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- The Stevens Smith Center - LancasterHistory
The Historic Preservation Trust of Lancaster County restored the facades of the Thaddeus Stevens House, Kleiss Tavern, and Lydia Hamilton Smith Houses, as well as unearthed thousands of compelling pieces of archaeological evidence, many pointing to Underground Railroad activity
- Thaddeus Stevens Lydia Hamilton Smith Center for History and Democracy
Housed in the former law office and home of Congressman Thaddeus Stevens and his confidante Lydia Hamilton Smith, the Center will combine historic buildings with a state-of-the-art museum to examine the lives and legacies of Stevens and Smith, and their social networks of abolitionists
- The Thaddeus Stevens Lydia Hamilton Smith Historic Site - visitPA
Slated for future development by LancasterHistory, this site is planned to feature a visitor center, historic house museum, and museum exhibitions dedicated to sharing the legacy and history of Thaddeus Stevens and Lydia Hamilton Smith, the Underground Railroad in PA, and the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the U S Constitution
- Heres whats next for historic Thaddeus Stevens home at Queen and Vine . . .
Here’s a timeline of activity at the Thaddeus Stevens and Lydia Hamilton Smith historic site, according to historians and newspaper records
- A Glimpse into the Thaddeus Stevens Lydia Hamilton Smith Center for . . .
Thaddeus Stevens, a formidable statesman of the 19th century, left an indelible mark on American history through his unwavering dedication to the abolition of slavery and the pursuit of equality for Americans of African descent
- The Thaddeus Stevens Lydia Hamilton Smith Historic Site
Thaddeus Stevens (April 4, 1792 – August 11, 1868) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania and one of the leaders of the "Radical Republican" faction of the Republican Party during the 1860s
- Lancaster PA History at LCCC — Lancaster County Convention Center . . .
Their lives and work reveal a profound historic trajectory of promoting racial justice The historic centerpiece of the Site is Stevens’ nineteenth-century home and law office at 45 South Queen Street and the subterranean area behind the home, containing an excavated cistern and archaeological items recovered from the Site
- Revealing the history beneath our feet – The Stevens and Smith Historic . . .
Our preservation and design investigations on the site opened the door to continuing discoveries that Congressman Stevens combined politics and legislation with direct action for the goal of social justice
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