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3 results for The State Vol. 3 Issue 4, June 1935
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Record #:
15371
Author(s):
Abstract:
A group of teenage boys from Washington began a natural history museum known officially as the Washington Field Museum, but locally as the \"Bug-House Laboratory\" in one of the town's municipal buildings. The \"Bug-house Boys\" develop, maintain, and run the displays exclusively and gather most of the specimens which they also prepare. In 1935, 4,500 specimens had already been collected.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 4, June 1935, p1, 26, il
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Record #:
15372
Author(s):
Abstract:
C. R. Peebles became president of \"Safe Bus, Inc.\" a new business venture to consolidate private bus lines into one company. The group of Winston-Salem bus owners operated 42 passenger buses and transported 8,000 passengers daily. The segregated bus line employed was owned, maintained, and operated by an African American group to provide the African American community with transportation services.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 4, June 1935, p7, 22, il
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Record #:
15742
Author(s):
Abstract:
Recently, a historical marker to Dobbs County was erected on the spot of its old county courthouse near Goldsboro. Few people know the county existed and fewer know of the man for whom it was named, Arthur Dobbs. The county ceased in 1791 and three counties were formed from it--Lenoir (1791), and Greene and Wayne (1799). Dobbs was a colonial governor of the state, 1754-1765, surveyor-general of Ireland, a scholar and a scientist.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 3 Issue 4, June 1935, p8, il
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