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  1. Photo credit to Focused Images. Used with permission. (1)
  2. Photo credit to Joachim H. Walther (unlocated) (1)
  3. Photo credit to Megaloconomous Brothers (unlocated) (1)
  4. Photo credit to R.N. Khanna (1)
  5. Photo quite faded; actual size is 3" x 4" (1)
  6. photo taken in August 1968 (1)
  7. Photographed at Nixon's home in Saddle River, NJ (1)
  8. photographs (65)
  9. photographs -- photographic prints (248)
  10. Phyllis (Holden) Dole, first row, 2nd from right. [She was the first wife of RJD]. (1)
  11. Phyllis Dole (2)
  12. Pierre Fm. (2)
  13. Pierre Shale (4)
  14. Pilgrims and pilgrimages. (4)
  15. Pinckney School (3)
  16. Pinckney School entrance, 810 West Sixth St. (1931) Pinckney students placed markers at the home sites where Langston Hughes lived and gravestones for his grandparents (donated by Rumsey Funeral Home, also on Sixth St.). According to the school website, a celebration in 1991 included dedication of a Langston Hughes Library for Children at Pinckney, and Hughes's biographer, Arnold Rampersad, attended. Mary J. Dillard was Hughes's teacher. At that time Lawrence schools were segregated up to grade four, although the neighborhood was not segregated. (1)
  17. Pinckney School, 801 West Sixth St (1872) E.S. Tucker took this photography of the old Pinckney School building in about 1895. It stood in the front yard of the present building. This school was built in 1872. In 1908 four rooms were added, so Langston Hughes attended school in a larger building. During Hughes's time there was no electricity. Hughes began second grade here in 1909 and completed third grade before transferring to integrated New York School for the rest of the elementary grades. At Pinckney, African American students had a separate classroom and teacher, Mrs. Mary Dillard. She must have made an impression on the young Hughes, as he maintained contact with her as an adult. (1)
  18. Pinckney School, 801 West Sixth St. (Intersection of Mississippi St. and Sixth St.) (1931) This school site is where Langston Hughes attended elementary school from 1909 to 1910. The location is a few blocks from his grandmothers house at 732 Alabama St. Today's Pinckney School was built in 1931. The first Pinckney School was on the front grounds of the present site. Hughes would have attended school in that building. Sixth St. was formerly known as Pinckney St. When he was living near here, he writes of his education from his grandmother Mary Langston, who told him stories where always life moved, moved heroically toward an end. (1)
  19. Pink (1)
  20. Pink chert unifacially worked (1)