When my son was born in 1948 there was a family from Mississippi who lived next door. On the way here they stopped in the Newark Train station and her little boy (about 5) had to go to the bathroom. When he got inside he saw a black boy in there and promptly told him to get out and go to the black bathroom. Dot ooo---This Email Scanned for Virus---ooo by ooo--- Norton Anti-Virus---ooo ----- Original Message ----- From: <Up2Nutrix@aol.com> To: <NJ-MEMORIES-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, December 21, 2002 12:54 AM Subject: [NJ-Memories] Re: Mason-Dixon Line > In a message dated 12/20/2002 2:02:00 PM Mountain Standard Time, > NJ-MEMORIES-D-request@rootsweb.com writes: > > > It was a > > disappointment that after MANY years of telling people that part of NJ > > was below the Mason-Dixon Line that that it was not true. > > My next question, though, would be . . . how come the segregated facilities > in Cape May County? Apparently those guys thought that they were below the > Line . . . > > Doris in Colorado (Up2Nutrix@aol.com) > "For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is > Christ the Lord. -- Luke 2:11 > > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >