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MOORE-GOLDEN HOUSE

1701 E. 8th St.

The English cottage has been the residence of several important Charlotte residents. After its construction in 1910, the stucco home was sold to local surgeon Baxter S. Moore. Moore held the deed to the home until 1919 but lived in the home for just a year, later renting it to a series of tenants, including Norman A. Cocke, an executive of the Southern Power Company, and ministers from Hawthorne Lane Methodist Church across the street. Harry Golden, a humorist, journalist, and author of the best-selling book Only in America, moved into the home in 1973. He came to Charlotte from New York in 1941 and gained acclaim as a strong supporter of racial integration. Golden was also the publisher of the Carolina Israelite, a controversial newspaper covering Jewish news and issues. He rented the home from his friend, Anita Stewart Brown, and lived there until his death in 1981. Brown then moved in to protect the home from vandals and kept the furnishings, photographs, and memorabilia just as they were while Golden lived there. Golden’s papers were donated to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Brown also managed to salvage numerous items from Golden’s former home on Elizabeth Avenue when it was demolished. She incorporated a stained-glass window, mantelpiece, and double front doors into the architecture of the cottage-style home. It’s the only one of Golden’s former residences in Charlotte that is still standing.

ST. MARY’S CHAPEL

1129 E. 3rd St., 704/333-1235, www. charmeck. org HOURS: Fri. noon-4 P.M.

COST: Free

This historic little chapelit seats just 125 peoplesits at the heart of Thompson Park. The chapel was built in 1892 on the former campus of the Thompson Orphanage, where it was used for 75 years. Historical evidence indicates that the bricks used to construct the chapel were made and fired on-site. It’s the oldest remaining building from the orphanage, which was founded in 1887. The chapel was boarded up for some time, but in 1975 the City of Charlotte took ownership and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

As I have now deposed and discharged you so you are Munich Metro Map now no longer Lord. You shall now go your way alone, the rest of the people Munich Metro Map of the Confederacy will not go with you, for we know not the kind of mind that possesses you. As the Creator has nothing to do with wrong so he will not come to rescue you from the precipice of destruction in which you have cast yourself. You shall never be restored to the position which you once occupied. Then shall the War Chief address himself to the Lords of the Nation to which the deposed Lord belongs and say: Know you, my Lords, that I have taken the deer’s antlers from the brow of , the emblem of his position and token of his greatness. The Lords of the Confederacy shall then have no other alternative than to sanction the discharge of the offending Lord.

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