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  <title><![CDATA[Black Gotham Archive]]></title>
  <author>
    <name><![CDATA[Unknown]]></name>
  </author>
  <rights><![CDATA[Copyright Black Gotham Archive. All Rights Reserved.]]></rights>
  <updated>2018-07-10T17:31:05-04:00</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/61/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Maritcha Lyons]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[This is a photograph of Maritcha as an adult.<br />
<br />
In adulthood, Maritcha was able to fulfill her lifelong ambition of becoming a school teacher.  In her memoir, she credited the many people who helped her at every step of the way.  In childhood, there were her parents, who “made over a sickly, peevish, unproposing [sic] girl into a woman with a new lease on life” and sacrificed so that she could “attain what was regarded in my youth as a liberal education for a woman.”   Later came her teachers, most esepcially Charles Reason. 	<br />
<br />
Maritcha devoted herself to elementary education.  She began at Colored School no. 1, later P.S. 67, where Charles Dorsey, another member of Brooklyn’s black elite, was principal and the much admired Georgiana Putnam assistant principal.  There, Maritcha progressed from teaching the lowest primary grade to instructing the graduating class.  Ten years later, she was hired as the assistant principal of P.S. 83 under the directorship of Frank Harding whose further mentoring helped her become, in her own words, “useful and efficient.”<br />
<br />
Thanks to her long career Maritcha developed a well-defined set of teaching principles.  Recognizing that elementary education was the full extent of what the majority of children—black or white, native born or immigrant—would receive, Maritcha saw herself as providing “the education of the masses rather than of the classes.”  She believed that there were three essential components to their education: information, which included not only book knowledge but also critical thinking; elevation, or moral development and the formation of personality; and the cultivation of the mind-body connection since she was convinced that control over muscles led to greater mental readiness and concentration.  <br />
<br />
In 1892, Maritcha moved beyond the female sphere of elementary school teaching into political activism.  That year she debated Ida B. Wells at the Brooklyn Literary Union and, in the eyes of many, won the debate.  The two women became close friends.  Maritcha mentored Wells “extempore speaking&quot;; in turn, it was Wells who convinced Maritcha and her friends to start a black women&#039;s club in Brooklyn, the Woman&#039;s Loyal Union.<br />
<br />
]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-07-17T22:41:41-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/61/"/>
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    <category term="education"/>
    <category term="family"/>
    <category term="social activism"/>
    <category term="women"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Maritcha Lyons</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">This is a photograph of Maritcha as an adult.<br />
<br />
In adulthood, Maritcha was able to fulfill her lifelong ambition of becoming a school teacher.  In her memoir, she credited the many people who helped her at every step of the way.  In childhood, there were her parents, who “made over a sickly, peevish, unproposing [sic] girl into a woman with a new lease on life” and sacrificed so that she could “attain what was regarded in my youth as a liberal education for a woman.”   Later came her teachers, most esepcially Charles Reason. 	<br />
<br />
Maritcha devoted herself to elementary education.  She began at Colored School no. 1, later P.S. 67, where Charles Dorsey, another member of Brooklyn’s black elite, was principal and the much admired Georgiana Putnam assistant principal.  There, Maritcha progressed from teaching the lowest primary grade to instructing the graduating class.  Ten years later, she was hired as the assistant principal of P.S. 83 under the directorship of Frank Harding whose further mentoring helped her become, in her own words, “useful and efficient.”<br />
<br />
Thanks to her long career Maritcha developed a well-defined set of teaching principles.  Recognizing that elementary education was the full extent of what the majority of children—black or white, native born or immigrant—would receive, Maritcha saw herself as providing “the education of the masses rather than of the classes.”  She believed that there were three essential components to their education: information, which included not only book knowledge but also critical thinking; elevation, or moral development and the formation of personality; and the cultivation of the mind-body connection since she was convinced that control over muscles led to greater mental readiness and concentration.  <br />
<br />
In 1892, Maritcha moved beyond the female sphere of elementary school teaching into political activism.  That year she debated Ida B. Wells at the Brooklyn Literary Union and, in the eyes of many, won the debate.  The two women became close friends.  Maritcha mentored Wells “extempore speaking&quot;; in turn, it was Wells who convinced Maritcha and her friends to start a black women&#039;s club in Brooklyn, the Woman&#039;s Loyal Union.<br />
<br />
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">NYPL: psnypl_scg_219<br />
Harry A. Williamson Photograph Collection</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">circa 1900s</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Photographs and Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">photograph</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/60/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[T. McCants Stewart]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[T. McCants Stewart was born into a relatively privileged family in Charleston, South Carolina that could afford to give him a pretty good secondary school education.  He received his law degree from the University of South Carolina at Columbia in 1875 and moved north a few years later.  Immersing himself in both national and local politics, Stewart was one of several prominent black New Yorkers who became disillusioned with the Republican Party in the last decades of the nineteenth-century, and for a period of time switched allegiance to the Democratic Party.  After Philip White&#039;s death in 1891, then Mayor Seth Low appointed Stewart  to succeed Philip on the Brooklyn Board of Education.]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-07-17T22:41:06-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/60/"/>
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    <category term="political activism"/>
    <category term="professions"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">T. McCants Stewart</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">T. McCants Stewart was born into a relatively privileged family in Charleston, South Carolina that could afford to give him a pretty good secondary school education.  He received his law degree from the University of South Carolina at Columbia in 1875 and moved north a few years later.  Immersing himself in both national and local politics, Stewart was one of several prominent black New Yorkers who became disillusioned with the Republican Party in the last decades of the nineteenth-century, and for a period of time switched allegiance to the Democratic Party.  After Philip White&#039;s death in 1891, then Mayor Seth Low appointed Stewart  to succeed Philip on the Brooklyn Board of Education.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">NYPL ID number: 1819715<br />
Harry A. Williamson papers: additions, 1881-1962</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                        <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Photograph</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
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]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/59/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[T. Thomas Fortune]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[Born a slave in Florida, T. Thomas Fortune was freed after emancipation. As a young man, he headed north to Washington D.C. where he attended Howard University and worked for a local newspaper. He then settled in New York City and established himself as a newspaper editor, founding the <em>New York Globe</em>, which he later renamed the <em>Freeman</em> and finally the <em>Age</em>. My grandfather, Jerome B. Peterson, served as co-editor of the <em>Age</em> for many years. Fortune was one of several prominent black New Yorkers who became disillusioned with the Republican Party in the last decades of the nineteenth-century, and for a period of time switched allegiance to the Democratic Party.]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-07-17T22:40:42-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/59/"/>
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    <category term="newspapers"/>
    <category term="political activism"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">T. Thomas Fortune</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Born a slave in Florida, T. Thomas Fortune was freed after emancipation. As a young man, he headed north to Washington D.C. where he attended Howard University and worked for a local newspaper. He then settled in New York City and established himself as a newspaper editor, founding the <em>New York Globe</em>, which he later renamed the <em>Freeman</em> and finally the <em>Age</em>. My grandfather, Jerome B. Peterson, served as co-editor of the <em>Age</em> for many years. Fortune was one of several prominent black New Yorkers who became disillusioned with the Republican Party in the last decades of the nineteenth-century, and for a period of time switched allegiance to the Democratic Party.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Joseph Fischl</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">NYPL ID number: 116918</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-publisher" class="element">
        <h3>Publisher</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Mne of Mark; eminenet, progressive and rising, by William J. Simmons, n.d.  Opposite page 785</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                    <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Print</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/58/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[College of Pharmacy Membership Acceptance]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[On March 19, 1874 Philip was finally elected member of the College of Pharmacy.]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-06-03T21:47:00-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/58/"/>
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    <category term="family"/>
    <category term="pharmacy"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">College of Pharmacy Membership Acceptance</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">On March 19, 1874 Philip was finally elected member of the College of Pharmacy.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">ID number: 71579<br />
College of Pharmacy of the City of New York</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">1874</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Wisconsin Historical Society</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/57/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Letter of Recommendation of Mr. P.A. White]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[Philip apprenticed in James McCune Smith&#039;s pharmacy from 1840 to 1842.  On that basis he was allowed to matriculate at the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York.  Out of an entering class of twenty-seven students, he was one of only four to graduate two years later.  But unlike the other graduates, Philip was not given the professional credential of becoming a member of the College.  In 1874, a full thirty years after his graduation, two senior members of the College decided to &quot;cheerfully&quot; recommend his election to membership.]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-06-03T21:46:38-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/57/"/>
    <link rel="enclosure" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/archive/files/25e63009dc37425c4fb20a8ee473bde7.jpg" type="image/jpeg" length="2872666"/>
    <category term="family"/>
    <category term="pharmacy"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Letter of Recommendation of Mr. P.A. White</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Philip apprenticed in James McCune Smith&#039;s pharmacy from 1840 to 1842.  On that basis he was allowed to matriculate at the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York.  Out of an entering class of twenty-seven students, he was one of only four to graduate two years later.  But unlike the other graduates, Philip was not given the professional credential of becoming a member of the College.  In 1874, a full thirty years after his graduation, two senior members of the College decided to &quot;cheerfully&quot; recommend his election to membership.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">ID number: 71576<br />
College of Pharmacy of the City of New York</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">1844</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Wisconsin Historical Society</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/56/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Dr. Bishop with the wardens and vestrymen of St. Philip&#039;s Church]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[Many of the men in my family—Peter Guignon, Philip White, Peter Williams Ray, and Jerome Bowers Peterson—were ardent supporters of St. Philip&#039;s.  First elected to the vestry in 1850, Philip became an increasingly important force to be reckoned with.  He held the position of senior warden from 1884 until his death in 1891.  <br />
<br />
In this photograph of the 1890 vestry, in the front row seated are: Dr. Bishop center; Philip White at far left.  In the second row standing are: Jerome B. Peterson second from left, Peter Williams Ray third from left.]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-07-17T22:40:13-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/56/"/>
    <link rel="enclosure" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/archive/files/2ed78b7f1179495ce9e47f83327d3c94.jpg" type="image/jpeg" length="2991120"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Dr. Bishop with the wardens and vestrymen of St. Philip&#039;s Church</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Many of the men in my family—Peter Guignon, Philip White, Peter Williams Ray, and Jerome Bowers Peterson—were ardent supporters of St. Philip&#039;s.  First elected to the vestry in 1850, Philip became an increasingly important force to be reckoned with.  He held the position of senior warden from 1884 until his death in 1891.  <br />
<br />
In this photograph of the 1890 vestry, in the front row seated are: Dr. Bishop center; Philip White at far left.  In the second row standing are: Jerome B. Peterson second from left, Peter Williams Ray third from left.</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-source" class="element">
        <h3>Source</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">NYPL ID number: 1819716</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">1890</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">photograph</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/55/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Altar of St. Philip&#039;s Episcopal Church]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[<p>When St. Philip's moved from its Mulberry Street building to a new location furrther uptown at 161 West 25th Street, Cornelia Guignon and her brother Peter Williams Ray asked the firm of Tandy and Foster to design an altar in honor of their parents. Vertner W. Tandy was the first African-American architect registered in the State of New York and George Washington Foster, Jr. was among the first African-Americans to practice in the architectural profession.</p>
<p>In its June 20, 1891 issue,the <em>New York Age</em> gave an elaborate description of the altar: "From the richly molded base of the altar rise fourteen pinnacle buttresses forming ten bays and a canopied central recess which contains in a deep niche the Agnus Dei and resting on the Book of Seven Seals. The bays are filled with delicately executed tracery divided in two sections by moldings. The top of the altar is supported by a bold cornice enriched with a carved grapevine in conventional treatment. In its execution, as well as in the substantial proportions of the different sections, the altar is conceded to be one of the best pieces of high art work in marble ever seen."</p>]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-06-10T16:29:50-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/55/"/>
    <link rel="enclosure" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/archive/files/d0cc4bd0462d576fcaf8b3a52bc95e4d.jpg" type="image/jpeg" length="953055"/>
    <category term="St. Philip's Episcopal Church"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Altar of St. Philip&#039;s Episcopal Church</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text"><p>When St. Philip's moved from its Mulberry Street building to a new location furrther uptown at 161 West 25th Street, Cornelia Guignon and her brother Peter Williams Ray asked the firm of Tandy and Foster to design an altar in honor of their parents. Vertner W. Tandy was the first African-American architect registered in the State of New York and George Washington Foster, Jr. was among the first African-Americans to practice in the architectural profession.</p>
<p>In its June 20, 1891 issue,the <em>New York Age</em> gave an elaborate description of the altar: "From the richly molded base of the altar rise fourteen pinnacle buttresses forming ten bays and a canopied central recess which contains in a deep niche the Agnus Dei and resting on the Book of Seven Seals. The bays are filled with delicately executed tracery divided in two sections by moldings. The top of the altar is supported by a bold cornice enriched with a carved grapevine in conventional treatment. In its execution, as well as in the substantial proportions of the different sections, the altar is conceded to be one of the best pieces of high art work in marble ever seen."</p></div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Firm of Vertner W. Tandy and George Washington Foster, Jr. </div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                    <div id="dublin-core-date" class="element">
        <h3>Date</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">circa 1889</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Courtesy of Christopher Moore</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">sculpture</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            </div><!-- end element-set -->
]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <id>https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/54/</id>
    <title><![CDATA[Abraham Lincoln standing above crouched slave wearing manacles]]></title>
    <summary><![CDATA[After the assassination of President Lincoln, black Americans came together to erect a monument in his honor.  Henry Highland Garnet put together a committee, the National Lincoln Monument Association, whose membership included James McCune Smith, Frederick Douglass, George Downing, and others.  <br />
<br />
The Colored People’s National Monument was unveiled on the eleventh anniversary of Lincoln’s assassination.  It&#039;s not the famous Lincoln Memorial located near the Tidal Basin in Washington D.C. but a much smaller statue in Lincoln Park in Southeast Washington.  It depicts Lincoln standing erect besides a whipping post around which swirls a vine.  With his right hand, he grasps the Emancipation Proclamation lying atop the post.  As if in benediction, his left hand stretches over the body of an unshackled slave kneeling in front of him.  The word “emancipation” is carved in large block letters on the base of the pedestal. <br />
]]></summary>
    <updated>2012-06-03T21:40:11-04:00</updated>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/items/show/54/"/>
    <link rel="enclosure" href="https://archive.blackgothamarchive.org/archive/files/9d36a72f1057da27fca21928e820b2b9.jpg" type="image/jpeg" length="31668"/>
    <category term="Civil War"/>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<div class="element-set">
    <h2>Dublin Core</h2>
        <div id="dublin-core-title" class="element">
        <h3>Title</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Abraham Lincoln standing above crouched slave wearing manacles</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                <div id="dublin-core-description" class="element">
        <h3>Description</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">After the assassination of President Lincoln, black Americans came together to erect a monument in his honor.  Henry Highland Garnet put together a committee, the National Lincoln Monument Association, whose membership included James McCune Smith, Frederick Douglass, George Downing, and others.  <br />
<br />
The Colored People’s National Monument was unveiled on the eleventh anniversary of Lincoln’s assassination.  It&#039;s not the famous Lincoln Memorial located near the Tidal Basin in Washington D.C. but a much smaller statue in Lincoln Park in Southeast Washington.  It depicts Lincoln standing erect besides a whipping post around which swirls a vine.  With his right hand, he grasps the Emancipation Proclamation lying atop the post.  As if in benediction, his left hand stretches over the body of an unshackled slave kneeling in front of him.  The word “emancipation” is carved in large block letters on the base of the pedestal. <br />
</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            <div id="dublin-core-creator" class="element">
        <h3>Creator</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">Thomas Ball</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
                            <div id="dublin-core-rights" class="element">
        <h3>Rights</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">N/A</div>
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                                </div><!-- end element-set -->
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    <h2>Still Image Item Type Metadata</h2>
        <div id="still-image-item-type-metadata-original-format" class="element">
        <h3>Original Format</h3>
                                    <div class="element-text">sculpture</div>
                    </div><!-- end element -->
            </div><!-- end element-set -->
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