Liste der Einträge im National Register of Historic Places im Macon County (Alabama)
Die Liste der Registered Historic Places im Macon County führt alle Bauwerke und historischen Stätten im Macon County in Alabama auf, die in das National Register of Historic Places aufgenommen wurden.
Aktuelle Einträge
Lfd. Nr. | Name | Bild | Datum der Eintragung | Adresse/Lage | Ort | ID-Nr. | Beschreibung |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Archeological Site No. 1MC110 | 14. Dez. 1985 | Address Restricted | Tuskegee | 85003118 | ||
2 | Atasi Site | 18. Apr. 1977 | Address Restricted | Shorter | 77000210 | ||
3 | Butler Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church | 28. Aug. 1995 | 1002 N. Church St. | Tuskegee | 95001022 | ||
4 | Creekwood | 13. Apr. 1989 | Society Hill Rd., 0.4 mi. N of Co. Hwy. 10 | Creekstand | 89000310 | ||
5 | Grey Columns | 11. Jan. 1980 | 399 Old Montgomery Rd. | Tuskegee | 80000364 | ||
6 | Macon County Courthouse | 17. Nov. 1978 | E. Northside and N. Main Sts. | Tuskegee | 78000495 | ||
7 | Main Street Historic District | 12. März 1984 | Main St. | Tuskegee | 84000650 | ||
8 | North Main Street Historic District | 7. März 1985 | 600, 615, 616 N. Main, 101, 110 E. Water, 700 Water, 701 Maple and 811 N. Maple Sts. | Tuskegee | 85000445 | ||
9 | Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church and Rosenwald School | 22. Juni 2010 | 7 Shiloh Rd | Notasulga | 10000522 | ||
10 | Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site | 6. Nov. 1998 | c/o Tuskegee Institute, PO Drawer 10 | Tusgegee Institute | 01000284 | ||
11 | Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site | 15. Okt. 1966 | 1 mi. NW of Tuskegee on U.S. 80 | Tuskegee | 66000151 |
Siehe auch
Weblinks
- Suchmaske Datenbank im National Register Information System, National Park Service
Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien
Autor/Urheber: Rivers A. Langley; SaveRivers, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
This is a photograph of the Hangar 1 Museum located at Moton Airfield at the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site in Tuskegee Alabama.
Autor/Urheber: Rivers A. Langley; SaveRivers, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
This is a photograph of the The Johnston-Cutright House (Circa 1850; pictured left) and the Segrest Law Office (Circa 1840; pictured right) located in the North Main Street Historic District in Tuskegee, Alabama.
Grey Columns, Old Montgomery Road (Institute Road), Tuskegee, Macon County, AL EXTERIOR (FROM LEFT). - FRONT (N.E.) ELEVATION.
Autor/Urheber: Rivers A. Langley; SaveRivers, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
This is a photograph of Butler Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church located in Tuskegee, Alabama. "This church was the focal point for a multi-year grass-roots project that united and empowered African Americans, rural and urban, educated and uneducated, to fight for the right to vote. Butler Chapel AME Zion Church, an imposing brick building located on a hill west of downtown Tuskegee, is a prominent landmark in the historically black neighborhood known as Zion Hill. The building, the second church on this site, was constructed about 1877. Originally built in wood, the church was sided with brick in the 1940s. In a 1957 effort to minimize the number of black voters in Tuskegee, Alabama's municipal elections, the state legislature simply redrew the town's political districts, placing Tuskegee Institute and all but a small fraction of black residents outside city limits. To protest this action, Tuskegee's middle-class black community and Macon County's poor black citizens joined forces in a seven-year "Crusade for Citizenship." On June 25, 1957, 3,000 area black residents showed up at Butler Chapel for the first of many weekly mass meetings. Only 500 attendees could fit into the church's small sanctuary; the rest listened outside. Charles Gomillion, a professor at Tuskegee Institute and the driving force of the black Tuskegee Civic Association, urged the crowd to join a "Trade with Friends" boycott of local white merchants. "We are going to buy goods and services from those who help us, from those who make no effort to hinder us, from those who recognize us as first-class citizens," he promised. The boycott ended in early 1961 when city boundaries were returned to their original position, after the Supreme Court ruled that a legislature could not single out an isolated segment of a racial minority for discriminatory treatment." [Source: NPS.gov]
Autor/Urheber: Rivers A. Langley; SaveRivers, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
This is a photograph of Creekwood, a Greek Revival home near Creek Stand Alabama. The home was built around 1844 and it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on April 13, 1989.
Autor/Urheber: Rivers A. Langley; SaveRivers, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
This is a photograph of the Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in Notasulga, Alabama.
Macon County Courthouse (Built 1905), Tuskegee, Alabama.
This is a picture of the Tuskegee City Center in Tuskegee, Alabama.