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The "Confederates in Cuba" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
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The Constitution Hall State Historic Site in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
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The "Destroying the Fort" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
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The George Boyer Vachon Research Center of St. Louis African American Culture in that Missouri city
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The Griot Museum of Black History in St. Louis, Missouri
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The historic Ritchie House in the Kansas capital city of Topeka
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The "Meeting in Missouri" along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, named after the island of Cuba in 1857 for reasons that are murky today
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The old Bald Eagle Mercantile, a general store in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
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The old Monroe Elementary School, now (as of 2021) a national historic site in the Kansas capital city of Topeka, was an important player in the monumental Brown v. Board of Education U.S. Supreme Court case of 1954, in which the Court ruled that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal"
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The "Rescue at Leasburg" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
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The territorial capitol building, now (as of 2021) a museum in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
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This is one of three adjacent homes in a lower-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant exterior drawings
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This is one of three adjacent homes in a lower-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant exterior drawings
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This is one of three adjacent homes in a low-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant drawings
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This is our home too
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Two Coca-Cola signs dominate one side of the 1888 McPherson Opera House in McPherson, Kansas, which was founded in 1872 and named after Union Civil War General James Birdseye McPherson
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Vaccination advertisement targeted to the Hispanic community. Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 145th St., Harlem
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Vaccination site, Harlem Hospital, Malcolm X Blvd. and West 135th St., Harlem
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Valentine's Day gifts and PPE, Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 125th St., Harlem
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Valentine's Day, Schomburg Center, W. 135th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
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