprehensible object. It looked like an enormous wreath woven from silvery thread, and it hung suspended in the immensity of space, shimmering.
As I stood transfixed by this vision, I felt something I had never experienced before—a visceral connection to the universe—and I became an umbraphile, an eclipse chaser, one who has since obsessively stalked the moon’s shadow —across Europe, Asia, Australia—for yet a few more fleeting moments of lunar nirvana.
The Jim Crow laws legalized racial segregation and discrimination in the Southern United States between 1877 and 1965. They mandated the separation of public facilities for blacks and whites, including separate schools, public places, and public transportation. The laws were established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by Southern state legislatures to disenfranchise and remove political and economic gains made by blacks during Reconstruction. Court rulings like Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 aided the establishment and preservation of racial segregation by determining that "separate but equal" public facilities were constitutional.
The document summarizes key differences between the North and South at the start of the Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial capacity, railroads, factories, and financial institutions. The South relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like rifles, which had longer range and accuracy, and farm equipment like reapers, which increased productivity, favored the North. The war evolved into one of attrition as armies dug in and sought to cut off the other's supplies and reinforcements.
The document summarizes key differences between the North and South at the start of the Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial capacity, railroads, factories, and financial institutions. The South relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like rifles, which had longer range and accuracy, and farm equipment like reapers, which increased productivity, gave the North military and economic advantages over the South. The war evolved to involve entrenchments, blockades, and inflicting exhaustion on the enemy over long battles of attrition. Though Lincoln wanted to end slavery, he initially avoided emancipation to prevent border slave states from joining the Confederacy.
The document is a slideshow presentation on a variety of topics including the Pillars of Creation nebula, crab nebula, microscopic plankton, orchids, a migrant mother photo from the dust bowl era, a family windmill, childhood photos, fossil footprints, volcanic ash cliffs, historical inscriptions, unusual crystal and plant growths, animals, and landscapes from around the world. The presentation provides brief descriptions and context for each image.
Mark Twain, born Samuel Clemens in 1835 in Missouri, grew up in Hannibal on the Mississippi River where he had many adventures as a boy that influenced his famous novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. He had a variety of jobs as a young man, including steamboat pilot, before achieving fame as a writer. His books were hugely popular during his lifetime but he also experienced personal tragedies like the deaths of his wife and children.
The document provides a timeline of key events from 1865-1911, during the Industrial Age and Gilded Age in the United States. Some major developments include the transcontinental railroad connecting in 1869, the rise of industrialists like Rockefeller and Standard Oil in the 1870s, inventions like the telephone, light bulb and cameras in the late 1870s-1880s, immigration and urbanization in the 1880s, conflicts between settlers and Native Americans in the 1870s-1890s, the rise of labor unions and strikes in the 1890s-early 1900s, and the growth of mail order catalogs around 1900-1910.
This document provides a summary of a thesis paper written by Matthew Woods about the mindset of runaway slaves during the American Civil War from 1861-1865. It discusses how some slaves took the war as an opportunity to escape toward Union lines, while others had their relationships with owners changed by the war. It explores ways that slaves resisted, such as participating in the Underground Railroad or impersonating free papers. It argues that while many slaves were born into slavery in the U.S., the Civil War provided a key distraction that some slaves saw as their chance to gain freedom by escaping to Union soldiers.
The document summarizes research disputing claims of mysterious disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle. It describes Larry Kusche's findings that many reported disappearances were exaggerated, misreported, or attributable to natural causes like weather. His research showed numbers of incidents were consistent with any similarly sized ocean area and included accidents during tropical storms that writers had failed to mention. While popular culture attributes the region's name to paranormal phenomena, the document concludes the "Bermuda Triangle" is a manufactured mystery not supported by evidence.
Topics to be covered
•Native American History – The Burro Flats Painted Cave
•Rancho Simi History
•Eddie Maier ownership in 1910
•Henry and Max Silvernale and Bill Hall ownership as partners 1939 to 1954
•Movie History 1937-1954
•Santa Susana Field Lab History 1947 to today
•North American Aviation (NAA) History
•NAA leases land in the Simi Hills 1947, the first test stand was completed in 1949 (Area I)
•NAA purchased Burro Flats/Sky Valley in 1954. The Rocketdyne Division builds four test stand complexes (Area II). The Atomics International Division builds the Sodium Reactor Experiment (Area IV).
•Nuclear research ends 1988; Rocket testing ends in 2006, cleanup continues
Prelims of Gen Quiz at IIM-A under the aegis of Ahmedabad Quiz Club QuizWaaley
The document provides information about an exam with 25 questions that will qualify the top 8 scorers. It mentions quizmasters and chachas being more powerful than Saitama. It asks the reader to identify a movie from a reference to Pulp Fiction and the painter from references to MC Escher's style in Simpsons stills. It states that Antoine-Joseph Sax invented the saxophone and provides constants related to Planck's constant and the kilogram.
1) The document provides a timeline of key events and developments in America from 1850 to the 1890s, during the period of rapid industrialization and immigration.
2) Some notable events included the Bessemer Process revolutionizing steel production in the 1850s, the Transcontinental Railroad being completed in 1869, the Pullman Strike in 1894, and Plessy v. Ferguson establishing the "separate but equal" doctrine in 1896.
3) The timeline highlights developments in technology, transportation, industry, politics, and social movements that shaped America during this pivotal era.
This document contains information about The Great Gatsby including locations, social themes, and music of the 1920s time period. It discusses popular jazz artists of the time like Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. It also includes images and citations for fashion, clothing, and a scene summary between Tom and Jordan at one of Gatsby's parties where they would have been listening to music, drinking alcohol, which was illegal, and smoking cigarettes.
The Korendians are a advanced civilization that live approximately 400 light years from earth, and their planet "Korendor" is 6 times bigger than our planet. This goes about a man called Bob Renaud that in July 1961 made contact with a ET woman called "Lin-Erri" that came from that planet.
Source:
http://www.galactic.no/rune/korundor1.html
- The document describes the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, where a white mob attacked the prosperous black community of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma and destroyed over 35 blocks of homes and businesses.
- Over 10,000 black residents were left homeless and an untold number were killed, though some estimates put the death toll as high as 300. Planes were even used to drop incendiary bombs on the Greenwood district.
- The massacre was sparked by accusations that a young black man assaulted a white woman in an elevator, though he was never convicted. It revealed the deep racial tensions and inequality that still existed after the abolition of slavery.
The document provides background information on the sides in the American Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial and economic capabilities compared to the South, which relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like railroads, rifles, and farming equipment influenced how the war was fought and gave advantages to both sides. The war resulted in immense suffering and changed how battles were reported to the public. The question of emancipating slaves added complexity, as Lincoln weighed military and political factors.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Black Wall Street, Tulsa Oklahoma Race Riot of 1921: A Documentary Film and C...RBG Communiversity
This document is the final report of the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. It includes the commission's findings on each item assigned by statute and explains their methods. The majority of commissioners recommend reparations for survivors and descendants such as direct payments, a scholarship fund, and establishing an economic development zone in the historic Greenwood district. While commissioners have different views on reparations, the majority agrees they are appropriate. The recommendations are intended to guide policymakers rather than dictate a specific solution.
To Kill a Mockingbird takes place during the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s. During this time, the United States was experiencing severe economic hardship due to the stock market crash and years of drought. Millions were unemployed and homeless, living in shantytowns called "Hoovervilles." The Dust Bowl led to massive dust storms that destroyed farmlands and crops in the Midwest. Racial segregation and discrimination against African Americans was also widespread in the South under the system of Jim Crow laws.
TO BE HUMAN, IT SEEMS, IS TO SEEK PURPOSE IN OUR
TRANSIENT lives. Many people find meaning in the eyes of their children
or in the words of Scripture, but I discovered it on a beach outside a Hyatt
Regency in Aruba. I had journeyed south that winter of 1998 to escape the
snows of Boston and, more notably, to take in nature’s grandest spectacle, a
total solar eclipse, which would cross the Caribbean on a Thursday
afternoon in late February. As a science journalist, I thought I knew what to
expect. For 174 seconds, the blue sky would blacken, stars would appear,
and the sun would manifest its ethereal outer atmosphere, the solar corona.
What I had not anticipated was my own intense reaction to the display.
For three glorious minutes, I felt transported to another planet, indeed to a higher plane of reality, as my consciousness departed the earth and I gaped at an alien sky. Above me, in the dim vault of the heavens, shone an incomprehensible object. It looked like an enormous wreath woven from silvery thread, and it hung suspended in the immensity of space, shimmering.
As I stood transfixed by this vision, I felt something I had never experienced before—a visceral connection to the universe—and I became an umbraphile, an eclipse chaser, one who has since obsessively stalked the moon’s shadow —across Europe, Asia, Australia—for yet a few more fleeting moments of lunar nirvana.
The Jim Crow laws legalized racial segregation and discrimination in the Southern United States between 1877 and 1965. They mandated the separation of public facilities for blacks and whites, including separate schools, public places, and public transportation. The laws were established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by Southern state legislatures to disenfranchise and remove political and economic gains made by blacks during Reconstruction. Court rulings like Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896 aided the establishment and preservation of racial segregation by determining that "separate but equal" public facilities were constitutional.
The document summarizes key differences between the North and South at the start of the Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial capacity, railroads, factories, and financial institutions. The South relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like rifles, which had longer range and accuracy, and farm equipment like reapers, which increased productivity, favored the North. The war evolved into one of attrition as armies dug in and sought to cut off the other's supplies and reinforcements.
The document summarizes key differences between the North and South at the start of the Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial capacity, railroads, factories, and financial institutions. The South relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like rifles, which had longer range and accuracy, and farm equipment like reapers, which increased productivity, gave the North military and economic advantages over the South. The war evolved to involve entrenchments, blockades, and inflicting exhaustion on the enemy over long battles of attrition. Though Lincoln wanted to end slavery, he initially avoided emancipation to prevent border slave states from joining the Confederacy.
The document is a slideshow presentation on a variety of topics including the Pillars of Creation nebula, crab nebula, microscopic plankton, orchids, a migrant mother photo from the dust bowl era, a family windmill, childhood photos, fossil footprints, volcanic ash cliffs, historical inscriptions, unusual crystal and plant growths, animals, and landscapes from around the world. The presentation provides brief descriptions and context for each image.
Mark Twain, born Samuel Clemens in 1835 in Missouri, grew up in Hannibal on the Mississippi River where he had many adventures as a boy that influenced his famous novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. He had a variety of jobs as a young man, including steamboat pilot, before achieving fame as a writer. His books were hugely popular during his lifetime but he also experienced personal tragedies like the deaths of his wife and children.
The document provides a timeline of key events from 1865-1911, during the Industrial Age and Gilded Age in the United States. Some major developments include the transcontinental railroad connecting in 1869, the rise of industrialists like Rockefeller and Standard Oil in the 1870s, inventions like the telephone, light bulb and cameras in the late 1870s-1880s, immigration and urbanization in the 1880s, conflicts between settlers and Native Americans in the 1870s-1890s, the rise of labor unions and strikes in the 1890s-early 1900s, and the growth of mail order catalogs around 1900-1910.
This document provides a summary of a thesis paper written by Matthew Woods about the mindset of runaway slaves during the American Civil War from 1861-1865. It discusses how some slaves took the war as an opportunity to escape toward Union lines, while others had their relationships with owners changed by the war. It explores ways that slaves resisted, such as participating in the Underground Railroad or impersonating free papers. It argues that while many slaves were born into slavery in the U.S., the Civil War provided a key distraction that some slaves saw as their chance to gain freedom by escaping to Union soldiers.
The document summarizes research disputing claims of mysterious disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle. It describes Larry Kusche's findings that many reported disappearances were exaggerated, misreported, or attributable to natural causes like weather. His research showed numbers of incidents were consistent with any similarly sized ocean area and included accidents during tropical storms that writers had failed to mention. While popular culture attributes the region's name to paranormal phenomena, the document concludes the "Bermuda Triangle" is a manufactured mystery not supported by evidence.
Topics to be covered
•Native American History – The Burro Flats Painted Cave
•Rancho Simi History
•Eddie Maier ownership in 1910
•Henry and Max Silvernale and Bill Hall ownership as partners 1939 to 1954
•Movie History 1937-1954
•Santa Susana Field Lab History 1947 to today
•North American Aviation (NAA) History
•NAA leases land in the Simi Hills 1947, the first test stand was completed in 1949 (Area I)
•NAA purchased Burro Flats/Sky Valley in 1954. The Rocketdyne Division builds four test stand complexes (Area II). The Atomics International Division builds the Sodium Reactor Experiment (Area IV).
•Nuclear research ends 1988; Rocket testing ends in 2006, cleanup continues
Prelims of Gen Quiz at IIM-A under the aegis of Ahmedabad Quiz Club QuizWaaley
The document provides information about an exam with 25 questions that will qualify the top 8 scorers. It mentions quizmasters and chachas being more powerful than Saitama. It asks the reader to identify a movie from a reference to Pulp Fiction and the painter from references to MC Escher's style in Simpsons stills. It states that Antoine-Joseph Sax invented the saxophone and provides constants related to Planck's constant and the kilogram.
1) The document provides a timeline of key events and developments in America from 1850 to the 1890s, during the period of rapid industrialization and immigration.
2) Some notable events included the Bessemer Process revolutionizing steel production in the 1850s, the Transcontinental Railroad being completed in 1869, the Pullman Strike in 1894, and Plessy v. Ferguson establishing the "separate but equal" doctrine in 1896.
3) The timeline highlights developments in technology, transportation, industry, politics, and social movements that shaped America during this pivotal era.
This document contains information about The Great Gatsby including locations, social themes, and music of the 1920s time period. It discusses popular jazz artists of the time like Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. It also includes images and citations for fashion, clothing, and a scene summary between Tom and Jordan at one of Gatsby's parties where they would have been listening to music, drinking alcohol, which was illegal, and smoking cigarettes.
The Korendians are a advanced civilization that live approximately 400 light years from earth, and their planet "Korendor" is 6 times bigger than our planet. This goes about a man called Bob Renaud that in July 1961 made contact with a ET woman called "Lin-Erri" that came from that planet.
Source:
http://www.galactic.no/rune/korundor1.html
- The document describes the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, where a white mob attacked the prosperous black community of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma and destroyed over 35 blocks of homes and businesses.
- Over 10,000 black residents were left homeless and an untold number were killed, though some estimates put the death toll as high as 300. Planes were even used to drop incendiary bombs on the Greenwood district.
- The massacre was sparked by accusations that a young black man assaulted a white woman in an elevator, though he was never convicted. It revealed the deep racial tensions and inequality that still existed after the abolition of slavery.
The document provides background information on the sides in the American Civil War. The North had a larger population and more industrial and economic capabilities compared to the South, which relied more heavily on agriculture and slave labor. New technologies like railroads, rifles, and farming equipment influenced how the war was fought and gave advantages to both sides. The war resulted in immense suffering and changed how battles were reported to the public. The question of emancipating slaves added complexity, as Lincoln weighed military and political factors.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
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This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
2. of protest marches in the summer of 1963, almost three
zen girls from Americus, Georgia, were held for weeks in an abandoned Civil War-
a stockade. Never formally charged, the girls banded together in horrific
rcumstances, even as their frantic families searched for them. Now their story
courage, faith and resilience is finally being told BY DONNA M.OWENS !
he Georgia sun was unrelenting that July day in 1963. It
caiised sweat to trickle down the backs of young brown girls
wearing pretty homemade cotton dresses, starched blouses
and capri pants. Moisture formed at the napes of ebony boys-
with neatly cropped hair, dampening their crisp, short-slee^
shirts. But for some 200 N^iro children and adults singir>g
"We Shall Overcome" as they marched down Cotton Avenue iii
the smalt southern town of Americus, Georgia, the heat was the
least of their concerns. In this onetime cotton center founded
in the 183O's, Blacks made up about half of the 13,000 resi-
dents, but they were treated as second-class
citizens under the same Jim Crow policies that ruled the South.
Americus, with its mix of antebellum cottages, tin-roof
shanties, pecan orchards and railroad tracks, had a name that
suggested democracy, but racism was as fertile here as the
rich, red Georgia soil. Colored and Whites Only signs prolifer-
ated, and segregated lunch counters, schools, restrooms and.
water fountains were a way of life. {
"If you think of Mississippi first and Alabama second,
then Georgia was third in terms of discrimination," says >
j
SNCC smu^led photographer
DANNY LYON into the stockade grounds
in 1963 to capture this haunting
portrait of the jailed girls of Americus.
to-of
w»
3. special report
fulian Bond, then a 23-year-oId leader of the Student Nonvio- "Blood was pouring down my face"
lent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and now chairman of Near rhe edge oJ downiown, the demonstrators found them-
the NAACP. "in those days Black people had no rights that selves facing a large While mob that included law-enforcement
Whiles felt bound to obey. You expected every outrage, and the officers, known Ku Klux Klan members and self-deputized
worst that could happen, would happen." citizens who had apparently heard about the protests from an
Indeed, at high noon on thai hot ]uly day, the worst was be- informant. No one doubted thai the snarling police dogs, high-
ginning to unfold in downtown Americus. "The plan was for half powered fire hoses, billy clubs and electric cattle prods carried
of the demonslrators to head to the segregated Martin Theater, by some in the angry moh would be used. But the marchers
while the rest were to veer right toward the White waiting r(X)m knew they would not fight back. They had taken an oath of non-
of the Trailways bus station," recalls James A. Westbrooks, then a violence that included no hitting or cursing, not speaking or
19-year-old college .student and a field secretary for SNCC, which laughing, never blocking entrances to stores and aisles, and
had joined with the NAACP to organize the demonstralion. being courteous al all time.s. So when the shc'iiff ordered
I Bin 13 yaars old and was In I««9burg Btockadt fK» Aur'uat 31 to
Septenber 8. Tliar* woro 3^ ltlds in Uiera irlLh ma. TViaro uero no beds, no
m Ltrsssos, no blankata, pillows, no sfiaata. The fl,)or w»s cold. lou lay dam
for whilo and soon It s',.:rts hu^-tlia you so yoj alt ui for ttrfill* ind It stirta
hurtlns 90 you hava to USUL arouni:! for a Nhll«.
Tha hsnbur^wa w«ra dry and wera not eookad wall bacauaa whan you break
your [Mat opm you can aaa a lot of red aeat lnsida,
Dia S M U of th« wMta matarial ms bad. I want to Uie bsthroai t^a^a to
urlnaU, but didn't have a bowel movanent Utriiig tha <ntir« nine days 1 was t^are,
I urlAated Mhare tAs water fron t ^ QI-MOT dralna down. Sone of tha glrla us^d
• placa of cardboard that can* fron U« box«a, tha cardboard boicas, that tha
hamburgon ware brought ir..
Hia water vaa hot and i t was rumiflg a l l tha Mhlla, '<^J nan s*** ua Ihraa
cupa for tho 32 of us.
TYitn »ts a a^an^ but I t wasn't claan Mough for you to batfie In.
Jardboard with wast« nutarlal had been put Ui»r* and i t naadad cl«a.iii^ and
acrubbing.
At night tha nosquitwas Bid ro^chas ware at UB. In tha middla of th« uaak
Above: The girls were forced to sleep on the concrete floor. Right: tha whit* Min gavfl ua saw blankets. They war* tha onea wlich had bMD bumed.
After their release, some of them wrote statements to document Re put t)-aN out in ttja aua Htd than gav* HIM back to ua. Two v UirM of im
what they'd been through. altpt tn ona bl^nkat.
bafor* • • Uila Uth daj of Sapiwbar, 1963,
Loli Bamnw HoUey ^^^ •'aarletta FULlar
In Americus, as in other parts of the South, young
people, fired up by meetings at local Black churches, had Votary PubUc, Oa. SUta at large Kanrlatu Puller
My camlaoicci w n i n a 8 ^
become faithful foot soldiers of the movement. They had
already taken part in sit-ins, protests and picketing at the
segregated public library and the local courthouse, and
voier registration drives were plentiful. "We were marching at them to disperse, the demonstrators dropped to their knees
least once a week and every weekend." remembers Emmarene and began to pray.
Kaigler Streeler. who turned 14 that year. "A lol of us were snealc- "I didn't have sense enough to be afraid." says Piane Dorsey
ing out of the house and doing it againsi our parents' wishes." Bowens, who had just turned 13 and was marching for the first
But just as the dream of dignity and equality emboldened some time. More than anything, she wanted to see places like the
Blacks, their challenge to the status quo angered and threatened local Watgreens desegregated. "You'd go in for a prescription,
many Whites in Americus. including some of those charged with and there was a soda fountain but you weren't allowed to
protecting them. Police Chief Ross Chambliss and the tobacco- drink." recalls Bowens. "Whites there would laugh and make
chewing sheriff. Fred Chappell. were as infamous in these parts fun of you and call you 'nigger/ When the movement came. 1
us Bull Connor was in Birmingham. Alabama. Chappell, who some couldn't wail to be part of it."
local folk described as heavy-jowled and prone to calling Blacks But as resolved as she and the other protestors were io
"nigger," had even left an impression on Dr. Martin Luther King. remain nonviolent, nothing could have prepared Ihem for the
Jr., back in 1961. After his arrest in nearby Albany, Dr. King had mayhem thai ensued. As the crowd swarmed Ihe marchers, I.ul.u
been transferred and briefly held in the Sumter County jail in Westbrooks Griffin, then 13. felt herself being swept from the side-
Americus. Afterward he is reported to have said that Fred walk into the street bya stinging blast of water, her shoes knocked
Clhappell was "the meanest man in the world." This was the man off her feel. As she struggled to get up, a policeman attacked her
waiting to meet the marchers in Americus in 1963. with his club. "He was on me, beating me over the head." lul.u
4. Above: LuLu Westbrooks Griffin stands at the door of the stockade 43
years later. Right: Gloria Breedlove and Carol Barner Seay inside the
stockade, which is now a public works facility.
would recall 43 years later. "Blood was pouring down my face."
Her older brother James, the SNCC worker who had
helped recruit and train the young marchers, watched in be taken out one by one and killed," recalls Barbara Jean Daniels.
horror hut was in no position to help. Pinned to the ground by She was 14 years old.
police, one boot on his neck, another on his back, he could do
nothing as his little sister LuLu, his 13-year-oId niece, Gloria "He swung the shovel at me"
Breedlove, and dozens of other children were arrested and The Leesburg Stockade, a low-slung white structure wiih steel
thrown into police wagons. doors, looked as if it hadn't been cleaned in decades. The barred
Eunice Lee Butts, now 95. remembers that her son James windows all had jagged, broken glass and no screens, the floors
came running home that afternoon, screaming that his 12-year- were filthy, and a single bare lightbulb hung from the ceiling.
old sister "Bang" was in jail. Bang was the nickname of Bobbie In this narrow cell, roughly 12 feet by 40 feel, more than 30 girls
Jean Butts Wise, one of Mrs. Butts's nine children, "I was scared were squeezed into a space intended to accommodate far fewer.
and sick with worry," she says, her voice clouding at the A squat, graying older man called Pops was assigned to guard
memory, "But I didn'l even know where they had taken them. the girls; he was armed with a sholgun. Other White men passed
There was nothing 1 could do." through on no particular schedule—whether they were
For weeks afterward, the marchers were shuffled from jail law-enforcement officials or not, the girls never knew. The only
to jail in neighboring counties across the region, all overflow- other person Ihey saw regularly was the local dogcatcher,
ing with demonstrators from the numerous civil rights protests Mr. Story, a tall, thin man with a nervous manner. He delivered
that took place that summer. Boys and girls were sometimes meals. "The first two days we didn't get any food." recalls Shirley
kept apart by chicken wi re in improvised holding pens, and older Ann Green Reese, who was 14. "Around the third day they started
teens were separated from yoxinger ones. Eventually about three bringing us hamburgers that were almost raw."
dozen adolescent girls from various facilities were transported Several of the girls began throwing up or suffering from
some 20 miles from Americus to the Leesburg Stockade, a Civil diarrhea. The only toilet was a broken commode in Ihe corner
War era prison in Lee County. The youngest girl was about 10, that couldn't be flushed. It was soon clogged to the top, With
the oldest about 16. For nearly seven weeks, many would be held no other options to relieve themselves, the j^irls took to squat-
in that bleak place with little family contact and no sense of ting over the shower drain, which quickly developed a
when or whether they'd ever be let go. "They told us that we'd suffocating stench. To wipe themselves they used the paper >
ESSENCE 165 6.2006
5. special report
cartons from the burger deliveries. When their menstrual someone was down or crying, we would all gather 'round and
cycles came, they tore strips off their dresses and fashioned hold her." Everyone had lost weight, and LuLu desperately needed
them into napkins. Bathing wasn't an option. There was a medical treatment for her festering head wound. The other girls
showerhead, but its slow perpetual drip proved useless, though suffered from a range of ills: ear infections, boils and high fevers.
the girls could get a sip of warm water by standing under it Some had lice in their hair, and one girl. 15-year-old Verna Hollis.
with cupped hands. One of the guards later gave them a few learned she was pregnant while inside the stockade. "Everyone
tin cups to share. else was getting their period, and mine never came," she says
Rickety bunks with thin, soiled mattresses stood in a cor- softly. "I was throwing up all the time. I was just miserable."
ner of the cell, but nobody dared sleep on them. Instead, the
girls huddled on the concrete floor with no pillows and some Six of the women who were imprisoned together in the summer of 1963
stained army blankets full of cigarette burns. They didn't sleep stroll toward the grounds of the Leesburg Stockade last January.
much. Their backs ached; the mosquitoes, ticks and roaches
were merciless; and the heat was stifling.
As the days and then weeks crawled by, the girls would take
turns at the window, hoping for an occasional whiff of fresh air.
"Once 1 was looking out through the hars, and I asked Pops
something. When he didn't respond, I called him a bastard."
recalls Willie Mae Smith Davis, whom everyone called Mae Mae.
She was 15 years old. "He swung a shovel at me. and it narrowly
missed my hands,"
Some guards poked the girls with sticks and called them
"pick-a-ninnies." "jungle bunnies" and "nigger." They told them
Dr. King had gone tci iail. "Who's going to be your,savior now?"
"One day a guard tossed a
snake into the cell, sending
the girls screaming into a
corner. The reptile
The girls took turns at the window to escape the heat and stench In the cell. remained there all night."
they taunted. One day one of the guards tossed a huge snake
into the cell, sending the girls screaming into a corner. The "We weren't afraid of death"
reptile remained there all night, hissing noisily. The next Several weeks into their captivity, the girls plotted an escape.
morning it was captured after the girls begged one of the other Biilie Jo Thornton Allen, 14 at the time, recalls that the plan was
men to remove it, for them to call out to Pops so he'd open the door, then they'd
Laura Ruff, who was 15, recalls the nlghl that two truckloads push past him and make a run for it. Chased by blasts from the
of While boys came riding up. "We knew they'd been drink- old man's rifle, they made it across an open field to the trees.
ing because we could see the bottles in their hands," she says. But after stumbling through the heavily wooded area for some
"They started yelling to Pops. 'Let us in there. We wanna have time, they began to realize they'd never be able to find Iheir way
a little fun!'" Pops cocked his rifle and told them to get the home. Dejected, they returned to the stocltade.
hell out of there, but Sanders, now 58, still shudders at the There were other rebellions. The pile of mattresses in the
thought of what might have happened had they somehow corner, which the girls had been forced to use as an impromptu
managed to get inside the stockade, lavatory, developed a horrible smell, recalls Roberliena Free-
During those long, slow weeks of captivity, the girls did what man Fletcher, who was 14. One day, in protest, the girts set the
they could to keep going, "We prayed all the time, and we sang pile on fire with some matches they found on the floor.
freedom songs." says Annie Lue Ragans Laster. one of several girls Back in Americus. frantic family members and SNCC work-
who had been sent to the stockade from later protests, "When ers were making the rounds of jails trying to discover the >
ESSENCE 186 6.2006
6. "Some families
were charged a fee
of $2 for each day
their daughters
spent in prison."
says Bond. "We then mailed them to Black newspa-
pers all over the country." One image appeared in
a September 1963 issue of Jet magazine, along with
an article, "CA Marchers Kept in Filthy, Slench-
Some of the women gathered last January on a bridge in Americus, Georgia. From left: Filled Jail." Bond and others say that Lyon's pholos
Annie Lou Ragans Laster, Carol Barner Seay. Gloria Breedlove, Emmarene Kaigler
Streeter. LuLu Westbrooks Griffin, Sandra Russell Mansfield, Diane Dorsey Bowens.
also came to the attention of a U.S. senator, Harri-
son A. Williams. Jr., who later entered them into the
whereabouts of the children. Word finally filtered to some of Congressional Record. In her self-published book, Freedom Is
the girls' families that they were being held in the Leesburg Not Free (Heirloom Publishing). LuLu Westbrooks Griffin spec-
Stockade. The few parents who had transportation drove out ulates that the pictures were eventually passed on to Attorney
with food and provisions, holding fast to the hope of taking General Bobby Kennedy. While no one has been able to verify
their daughters home. A handful did succeed in securing their a paper trail, it seems clear that after the [CONTINUED ON P G 218] AE
daughters' release, but they were mostly the town's more in-
fluential Negro citizens, including the principal of the Black
junior high school and the local funeral director. Most other
parents weren't even allowed to see their girls. DELAYED JUSTICE in recent years some
After more than a month, help finally arrived in the form
cases involving civil rights-era crimes have
of a 21 -year-old SNCC photographer named Danny Lyon, a Jew-
ish New Yorker living in Atlanta. The organization had senl been reopened by the Justice Department
him lo take photos of the girls as evidence of the fact that the'
THE CASE: The 1963 bombing of Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in
were being held illegally. Smuggled to the stockade grounds
Birmingham, Alabama, killed four Black girls; Addie Mae Collins, 14;
by a Black teen driving Lyon's Volkswagen, the photographer
Cynthia Wesley, 14; Carole Robertson, 14; and Denise McNair, 1 1 .
lay on the floor behind the front seat. While the young driver
THE RESULT: One defendant was convicted in 1977. In 1997 the FBI
distracted Pops, Lyon crawled out of the car and around to the
reopened the case, prompted by pressure from the community. An in-
back, where he saw the girls through tbe windows.
vestigation led to a second conviction in 2 0 0 1 and a third in 2002. A
"They clustered around the window, holding hands through fourth alleged participant died in 1994, and therefore was never tried.
Ihe broken glass and bars and saying 'freedom,'" remembers THE CASE: Ben Chester White, 6 7 , a Black sharecropper, was driven
Lyon, who later recounted the experience in his book Memo- into a national forest and murdered in 1966 by Ernest Avants, who
ries of the Southern Civil Rights Movement (University of North
was reported to be a Mississippi Ku Klux Klan member.
Carolina Press). "They were beautiful." Lyon knew he didn't THE RESULT: White was murdered on federal land, so the five-year
have much time, so he explained to the girls the sort of pic- statute of limitations didn't apply. In 2 0 0 3 , at the instigation of civil
tures he needed to make. They understood at once, "They all rights groups, Avants, 7 2 , was convicted in Jackson, Mississippi.
went and lay down and pretended they were asleep," says Lyon. THE CASE: Emmett Till, 14, was abducted in August 1955 after al-
His hands trembled and his heart pounded as he snapped legedly whistling at a White woman in Money, Mississippi. His mu-
photo after photo of the giris in the squalid cell. He documented tilated body was found in the Tallahatchie River several days later.
the overrun toilet, the rusty showerhead, the girls in torn cloth- THE RESULT: In 1 9 5 5 two White men were acquitted by an all-
ing on the filthy floor. Then, while the teen who'd smuggled White jury. In 2 0 0 4 the FBI reopened the case, in part because of
him in continued to engage Pops. Lyon hurried back to the car. new information uncovered by documentary filmmakers. This year
shaken by his close-up view of southern "justice." the case was turned over to the state's attomey in Mississippi. At
When he returned to SNCC's Atlanta headquarters with the press time no c h a f e s had been filed. —D.M.O.
pictures, workers rushed to publicize the girls' plight. "The
pictures first appeared in our newspaper, The Student Voice,"
7. STOLEN GIRLS
CONTINUro FROM PAGF i b6
pictures arrived in Washington, D.C, someone important, premiered in Americus at the Rytander Theatre in July 2003,
perhaps President John F. Kennedy himself, orchestrated the the fortieth anniversary of the girls' imprisonment. Filmmak-
girls' release. ers Richard J, McCollough and Travis W. Lewis of Mirus Vide<i
All the girls know for sure is that in the first week of Septem- Productions in Rochester, New York, spent hours and their own
ber 1963, just after school opened, they were herded into a police money documenting the incident. "It's one of those untold civil
wagon and transported back lo Americus. They'd had some inkling rights stories that everyone needs to know about," says McCol-
I hat they were soon to be released: Fops had muttered it to them, lough, 49, a broadcast journalist who first met LuLu in 1999,
and the dogcatcher, Mr. Story, hrought scraps of news from the after reading about her in their local newspaper. Completed
girls' families as he delivered meats. On arriving back in Ameri- in 2003, the documentary has won several awards, including
cus. several of the girls were brought before officials at the local the prestigious Telly, which honors the best in cable, news and
courthouse. There they learned that some families had been video, in 2004, Yet the filmmakers believe that not enough
charged $2 per day as a "boarding fee" for the time their children people have seen the fibn, "The story of what happened to these
spent in prison. But the parents, overjoyed to see their daughters women deserves national exposure," says Lewis.
alive, focused only on getting them home safely.
Carol Barner Seay, who was 13. remembers tbat she and her
mother were told to appear before a magistrate who asked if
she would promise to stay away from the protests and other
"mess" in the future. Carol retorted angrily. "Mess, what mess?!"
as her mother tried in vain to shush her. "We always knew that
marching could mean jail or death," Seay, a minister, says now.
"But I was not afraid, and neither were the others. We were will-
ing to do what we had to do to gain our freedom."
"It's like I'm drawn back here"
On a crisp, clear day in January 2006, a caravan of cars zooms
past wide-open cotton fields, magnolia trees, marshland and
peanut stands in scenic southwest Georgia. Forty-three years
after their imprisonment, some of the women are returning to
visit the place where their innocence was stolen.
Many of the Americus girls have moved away from their
hometown and are scattered all over the country. Some have
become educators, business owners, nurses, real estate agents,
urban planners, scientists and ministers; others have worked
at factories and fast-food places, and some are retired. Most are
married with adult children, some have grandchildren, and sev-
eral have passed away. Though their lives have followed many
different trajectories, they all say they were forever marked by
what they endured in the summer of 1963.
The Leesburg Stockade along Highway 32 has been slightly
altered over the years, and its name, etched into a wall of the
structure, has been obscured by a public-works sign, "A lot of LuLu (above, at 13) wore a flour sack after her dress was torn in the march.
sad memories in this place." says Sandra Russell Mansfield, a
small, fragile-seeming woman who still lives in Americus, and Shari K. Thompson. 34. an adjunct professor in film and me-
who begins weeping almost from the moment she steps out of dia arts at Temple University, couldn't agree more. She is work-
her car. "1 drive down sometimes. It's like I'm drawn back here. ing on her own documentary about the women. She became
Every time I come, I leave a piece of myself," aware of them in the late nineties after Philadelphia attorney
For some of the women, like Robertiena Freeman Fletcher. Calvin Taylor. Jr., who had met Gloria Breedlove, approached
this is the first trip back. Others, like LuLu Westbrooks Griffin, Thompson to tell the story on film, Taylor thought the docu-
now 57 and a resident of Springwater, New York, and Gloria mentary would help him build a legal case on behalf of the
Breedlove. 57, of Philadelphia, have made regular pilgrimages women. Intrigued, Thompson traveled to Americus to see the
to both Americus and Leesburg over the last decade, taking pic- stockade and meet the women, "This story has a spiritual con-
tures and videotaping the site to preserve the history. nection for me," she reflects. "I haven't been able to let it go."
A documentary. LuLu and the Girls ofAmericus, Georgia 1963, Indeed, this too-little-known incident of the civil rights era
ESSENCE 218 6.2006
8. haunts all who learn of it. Taylor, a specialist in litigation, says sissippi home; and that four little Black girls were killed in a
he cried the first time he discovered what had happened to Birmingham, Alabama, church bombing.
the girls in that sweltering summer of 1963. "I think they de- But 1963 also had its triumphs. August 28 of that year, while
serve some type of reparation for this tragedy." says the attor- the girls shored up their courage by singing civil rights anthems
ney, who now represents Gloria and several of the other women inside the stockade. Martin Luther King, Jr.. gave his indelible
hut has not yet filed a lawsuit. "These women suffered enor- "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington. D.C. Few among the
mously, and most Americans don't even know it happened." 250,000 gathered to hear him knew that hundreds of miles away
in Georgia, another group of marchers was also serving the same
"We took a Stand for justice" cause. "We took a stand for justice and dignity, and I'm proud
Roaming the grounds of the stockade on a crisp blue morning of what we accomplished, knocking down those ugly walls of
last January, alternately crying and holding one another, the segregation," LuLu says,
women reflect on the fact that, all these years later, many of As the daylight slants lower over the stockade, the women,
them still have recurring nightmares. A few have sought coun- bound by shared experience, spontaneously come together in
seling, but others have spent their entire adult lives burying a circle and bow their heads to pray. Afterward, as they break
the incident, refusing to talk about their time in the stockade, apart, each one lost in her own separate memory, you know that
even with their spouses and children. in the pantheon of fighters who struggled and sacrificed for free-
Nor has their hometown come to terms with its cruel re- dom's cause, the girls of Americus, Georgia, deserve their right-
sponse during that summer of protests. While the population ful place in history, too. D
of Americus has grown to 17.000 (39 percent White and 58 per- Donna M. Owens, an award-winning print and broadcast journalist,
cent Black), and the town now houses internationally known lives in Baltimore.
organizations like Habitat for Humanity, Americus has never
officially addressed the stockade incident or other shameful
episodes in its history. Many of the authorities involved, in-
cluding sheriff Fred Chappell and police chief Ross Chambliss, THE GIRLS IN THE STOCKADE
have died, and court records thai might document the girls' im-
I
n the summer of 1963. at least 33 girls from different protest
prisonment have proven impossible to locate.
marches were held at the Leesburg Stockade. Most of
The women feel that an apology, and some form of legal re- them had participated in the violent Americus march that
dress, is appropriate given what they suffered. Officials at the was intended to desegregate the local movie theater and
U.S. Department of Justice, the federal agency charged with pur- bus station. The following are among those who were re-
suing civil rights violations, told Taylor that the five-year statute portedly detained. They are listed by their childhood names
of limitations has passed, but legal precedent exists for other
avenues of pursuit. "If there is a strong community outcry about 1. Carol Bamer 18. Mary Frances Jackson
what happened." says attorney Jacqueline A. Berrien of the 2. Lorena Bamum 19. Vyrtis Jackson
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, "then legal re- 3. Pearl Brown (Deceased) 20. Dorothy Jones
course can still occur." (See "Delayed justice" sidebar.] 4. Bobbie Jean Butts 21 Emma Jean Jones
To raise awareness, several of the women have spoken pub- 5. Agnes Carter (Deceased) 22. Emmarene Kaigler
licly about their experiences, and all would like to see a memo- 6. Pattie Jean Collier 23. Barbara Ann Peterson
rial or museum erected at Leesburg to educate young people. 7. Mattie Crittenden 24. Annie Lue Ragans
Georgia congressman Sanford Bishop, who represents the Sec- (Deceased) 25. Judith Reid
ond Congressional District, which includes Americus and Lees- 8. Barbara Jean Daniels 26. Laura Ruff
burg. has said that a memorial "is in the realm of possibility." 9. Gloria Dean 27. Sandra Russell
He has already pushed through legislation to name the new U.S. 10. Carolyn DeLoatch 28. Willie Mae Smitti
courthouse in nearby Albany for civil rights attorney C.B. King. 11. Diane Dorsey 29. BillieJoThomton
With support from the Georgia legislature, he says, the women 12. Juanita Freeman 30. Gloria Breedtove
might be honored with their own memorial as well. "It's a very 13. Robertiena Freeman Westbrooks
gripping story." he says, "one that needs to be preserved." 14. Henrietta Fuller 31. LuLu Westbrooks
Would any of the women choose to rewrite their fateful his- 15. Shirley Ann Green 32. OzellarWhitehead
tory? Not one said she would. "The minute I became a freedom 16. VemaHollis (Deceased)
rider." reflects Gloria. "I was choosing to abandon my jump rope 17. EvetteHose 33 Ganie Mae Williams
and be a soldier for freedom. That motivation superseded fear."
Even so, the women are aware that many fellow soldiers
Teresa Mansfield of Americus assisted in compiling this list.
never lived to tell their story; that in the same year they were
in jail, Medgar Evers was fatally shot in the back outside his Mis-