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First Baptist Church (Montgomery, Alabama) First Baptist Church (South Perry Street, Montgomery, Alabama) Frazer Free Methodist Church; H. Holt Street Baptist Church; M.
The Holt Street Baptist Church is a historic Baptist church in Montgomery, Alabama, United States. [2] The church served as a meeting place for Montgomery's black community during the Montgomery bus boycott. Built in 1913, the church closed in 1998, when the congregation moved to a new location in Montgomery.
The St. Louis Street Missionary Baptist Church was host to the seventh Colored Baptist Convention of Alabama in 1874, a meeting that lead to the formation of Selma University in 1878. [11] The Dexter Avenue Baptist Church is a National Historic Landmark near the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery. [ 12 ]
The First Baptist Church (also known as the Brick-A-Day Church) on North Ripley Street in Montgomery, Alabama, is a historic landmark.Founded in downtown Montgomery in 1867 as one of the first black churches in the area, it provided an alternative to the second-class treatment and discrimination African-Americans faced at the other First Baptist Church in the city.
The Cottage Hill Historic District is a 42-acre (17 ha) historic district in Montgomery, Alabama.It is roughly bounded by Goldthwaite, Maxwell, Holt, and Clayton streets and contains 116 contributing buildings, the majority of them in the Queen Anne style.
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Generally bounded by Madison Avenue, N. Lawrence Street, Church Street, and Lee Street 32°22′39″N 86°18′30″W / 32.3774°N 86.3083°W / 32.3774; -86.3083 ( Court Square Urban Renewal Area Historic
Montgomery in the Good War: Portrait of a Southern City, 1939–1946 (U of Alabama Press, 2000). Rogers, William Warren. Confederate Home Front: Montgomery During the Civil War (University of Alabama Press, 2001). Williams, Clanton W. "Early Ante-Bellum Montgomery: A Black-Belt Constituency." Journal of Southern History 7.4 (1941): 495-525.