(SW Times Record) – In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
Read more about Dr. McDonald.
In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
– See more at: http://swtimes.com/features/fort-smith-museum-prepares-black-history-exhibit#sthash.nsk3NNvK.dpuf
In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
– See more at: http://swtimes.com/features/fort-smith-museum-prepares-black-history-exhibit#sthash.nsk3NNvK.dpuf
In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
– See more at: http://swtimes.com/features/fort-smith-museum-prepares-black-history-exhibit#sthash.nsk3NNvK.dpuf
In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
– See more at: http://swtimes.com/features/fort-smith-museum-prepares-black-history-exhibit#sthash.nsk3NNvK.dpuf
In celebration of Black History Month, the Fort Smith Museum of History will add new faces to its exhibit in February at the museum, 320 Rogers Ave.
Those viewing the Black HIstory Month Exhibit will learn about Dr. Harry P. McDonald, who served as a family physician to nearly all blacks in the region. In 1952, he was the first black physician admitted to the Sebastian County Medical Society and the Arkansas State Medical Society.
Other individuals featured in the exhibit include Sebastian County Deputy Sheriff Donald J. Talley, his friend, George Hudgens, and Crawford County educator Linda Sloan Norwood.
For information, call 783-7841 or visit www.fortsmithmuseum.com.
– See more at: http://swtimes.com/features/fort-smith-museum-prepares-black-history-exhibit#sthash.nsk3NNvK.dpuf