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                  <text>"Lift Every Voice": African-American History in Haywood County</text>
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                  <text>Lift Every Voice: Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center Oral History Project.&#13;
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Haywood County Public Library History Collection&#13;
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Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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                <text>Elizabeth was a wonderful cook, creating some of the most amazing dishes in Haywood County. She was first employed at the Garden Hotel, where she was the head cook, until the operation moved across the street to the Towne House. Elizabeth also worked as a personal cook for people throughout the community. Elizabeth was very neat and clean, and never allowed people with dirty hands to enter her kitchen. She was also very secretive, as she never gave out any of her recipes.</text>
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The Pigeon Community Multicultural Center and the public history program at Western Carolina University would like to give special thanks to Georgia Forney, who provided a wealth of primary source materials that allowed this project to be created. </text>
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Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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                <text>Elizabeth Haley was very family oriented. Elizabeth's husband passed away when their daughter, Georgia, was three, leaving her to raise Georgia alone. Haley's father, Walter, helped Elizabeth a great deal in Georgia's upbringing. This is a photograph of Elizabeth and her brother Walter Jr., who was also a great help. Elizabeth was revered as an amazing mother who was extremely selfless. She loved her four grandchildren, who lovingly nicknamed her 'Big Mama.'</text>
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                <text>1958</text>
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                <text>  &#13;
This image is presented courtesy of Haywood County Public Library History Collection for research and educational purposes. Prior permission from the Haywood County Public Library is required for any commercial use.</text>
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                  <text>This display was created by students in the History Department's Introduction to Museums and Historic Site Interpretation Course in Spring 2016. The online exhibit draws from materials collected by the Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center,  Lift Every Voice, African-American History Project, based in Haywood County, Waynesville, NC.&#13;
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The Pigeon Community Multicultural Center and the public history program at Western Carolina University would like to give special thanks to Georgia Forney, who provided a wealth of primary source materials that allowed this project to be created. </text>
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                  <text>Lift Every Voice: Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center Oral History Project.&#13;
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Haywood County Public Library History Collection&#13;
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Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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                <text>The Towne House might have been owned by Myrtle and Maude, but Elizabeth was the star, known throughout Haywood County for her cooking. Various white social and political groups held meetings here regularly, and other local big shots came to enjoy the food. Elizabeth rarely got time off because Sundays were so busy for the restaurant. Elizabeth continued to work at the Towne House, until the late sixties, when she moved to Chapel Hill. The Towne House shut its doors not long after. </text>
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&#13;
The Pigeon Community Multicultural Center and the public history program at Western Carolina University would like to give special thanks to Georgia Forney, who provided a wealth of primary source materials that allowed this project to be created. </text>
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                  <text>Lift Every Voice: Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center Oral History Project.&#13;
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Haywood County Public Library History Collection&#13;
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Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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                <text>Haywood County Board of Commissioners Proposal</text>
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                <text>Creation of Center</text>
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                <text>•	Noting a “lack of supervised activities and the absence of a place to facilitate those activities,” the Pigeon Community Development Club presented the Haywood County Board of Commissioners with a proposal to create a “unified community club” at the site of the former Haywood County Schools Instructional Materials Center. Prior to its life as the system’s IMC, prior to the desegregation of the county’s schools in 1964, the building was one of only two African American schools in the county. The club proposed a long-term lease for the property with the goal of making it a community center where the club could offer programming including health and fitness, recreational activities, and other family-oriented programming. </text>
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                <text>April 3, 2000</text>
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The Pigeon Community Multicultural Center and the public history program at Western Carolina University would like to give special thanks to Georgia Forney, who provided a wealth of primary source materials that allowed this project to be created. </text>
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                  <text>Lift Every Voice: Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center Oral History Project.&#13;
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Haywood County Public Library History Collection&#13;
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Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>"Lift Every Voice": African-American History in Haywood County</text>
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                  <text>This display was created by students in the History Department's Introduction to Museums and Historic Site Interpretation Course in Spring 2016. The online exhibit draws from materials collected by the Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center,  Lift Every Voice, African-American History Project, based in Haywood County, Waynesville, NC.&#13;
&#13;
The Pigeon Community Multicultural Center and the public history program at Western Carolina University would like to give special thanks to Georgia Forney, who provided a wealth of primary source materials that allowed this project to be created. </text>
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                  <text>Editor: Charles Jones&#13;
 &#13;
Compiled and created by students in the Public History program at Western Carolina University, Spring  2016</text>
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                  <text>Lift Every Voice: Pigeon Community Multicultural Development Center Oral History Project.&#13;
&#13;
Haywood County Public Library History Collection&#13;
&#13;
Georgia Forney, of Haywood County, North Carolina </text>
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                <text>What does AME Zion mean?</text>
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                <text>An easy guide to understand the exact definition of the AME Zion Church in general. AME Zion Churches exist all across the United States, South America, Africa and the West Indies and numbers over a million members in America, establishing itself as one of the largest communities of organized African Methodist belief systems. In recent years, the number of AME Zion churches has risen to over 3,000 across the countries previously accounted for and stands as a physical reppresentation of the influence of African American solidarity through religion.</text>
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                <text>AME Zion Church</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                <text>http://www.amez.org/index.php</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>AME Zion Church</text>
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                <text>2016</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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                <text>Copyright © 2016 AME Zion Church. All rights reserved.</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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