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Title Description Coordinates LocationMem URL
The Messer Building The original Messer Building was developed by James A. Messer and occupied a portion of this site for over half a century until 1989. The Messer family, early Scottish immigrants who settled in the District of Columbia, have left their mark as skilled stone cutters on many government buildings, churches and private residences in the area. Their influence and efforts remain in areas of commerce, banking, government and civic leadership. 38.903447, -77.028122 On 12th St. NW, Downtown, (On the left when traveling north) https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=88823
The Milltown Cotton Mill Workers Monument English on left They came from homes still standing in Milltown and St. Stephens. They were joined by experienced textile workers from England, Scotland, America and French Canada. The included young women, recruited from small towns and villages across the Maritimes. Together with earlier immigrants from Ireland, England and Scotland, they moved to factory work from the declining lumbering and shipbuilding industries. Their sweat and toil powered the second largest cotton mill in Canada. At... 45.174817, -67.295246 On Milltown Boulevard (State Route 170) , St. Stephen, (On the right when traveling north) https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=77234
The Mohawk Institute The Mohawk Institute Residential School was established in 1831 for children of the Six Nations Iroquois living on the Grand River, and it was a Canadian Indian residential school in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. 0.000000, 0.000000 Ontario, Canada https://muscleandboneblog.wordpress.com/tag/mohawk-institute/
The Mormon Battalion This memorial is the Property of the State of Colorado ____ A detachment of United States Soldiers of The Mormon Battalion in the Mexican War spent the winter of 1846-47 near this site. With their families and Mormon immigrants from Mississippi they formed a settlement of 275 persons. They erected a church and rows of dwellings of cottonwood logs. Here were born the first white children in Colorado. 38.255814, -104.604100 On Stanton Avenue, Pueblo, (On the right when traveling north) https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=96068
The Mormon Trail Between 1846 and 1869, thousands of Mormon immigrants traversed the Great Plains enroute to sanctuary in the Great Basin of the Rocky Mountains. The main route ran through Nebraska, paralleling the Platte River. A cholera epidemic in the fall of 1853 caused the bulk of the immigrants to seek a new pathway west. Mormon wagon and handcart companies traveled from Westport, Missouri, down the Santa Fe Trail to 110-Mile Creek crossing, then across the prairie into Geary County and Fort Riley and... 39.037858, -96.765392 Near Henry Drive, Fort Riley, https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=43936
The Museum of Indigenous People This museum is meant to preserve and show the culture of the indigenous population of Brazil. The museum was also created to educate people about the Brazilian indigenous people and the challenges they went through, as well as correct any misunderstadning people have of them. -15.784919, -47.911380 Brasilia, Brazil https://www.visitbrasil.com/attractions/memorial-of-indigenous-peoples.html, https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g303322-d2349396-Reviews-Memorial_of_the_Indigenous_Peoples-Brasilia_Federal_District.html
The National Memorial for Peace and Justice 800, six foot corten steel monuments to symbolize thousands of lynching victims, one for each county in the US that a lynching took place in. Also includes statues of slaves in chains 32.372196, -86.312746 Montgomery, Alabama https://eji.org/, https://museumandmemorial.eji.org/memorial
The New Ferry Building - Ellis Island Restoration of the New Ferry Building on Ellis Island is being supported in part by a Federal Save America’s Treasures award administered by the National Park Service, Department of the Interior. New Ferry Building In 1999, the Statue of Liberty National Monument/Ellis Island was awarded a $1.2 million federal challenge grant from the Save America’s Treasures program to restore the New Ferry Building. New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman’s advisory committee on Ellis Island helped secure... 40.699369, -74.041130 Near , Jersey City, https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=49291
The Next Wave Caribbean immigrants discovered this stretch of Georgia Avenue in the 1940s, bringing island culture along with jerk chicken, curry, and coco bread. Many, like Eric Williams, who later led Trinidad and Tobago to independence in 1962, came to study or teach at Howard University. Others came seeking better jobs. the 2000 Census showed that Caribbean-born residents formed DC's second-largest immigrant group. For English-speaking immigrants from the former British West Indies, transition to DC... 38.931945, -77.023757 On Georgia Avenue, Pleasant Plains, (On the right when traveling south) https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=66559
The Niels Petersen House Niels Petersen, a Danish immigrant, homesteaded 160 acres in Tempe in 1872. He was involved in almost every aspect of area development and was an organizer of the Tempe Methodist Episcopal Church in 1888. This Queen Anne style farm house was designed by James Creighton in 1892 and built on the homestead for Niels and Susanna Decker Petersen. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. This plaque is a bicentennial project of the Tempe Historical Society 33.393367, -111.961717 Near West Southern Avenue, Tempe, (On the right when traveling west) https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=27559

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