-
A photograph of Allie Mae Willis and an unidentified friend on the left. Allie Mae Willis was the childhood sweetheart and later wife of Dr. Devurn Glenn, a notable educator in Tallahassee.
-
A photograph of Bud and S.L. Willis, a relative and the brother of Mrs. Glenn, from the Glenn Family Collection. Allie Mae Willis Glenn was the wife of Dr. Devurn Glenn, a notable educator in Tallahassee.
-
A photograph of Malachiah Willis, brother of Mrs. Allie Mae Willis Glenn, found in the Glenn Family Collection. Allie Mae Glenn was the wife of Dr. Devurn Glenn, a notable educator in Tallahassee.
-
A portrait of Amy F. Jackson from the Glenn Family Collection. It includes a label stating she was a "Critic teacher, 1st and 2nd Grades Children's School." The Glenn Family is notable in Tallahassee for their educators, such as Dr. Devurn Glenn, the first principal of Nims Middle School and the first African American to work for the Leon County School Board administrative office.
-
A portrait of George Madison "Mack" Gardner and Annie Floyd Gardner from the Gardner Family Collection. Formerly enslaved, they became a Pioneer Tallahassee family when, after the Civil War, they moved to the rural Leon County. There, they bought 40 acres on Meridian Road and property in the Frenchtown area where they opened a store. They later purchased 360 acres on Lake Jackson and rented to tenant farmers. Rent was paid in cotton and cotton sales paid for the land.
-
A military portrait of Willie Gardner from the Gardner Family Collection. He is one of the descendants of George Madison "Mack" Gardner and Annie Floyd Gardner, formerly enslaved, who after the Civil War moved to Leon County and established their family there.
-
A portrait of Georgia Gardner, from the Gardner Family Collection.
-
A photo of Elmira Deloris, Mack Wilson and Cynthia Gilberta Gardner as children from the Gardner Family Collection. They are the descendants of George Madison "Mack" Gardner and Annie Floyd Gardner, formerly enslaved, who after the Civil War moved to Leon County and established their family there.
-
A photograph of a youth group vacationing at Paradise Park, Ocala, part of the Gardner Family Collection.
-
A graduation picture of Willie Gardner from the Inez Gardner Collection. He is one of the descendants of George Madison "Mack" Gardner and Annie Floyd Gardner, formerly enslaved, who after the Civil War moved to Leon County.