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Durham: 55: North Durham County Prison Camp (Former) North Durham County Prison Camp (Former) December 31, 1998 : 2410 Broad St. Durham: 56: North Durham-Duke Park District: North Durham-Duke Park District: June 20, 1985
This list includes properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Jones County, North Carolina. Click the "Map of all coordinates" link to the right to view a Google map of all properties and districts with latitude and longitude coordinates in the table below. [1]
Hayti (pronounced "HAY-tie"), also called Hayti District, is the historic African-American community that is now part of the city of Durham, North Carolina. [1] It was founded as an independent black community shortly after the American Civil War on the southern edge of Durham by freedmen coming to work in tobacco warehouses and related jobs in the city.
Willie P. Mangum - NC Highway Marker G-28 "Member of United States Senate for 18 years and president pro tempore, 1842-45; Congressman; Whig party leader. Home site, grave, 10 mi. N.E." [6] Stephen B. Weeks - NC Highway Marker G-50 "Historian, bibliographer, collector of North Carolina books and manuscripts, professor at Trinity College, 1891-93.
St. Joseph's African Methodist Episcopal Church is a historic African Methodist Episcopal church building located at Fayetteville Street and Durham Expressway in the Hayti District, now a neighborhood of Durham, Durham County, North Carolina.
Duke Memorial United Methodist Church is a historic Methodist church at 504 W. Chapel Hill Street in Durham, North Carolina.It was originally established in 1886. The congregation's growth paralleled Durham's growth as a manufacturing center in the textile and tobacco industries and has maintained a close connection with Duke University (formerly Trinity College).