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Charlotte Daily Observer 5/20/1906 Sec.3 p. 3 and  5/20/1906 Sec.3, p. 5     ODE TO NORTH CAROLINA   PATTIE WILLIAMS GEE.   To stay the rocks from heralding the shame That in oblivion of men’s praise or blame
News…From the Carolina Room
Echo of the Bugle Call
APPENDIX B   GENERAL WOOD'S ADDRESS IN THE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHYARD
The following articles detail the various events of the 1906 celebrations for the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. Charlotte Daily Observer: 5/20/1906 p.14, 5/20/1906 p.6, 5/20/1906 p.7 and 5/20/1906, Section 3, p.1  
The following article highlights the Boy Scouts parade for the Mecklenburg Independence day.   The Charlotte Observer 5/21/1941, pp. 1-2A   Mecklenburg Independence Day Breaks With Tradition Highlights-Scouts Parade and Garden Party  
OFFICE OF THE PRESS SECRETARY TO MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON THE WHITE HOUSE     EXCERPTS FROM REMARKS BY  MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON AT THE DEDICATION OF THE JAMES POLK BIRTHPLACE PINEVILLE, MECKLENBURG COUNTY,  NORTH CAROLINA    
V. V. McNitt, Chain of Error
Chain of Error Presented below is Chain of Error and the Mecklenburg Declarations of Independence, by V.V. McNitt. The book has been separated into chapters in PDF format for your viewing and printing convenience.
News…From the Carolina Room Jane Johnson Manager, Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room Main Library, 310 N. Tryon, Charlotte, NC
Beginning of Part I --- Table of Contents --- Next Section
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MISS AMAY, as she was affectionately called by her children and friends, lived on Boundary Street about two blocks from our home in Brooklyn. She was a short, stout woman with a very friendly serene face and a rare ability to make friends.
IN THE NEXT BLOCK from our home lived a physician who was an important person in our early family life. During our father’s lifetime, Dr. George Williams was our family physician, and he remained so after my father’s death. 
THE COLORED RACE as a whole was markedly religious during the dark days of slavery, and out of many a fervent gathering held in the recesses of dark swamps or other forbidden places came the simple, sincere thoughts expressed in many grand old spirituals. 
MILLIONS of words, often impassioned and frequently more resonant than reasoned, have been spoken and countless tens of thousands have been written in letters, books, historical journals, magazines, and newspapers on the subject of the Mecklenburg declaration of indepenence.
Intricate Design Patterns in Stone Markers
Stone Cutters
"Over There For Uncle Sam"
May 18, 1918
1849 daguerreotype of the President and First Lady
James Knox Polk was a native of Mecklenburg County, a graduate of the University of North Carolina, a political leader in the state of Tennessee, and Pre
South Brevard Street, 200 and 300 blocks
  Click on map to see more detail.   South Brevard Street (east side only) (4th Street intersects) 205 - Presson Tire Co. 
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