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Hardin schools closed Monday after social media threat

Hardin schools closed Monday after social media threat
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Las mejores localidades para observar los fuegos artificiales este 4 de julio en NY, NJ y CT

Los fuegos artificiales del 4 de julio de Macy s están de vuelta después de una edición modificada el verano pasado. En el espectáculo de fuegos artificiales más grande de Macy s para su edición número 45 se lanzarán más de 65.000 fuegos pirotécnicos y una variedad de efectos especiales planificados a lo largo de la exhibición de 25 minutos.  La exhibición se puede observar a partir de las 8 p.m. desde cualquier vista sin obstáculos sobre el East River en Midtown Manhattan o a lo largo del paseo marítimo de Queens, Brooklyn y Manhattan.

Black History Month in Brown County: Rufus F Hardin

Brownwood News –  February is Black History Month.  Brownwoodnews.com will run a series of articles this month about some of the early Black leaders in Brown County.  This is the second in the series. Most folks in Brown County are familiar with the Hardin School building on Hall Street, adjacent to Cecil Holman Park and the Bennie Houston Community Center, but are not so familiar with the man for whom the school was named. Rufus Forley Hardin was born in slavery in August, 1859, in Kaufman County, southeast of Dallas.  His formal education began at the age of 13 in Kaufman county, but at the age of 17 he moved north to Kansas and worked cattle.  He attended school during his eight months in Kansas, then moved back to Texas and continued his education in Van Zandt county, also southeast of Dallas.

Black History Month in Brown County: George E Smith

February is Black History Month.  Brownwoodnews.com will run a series of articles this month about some of the early Black leaders in Brown County.  This is the first in the series. Rev. George E. Smith was one of the first Blacks to move to Brown County, and was the founder of the first school for blacks here, later to be known as the Hardin School. Smith was born a slave in Virginia, circa 1847.  In 1861, with his grandmother’s help, he escaped and ran away to Washington, D.C.  The Civil War having just begun, he was considered “contraband” by Union troops, and was forced to dig trenches around the city to protect it from the Confederate armies.  In 1869, after the Civil War, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, Company C, 9th Cavalry, in Washington, D.C.  He was sent to Texas and served at Fort Concho and Fort Davis.   From these forts he participated in campaigns against Apache Indians in Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.  In 1874, upon the expiration of his enlistment, S

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