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Raleigh: A Living History of North Carolina's Capital
Raleigh A Living History of North Carolina's Capital Author:David Perkins Sherman's conquest: the long march end in Raleigh — What has befallen us?: from the diary of a Southern lady — The newspaper war: recollections of a printer's devil — An editorial face off — A Yankee on the dome: a Union soldier signals the end of the war — Haywood house — Andrew Johnson: a misunderstood native son — Peace College: for the thor... more »ough education of young ladies'
Briggs and Sons, Inc.: a memoir of a Raleigh burgher
A spectacle for progress: the North Carolina state fair
Oberlin: the village freedom built
W.W. Holden: the career of an enigma
The freedman's mania: Shaw University and St. Augustine's College
Estey hall: the finest edifice
Anna Cooper: a critic of all favoritisms
John Rex and R. Stanhope Pullen: bachelors who helped make the town metropolitan hall
To wake a slumbering state: North Carolina State University
A northern visitor's view of the college. Blount Street: the very best address
A formal life
Rolling out the city: the era of the streetcar
A boy's life in the 1800s
The architect and the princess: the love story of A.G. Bauer and Rachel Blythe
To redeem the south: the news and observer and partisan journalism
Joseph Daniels: scourage of rum and republicans
A female seminary of high order: Meredith College
The govenor's mansion
Bloomsbury Park: joyride at the end of the line
The pullen park carousel
Hargett Street: the rise and decline of the black Main Street
A segregated lifestyle
Curtain up!: The founding of Raleigh little theater
A method for education: Berry O'Kelly
Miss Blanche's salon: tar heel politics at the Sir Walter Hotel
The little airport that could: Raleigh
Durham international airport takes off
Amelia Earhart brings first autogyro to city. Clarence Poe: An editor for the common man
The city market in the 1930s: like family!
Nell Battle Lewis: crusader for a reformed south
Incidentally: on the scopes trail
Jane McKimmon: when we're green we grow
Beyond the beltline: the rise of north Raleigh
Like a life-size pinball machine: A Yankee experiences Raleigh traffic
The Dukes of York: a family of builders
The classic lines of memorial auditorium
Crossing the color line: William Campbell integrates Raleigh's schools
Sit-down strike spreads to stores: the civil rights movement awakens
Ellen Winston: helping others help themselves
Running with the wolfpack: North Carolina state's sports legacy
Main Street moves indoors; the malling of Raleigh. Fayetteville street mall: letting grass grow on the town's main street
Dorton arena and it's designer: an architect's lonely monument