Cassey House
The Cassey House, at 243 Delancey Street (formerly 63 Union Street) at the corner of S. Philip Street in the Society Hill neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was owned by the Cassey family for 84 years (1845–1929). The Casseys were a prominent, prosperous, African-American family known for their activism in working for the abolition of slavery and against colonization – the repatriation of free blacks to Africa – and their support for educational, intellectual, and benevolent organizations.
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Cassey House
The Cassey House, at 243 Delancey Street (formerly 63 Union Street) at the corner of S. Philip Street in the Society Hill neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was owned by the Cassey family for 84 years (1845–1929). The Casseys were a prominent, prosperous, African-American family known for their activism in working for the abolition of slavery and against colonization – the repatriation of free blacks to Africa – and their support for educational, intellectual, and benevolent organizations.
has abstract
The Cassey House, at 243 Delan ...... and benevolent organizations.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
13,401,993
Wikipage revision ID
743,593,230
point
39.9439 -75.1467
type
comment
The Cassey House, at 243 Delan ...... and benevolent organizations.
@en
label
Cassey House
@en
lat
3.99439e+1
long
-7.51467e+1