Greensboro Pictorials Highlights
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Y.W.C.A., Greensboro
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Exterior view of the YWCA, located on South Greene Street at Sycamore Street (now February One Place) in Greensboro.
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Y.M.C.A., Greensboro
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Exterior view of the YMCA, located on South Greene Street at Sycamore Street (now February One Place) in Greensboro.
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Y.M.C.A. Building
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Exterior view of the YMCA, located on South Greene Street at Sycamore Street (now February One Place) in Greensboro.
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White Oak Cotton Mills
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Exterior view of the White Oak Cotton Mills, northeast of Greensboro. White Oak was later merged into Cone Mills Corporation.
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West Market Street M.E. Church
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Exterior view of the West Market Street Methodist Episcopal Church, located on West Market Street at Library Place (now Commerce Place) in Greensboro. Image taken from "Progressive Greensboro: The Gate City of North Carolina"
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West Market St. Methodist Church
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Exterior view of the West Market Street Methodist Church, located on West Market Street at Library Place (now Commerce Place) in Greensboro.
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Views of two graded schools
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Exterior view of the two public graded schools designated for white children in Greensboro, one on Lindsay Street and the other on Asheboro Street (now Martin Luther King Jr. Drive). Image taken from "Southward the sun of progress shines"
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View of the Keeley Institute, Greensboro, N.C.
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Exterior view of the Keeley Institute campus, located at 447 West Washington Street in Greensboro. The institute was housed in Blandwood, the former home of Governor John Motley Morehead, which is now a museum operated by Preservation Greensboro. Image taken from "Commercial history of the State of North Carolina"
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Vick Chemical Co.
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Exterior view of the Vick Chemical plant, located on Milton Avenue (now Milton Street) at Florida Avenue in Greensboro. Vick Chemical, founded by Lunsford Richardson, inventor of Vick's VapoRub, later became known as Richardson-Vick's, Inc. and is now part of Procter & Gamble.
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Vanstory Clothing Co.
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Exterior view of the Vanstory Clothing Company, located at 236-238 South Elm Street in Greensboro. Vanstory's would later occupy space in the Jefferson Standard Building, Greensboro's tallest building for most of the 1920s through 1960s.
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Van Lindley Company
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View of the J. Van Lindley nursery, located on Oakland Avenue Extension in Greensboro.
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Two views of Market Street
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Two views of Market Street, one looking east and the other looking west. Image taken from "Southward the sun of progress shines"
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Two views of Elm Street
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Two views of the southern part of Elm Street in Greensboro, one looking south from the railroad tracks and one looking north from Lewis Street. Image taken from "Southward the sun of progress shines"
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