
After the Civil War, Patience Gromes and other African-Americans of her generation left the country and came to the city. They married, took jobs, purchased houses, raised families. They pursued the program of hard work and thrift that their parents and grandparents had perfected in the country after the Civil War. Patience Gromes and her peers brought the project that three generations of African-Americans had been pursuing to a triumphant conclusion in the Civil Rights Movement.
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history.ky.gov
A A&M College (Lexington, Ky.), 96:55–58 A & P Store (Covington, Ky.): desegregation of, 109:382 Aaron, Ky.: and Garlin M. Conner, 110:67, 70, 87
A A&M College (Lexington, Ky.), 96:55–58 A & P Store (Covington, Ky.): desegregation of, 109:382 Aaron, Ky.: and Garlin M. Conner, 110:67, 70, 87
Download link for The World of Patience Gromes: Making and Unmaking a Black Community by Scott C. Davis :

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