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John C. Calhoun statue in Marion Square spray-painted with the words "slavery" and "racist" following the mass shooting at the Mother Emanuel Church, Instagram photograph by Ashley Edge, June 23, 2015, Charleston, South Carolina. John C. Calhoun (1782-1850) was an influential American politician who strongly supported slavery and secession for the South. This statue was unveiled in 1896, at a time when Jim Crow segregation laws were becoming entrenched throughout the U.S. South.
John F. Potts, Avery principal 1945-1954, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
John P. Burgess Elementary School, photograph by Rebekah Dobrasko, Greenville County, South Carolina, 2013.
John Potts, ca. 1970, courtesy of Avery Research Center.
John Rutledge House, photograph by Daniel Seyffer, 116 Broad Street, Charleston, South Carolina, February 2015.
John Rutledge House, photograph by Daniel Seyffer, 116 Broad Street, Charleston, South Carolina, February 2015.
John Rutledge House, photograph by Daniel Seyffer, 116 Broad Street, Charleston, South Carolina, February 2015.
John Wrighten, ca. XXXX, courtesy of the Charleston Chronicle.
John Wrighten's letter as a Avery graduate to College of Charleston faculty, 1943, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
John Wrighten's letter as President of Junior NAACP Charleston Chapter to College of Charleston faculty, 1944, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
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