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John Rushing Howell〔(Ann Taylor Boutwell, "A Look Back", ''Atlanta Intown Paper'', June 2014 )〕 (November 7, 1933, Durant, Mississippi〔 – June 28, 1988, Atlanta) was an Atlanta, Georgia grassroots civic activist, well known and well loved for his strong support of human rights, civil liberties, neighborhood preservation, and the arts.〔(John Howell Park Project )〕〔(Mary Davis, "In Memoriam: John Howell", ''Virginia-Highland Voice'', 1988 )〕 As a resident of the Virginia-Highland neighborhood of northeast Atlanta, Howell was highly instrumental in stopping the construction of Interstate 485 through the neighborhood, thereby preserving one of Atlanta's vibrant and architecturally intact intown communities.〔〔 Howell served as the first president of the Virginia-Highland Civic Association; he was active in the Virginia-Highland Civic Fund until his death and served on many other community and civic boards. Employed by the Veterans Administration, Howell also served as chapter president of the Georgia American Civil Liberties Union, and on the city License Review Board. Professionally, Howell was a social worker in the area of alcohol and drug abuse. Howell died in 1988 from complications of HIV infection.〔〔 He was buried in Mizpah cemetery in his native Durant, Mississippi.〔 (Findagrave record via Ancestry.com )〕 John Howell Memorial Park, on the site of 11 houses demolished to make way for the freeway that was never built due to his activism, was dedicated to his memory in 1989.〔 Howell was the son of William Edgar Howell, who at one time was mayor of Durant, Mississippi.〔("Former Durant mayor dies; rites Wednesday", ''Holmes County Herald'', August 29, 1968, p.1 )〕 ==References== *(City of Atlanta, Park Locations ) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「John Howell (Atlanta)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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