A long-gone structure that stood on Charlottesville’s Preston Avenue in Virginia and became a Green Book-era lodging for such luminaries as Louis Armstrong and Thurgood Marshall will soon be commemorated with a state historic marker.
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This 1961 photograph shows the Carver Inn at the corner of Preston Avenue and Albemarle Street in Charlottesville.
FRANK HARTMAN, ALBEMARLE CHARLOTTESVILLE HISTORICAL SOCIETY
This 1957 photograph shows civil rights lawyer-turned-Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Marshall stayed in Charlottesville in 1950 while representing Gregory Swanson, a Black man denied admission to the University of Virginia.
THOMAS J. O’HALLORAN, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
St. Rose
07-30-1961 (cutline): George C. (Skid) Abott (foreground) converted the old Gordon's fish packing house anchorage at Buckroe Beach to make a popular sport fishing pier which attracts anglers to the beach for both day and night fishing. Some families make a day of it fishing from the pier for blues, spot, trout, seas bass, small cobia, dog sharks and flounder.
- Staff photo
From the Archives: Who remembers Buckroe Beach?
Buckroe Beach is located in Hampton, Virginia, on the Chesapeake Bay. It is one of Virginia’s oldest recreational spaces. Originating in the 1600s as “Buck Roe” plantation, it was open to the public to use when new settlers arrived from England.
In the 1920s, the beach became a popular vacation destination for visitors up and down the East Coast. Several hotels and an amusement park stretched along the beach. Recreation areas were segregated until after the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
07-30-1961 (cutline): George C. (Skid) Abott (foreground) converted the old Gordon's fish packing house anchorage at Buckroe Beach to make a popular sport fishing pier which attracts anglers to the beach for both day and night fishing. Some families make a day of it fishing from the pier for blues, spot, trout, seas bass, small cobia, dog sharks and flounder.
- Staff photo

