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Title | Description | Coordinates | LocationMem | URL |
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Tingley Memorial Hall | Tingley Memorial Hall honors William Wilson Cooke, a graduate of Claflin College and the first African American man working as a senior architectural designer in the US Supervising Architect's Office in Washington, D.C, who designed the building. The Hall also memorializes attempts at improving higher education and the future of young African Americans in South Carolina. | 33.499021, -80.854211 | South Carolina, United States | https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/8d9d24b4-91b0-48bc-a578-dfbc5a57b97c, http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/orangeburg/S10817738009/pages/S1081773800903.htm |
To Us, To Those Like Us, Damn Few | , | |||
Touro Infirmary | On this site in 1852, Jewish American philanthropist, Judah Touro, a distinguished veteran of the Battle of New Orleans, established Touro Infirmary to care for seamen, immigrants, slaves, and the indigents of all races and religions. Touro Infirmary relocated to Prytania Street in 1882. As a full service hospital, Touro Infirmary continues to provide health care to all of New Orleans. | 29.941130, -90.064491 | On Convention Center Boulevard, New Orleans, (In the median) | https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=40487 |
Trail of Tears Cherokee Removal Park | Located in the Trail of Tears historical park stands granite walls that have the names of Cherokees that were forcibly removed from their homes. Also lays next to it is a map that outlines the route of the Trail of Tears to show the path the Native Americans had to take. | 35.407135, -85.006079 | 6615 Blythe Ferry Ln, Birchwood, TN 37308 | https://www.roadtripsandcoffee.com/cherokee-removal-memorial-park/ |
Trail of Tears Cherokee Removal Park (1) | , | |||
Trail of Tears Memorial | The Trail of Tears Memorial was built by Larry Baggett to memorialize the plight of the Cherokee Nation’s forced march and relocation from the southeastern United States to Indian Territory in Oklahoma. Most of the concrete work is encrusted with local stone. Mr. Baggett studied Indian culture, astrology and numerology, and told visitors he created the monument to memorialize the plight of Native Americans, to whoms' ghosts he could speak with. | 37.910281, -91.980656 | Jerome, Missouri Heading west on I-44, exit 172 (Jerome). Turn immediately north, then right at the T-intersection at Hwy D toward Jerome. The Trail of Tears Memorial is a few hundred yards on the left. | http://spacesarchives.org/explore/collection/environment/trail-of-tears-memorial/ |
Trails West | Smoky Hill Trail The Smoky Hill Trail was the most direct route to Denver and the goldfields of the central Rockies. Immigrants heading west through central Kansas followed the Kansas River, then headed up its Smoky Hill River branch into the high plains of eastern Colorado. Here, the Smoky Hill River ended. Immigrants then turned northwest to Denver over the high, dry rolling prairie country. It was a tough stretch. A Denver newspaper called those who dared it "foolhardy and insane.... | 38.812618, -102.468887 | On U.S. 40, near Cheyenne Wells, (On the left when traveling east) | https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=77898 |
Treaty of Greenville Memorial | This memorial commemorates the Treaty of Greenville (1795) between the US and the indegenous peoples of Northwest territory (namely the Wyandot and Deleware peoples) which marked the end of a battle in Ohio during the 1930s between American army headed by Anthony Wade seized Native Americans led by the Blue Jacket of the Shawnee. The Native American signatories of this treaty agreed the cede their land south and east of the Cuyahoga River and the US would cede claims of land north and west of... | 40.105657, -84.689749 | Darke County, Ohio | https://ohiohistorycentral.org/w/Treaty_of_Greeneville_(1795), https://ohiomemory.org/digital/collection/p267401coll32/id/14361/ |
Treue Der Union Monument | [Panel 1:] This German language monument, erected 1866, honors the memory of 68 men (mostly Germans) from this region who were loyal to the Union during the Civil War. Trying desperately to reach U.S. Federal troops by way of Mexico, about 40 of the men were killed by vengeful Confederates bent on annihilating them, in the Battle of the Nueces (on Aug. 10, 1862) and a later fight (Oct. 18). The bodies of the slain and those who drowned swimming the Rio Grande were left unburied. A group of... | 29.969783, -98.913783 | On High Street, Comfort, (On the right when traveling east) | https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=34985 |
Trinity Complex | Organized for Ev. Lutheran beliefs - Sept. 9, 1853 by 75 Prussian immigrant families - Red brick church made of clay on site | 43.114328, -78.517552 | On Wolcottsville Road (County Route 122) , Royalton, (On the right when traveling north) | https://www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=77742 |