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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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4 results for "Sandbeck, Peter B"
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Record #:
34749
Author(s):
Abstract:
Beaufort’s first African-American school, the Washburn seminary, was founded in 1867 by the American Missionary Association and the northern Congregation Church. Located in a traditionally black neighborhood, the school’s aim was to train and educate freed slaves living in a refugee camp in Beaufort. Teachers were brought from northern states as educators, and by 1900 the school had expanded to include several new buildings including a training workshop and classrooms. In 1920, the main school building burned and was rebuilt near the new Beaufort High School which catered to the black community. Today, this building remains in use as the Beaufort Central School.
Source:
The Researcher (NoCar F 262 C23 R47), Vol. 22 Issue 2, Fall-Winter 2006, p5-6
Record #:
2036
Author(s):
Abstract:
Ensuring that gravestones are preserved requires that preservationists have a good knowledge of cleaning techniques and gravestone repair techniques.
Source:
Record #:
1972
Author(s):
Abstract:
A process that has been used by foresters and the timber industry is now a valuable tool in assisting historians in precisely dating old houses and maritime artifacts.
Source:
Tributaries (NoCar Ref VK 24 N8 T74), Vol. 2 Issue 1, Oct 1992, p26-29, il, f
Record #:
18865
Abstract:
In this seminal article of a series of biographies of North Carolina artisans, Bishir et al. discuss the work of Hardy B. Lane and his three sons, prominent North Carolina carpenter-builders in the 19th-century New Bern.
Source:
North Carolina Preservation (NoCar Oversize E 151 N6x), Vol. Issue 64, July/Aug 1986, p1-3, f