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  1. Battle Creek High School (1) Battle Creek Sanitarium (1) Battle Creek Symphony (1) Calhoun County YMCA Conference Albion, Oct. 29-30, 1915 Smith (1) Don Nelson, Battle Creek Enquirer (1) Grand Trunk (1) h58_0140 (1) Hart-Dole-Inouye Federal Center (1) Ireland, Herb (1)... View More; Subject. People Individuals (601) Houses (534) Industries (501 ...

  2. This article explores how photographs were used as evidence during the early Northern Ireland Troubles. In particular, it focuses on the collection and use of images at the Scarman Tribunal, which investigated the disturbances of the summer of 1969, and the Widgery Tribunal, which sought to ascertain the sequence of events surrounding Bloody ...

    • Erika Hanna
    • 2015
  3. Known across the globe as the breakfast cereal capital of the world, Battle Creek was also the cradle of the Seventh-day Adventist religion, the chosen home of social justice activist Sojourner Truth and a major stop on the Underground Railroad.

  4. Title: 1882 Stereopticon View of East side of S. Jefferson Street Author: Unknown author. Title: 1897 S. F. McKay Grocer J. 0. Barden Meat Market Author: Unknown author. Title: 1926 Battle Creek High School Commencement Program Author: Unknown author Date: Title: 1927 Battle Creek High School Commencement Program Author: Battle Creek High ...

  5. Aug 15, 2018 · The title of my exhibit is Tears of America: the Riots of 1968, which concentrates on six cities that experienced the uprisings after the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. These cities are Baltimore (Maryland), Boston (Massachusetts), Cleveland (Ohio), Detroit (Michigan), Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania), and Washington, D. C.

  6. May 15, 2017 · Harrowing Photos From The 30-Year War That Tore Northern Ireland Apart. By John Kuroski. Published May 15, 2017. Updated January 24, 2020. For 30 years, The Troubles tore Northern Ireland apart. These intense images reveal what life was like for those who lived through it.

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  8. Mar 12, 2018 · On March 17, 1968, an estimated 10,000 people in London demonstrated against American action in Vietnam and Britain’s support for the United States. The protests began in Trafalgar Square and culminated in clashes outside the United States Embassy in Grosvenor Square.