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147:, the oldest of four children. In 1868 he moved to Raleigh to study in a school run by William Warrick, but in 1870 he returned to the farm where his mother lived to help her with her work. He resumed his studies for a short time in 1871, but soon returned to the farm. In the spring of 1873, Augustus Shepperd of Raleigh invited him to join the North Carolina Jubilee Singers led by Nettie M. Sage and managed by
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182:. That year he was also ordained to the ministry and elected clerk of the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. He also became associated with the temperance movement and worked to gain support for the movement from the Republican Party. His connection with politics came to a head in 1884 when he was nominated as a candidate for the
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and preparing for a tour to raise money for Shaw
University. Lipscombe joined the group for a tour of New England, Canada, and Nova Scotia. After the tour he enrolled at Shaw Collegiate Institute, now Shaw University, where he graduated the youngest member of his class in 1879. As a student in 1877,
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In 1881 he became principal of the
Washington Graded School of Raleigh, the largest school in the city. In 1882 he was appointed by the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina as one of the editors of the bodies journal, the
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In the 1890s and 1900s, Lipscombe became principal of the
Catholic Hill School in Asheville. Lipscombe also became president of the Asheville Young Men's Institute. In 1898, during the buildup for the
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in Gaston County. In 1886, through the efforts of
Lipscombe, the Dallas institute moved to Asheville and changed its name to the Western Union Institute with Lipscombe as president.
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123:(born September 29, 1858) was an educator and religious leader in North Carolina in the late 19th century. He was a professor at
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In 1884 he was for a short time the principal of Durham Graded School, before becoming principal of the Dallas
Academy in
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by the North
Carolina State Teachers' Association. He also helped form a branch of the
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337:(Wadesboro, North Carolina) February 22, 1906, page 3. Retrieved January 13, 2017 at
322:(Wadesboro, North Carolina) December 1, 1904, page 1. Retrieved January 13, 2017 at
306:(Asheville, North Carolina), June 28, 1898, page 4. Retrieved January 13, 2017 at
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https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8335730/a_card_the_messenger_and_intelligencer/
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and elsewhere. He was also co-founder and editor of the religious paper, the
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https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8335622/around_town_asheville_citizentimes/
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Along with being an editor, Lipscombe contributed a number of poems to the
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https://www.newspapers.com/clip/8335767/no_headline_the_messenger_and/
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at the age of 19, together with Shaw professors Tupper and
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North
Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
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288:Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising
431:Activists for African-American civil rights
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391:People from Orange County, North Carolina
290:. GM Rewell & Company, 1887. p959–963
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257:In 1882 he married Lizzie L. Taylor of
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127:and a co-founder of the journal, the
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381:People from Raleigh, North Carolina
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401:19th-century American academics
335:The Messenger and Intelligencer
320:The Messenger and Intelligencer
184:North Carolina General Assembly
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57:Orange County, North Carolina
436:Baptists from North Carolina
411:African-American journalists
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199:National Prohibition Party
416:American male journalists
227:Wadesboro, North Carolina
154:Nicholas Franklin Roberts
133:Asheville, North Carolina
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304:Asheville Citizen-Times
77:Educator, journalist,
360:Edward Hart Lipscombe
121:Edward Hart Lipscombe
25:Edward Hart Lipscombe
362:at Wikimedia Commons
211:Spanish–American War
259:Lynchburg, Virginia
149:Henry Martin Tupper
406:American educators
53:September 29, 1858
358:Media related to
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370:Categories
318:"A Card,"
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215:Fort Mason
139:Early life
90:Republican
49:1858-09-29
180:Expositor
169:Educator
105:Religion
100:Personal
79:minister
109:Baptist
253:Family
164:Career
81:, poet
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