African Americans living in working class neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia. A wooden clapboard in a poor neighborhood. An African-American girl looks through front door. Closer view of girl talking, her mother briefly walks in the background. African-American woman rubs her face and holds a cigarette. Another woman joins in. Woman talking. An African-American man wearing a "newsboy" cap lights and smokes a cigarette outside on the street.
African-American students walking outside Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta, Georgia (45 Whitehouse Dr SW, Atlanta, GA 30314, United States). African-American schoolgirls in swing skirts and dresses walking on campus. Some High School girls are holding books. Black High School boys and girls pose together casually in front of the camera. Black male students, some wearing sunglasses and smoking cigarettes, form a crowd. More teenagers move in a line, some playfully push each other and laugh. A group of Black schoolgirls walking home together. Booker T. Washington Lifting the Veil of Ignorance statue (1927 replica of an original which stands at Tuskegee University) in front of Booker T. Washington High School. Satuue inscription reads “Booker T. Washington 1856 - 1915 He lifted the veil of ignorance from his people and pointed the way to progress through education and industry”.
Two Black women walk in front of an affluent suburban house in Atlanta, Georgia. Two African-American women holding each other’s hands while walking in front of a house. One of the women is wearing sunglasses and is smiling. A Black man enters a 1958 Ford Fairlane parked on the street and then drives away with his passengers.
Two African American school girls walking in front of Booker T. Washington high school in Atlanta (45 Whitehouse Dr SW, Atlanta, GA 30314 ) . A student with soda cup twirls around near them. Brief shot of a white man with sunglasses smiling while eating ice cream. A group of African-American students walking on the sidewalk, a couple tap each other playfully. Students with books laughing and walking together. A female student wearing sunglasses smiles.
A suburban neighborhood in Atlanta, Georgia. Mid-century houses in the neighborhood. A Black woman pushes a stroller carrying two baby girls. The woman carries one girl while her older daughter stands. African American mother carries and talks to her baby in the front yard of a house.
Dr. Frederick Earl McLendon and his wife Mrs. Bennie B. McLendon are seen with a guest on the backyard terrace of their home in Atlanta, Georgia. They are then see in front of their house. Dr. McLendon, pulls mail from his mailbox. The couple returns to the house. Mailbox address reads “Dr. F. Earl McLendon 866 Woodmere Dr. N.W.” Dr. McLendon is then seen talking with an older associate while sitting at a patio table on the terrace. View of the home's swimming pool. African American Doctor Frederick Earl McLendon founded the McLendon Medical Clinic, later McLendon Hospital, which served African-American residents in Atlanta at the height of the Jim Crow era. The hospital opened in April, 1946 during a time of segregation in the south.
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