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  • a colorful fence filled with happiness and joy in Faubourg Marigny
    IMG_7853.jpg
  • a colorful fence filled with happiness and joy in Faubourg Marigny
    IMG_7854.jpg
  • IMG_2969.jpg
  • self-portrait; Mercedes-Benz Superdome exterior at night
    IMG_3490.jpg
  • Mercedes-Benz Superdome exterior at night
    IMG_3472.jpg
  • Mercedes-Benz Superdome exterior at night
    IMG_3429.jpg
  • Le Marais Hotel; New Orleans Hotel Collection
    IMG_8615_16_17_18_19_20_21.jpg
  • a champagne colored Cadillac with Jones County Mississippi license plate and a bumper sticker 'In God We Trust' outside the courthouse in Laurel, Mississippi
    125A7427.jpg
  • colored, inlaid tile
    1816.jpg
  • a dusty, old bottle of K&B brand vodka found at the Blitch family home, "Ahmeek" in Abita Springs; Katz & Besthoff drug store's colorful bottle and logo
    IMG_0642.jpg
  • Historical marker for The Pythian Temple, sponsored by the Plessy and Ferguson Foundation; The architecturally acclaimed Pythian Temple building at 234 Loyola Avenue (formerly South Saratoga) is one of New Orleans' storied landmarks.  From 1908 to 1941, members of the Knights of Pythias, under the leadership of Smith W. Green, served as a beacon of pride for African Americans during the segregation era of Jim Crow.  In June of 1908, the Pythians laid their cornerstone at Gravier and Saratoga Streets.  In August of 1909, Green opened the Pythian Temple at a cost of over $200,000.  The dedication ceremonies featured orchestral music and selections by the St. James A.M.E. choir and glee club of the Dryades Street YMCA.  Black lawyer, J. Madison Vance - a 1912 delegate to the Republican National Convention - engendered frequent applause as he spoke of the "Power of Organization and its effects upon Civilization."  The Times-Picayune described the Pythian Temple as "the biggest business enterprise ever attempted by the colored race in the United States."
    125A3987HDR-Edit.jpg
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George Long Photography

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