The Recovery of a Rural African American Burial Ground is a Recovery of Voices & Lives

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Poughkeepsie “Scrapbook”

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Women’s Suffrage on Wheels!

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Washington’s 1792 Visit to Poughkeepsie

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The Long & Winding Road: The Local Path to 1920 Women’s Right to Vote Nationally

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Stoutenburgh-Teller Family Association 2019 Hyde Park

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The Street Where It Happened

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Poughkeepsie 1961

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Washington & Lafayette in Dutchess County

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Black Burial Grounds: Dutchess

In Dutchess County, burial of Persons of Color took place in separate, segregated cemeteries into the early 20th century. The last known such burial was Lemuel Jackson of Red Hook, buried in the Turkey Hill “Colored Cemetery” in the Town of Milan in 1927. In addition to segregated cemeteries, there were segregated sections of larger cemeteries, often disallowing permanent markers. There were homestead or farm burials, as was the tradition especially prior to the Civil War. There were some, but few instances where highly regarded servants were buried in a predominantly White cemetery.
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