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Roland E. Cook Elementary School

1915 establishments in VirginiaBuildings and structures in Roanoke County, VirginiaNational Register of Historic Places in Roanoke County, VirginiaSchool buildings completed in 1915School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia Registered Historic Place stubs
Roland E. Cook Elementary School
Roland E. Cook Elementary School

The Roland E. Cook Elementary School is a historic school building at 412 South Poplar Street in Vinton, Virginia. Built in 1915 as a T-shaped Classical Revival structure, it was expanded in 1924 to its present H shape, at which time it became Vinton High School. It served as a high school until 1933, when the William Byrd High School was built, and was then converted to an elementary school. It originally served the area's white population during the Jim Crow period of segregated facilities, and was integrated in 1966–67. It closed in 1999, and was mothballed after a period of use by an alternative school.The school was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.

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Roland E. Cook Elementary School
Jefferson Avenue,

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Latitude Longitude
N 37.276944444444 ° E -79.895555555556 °
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Roland E Cook Elementary School

Jefferson Avenue
24179
Virginia, United States
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Roland E. Cook Elementary School
Roland E. Cook Elementary School
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Nearby Places

Mount Moriah Baptist Church and Cemetery
Mount Moriah Baptist Church and Cemetery

Mount Moriah Baptist Church and Cemetery is a historic African-American Baptist church and cemetery located at Roanoke, Virginia. It was built about 1908, and is a small, one-story, rectangular frame church sheathed in weatherboard. It consists of a main sanctuary, a front vestibule, and a rear chancel bay. The frame building sits on a raised foundation of uncoursed fieldstones. The associated burial ground contains over 100 interments from the 1870s through the present.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.Outside the entrance to the church is an historical marker that reads: "Mount Moriah Baptist Church. K-99. The members of Mount Moriah Baptist Church belong to one of the region's earliest African American congregations, originating in a Sunday school for slaves established in the mid-1800s by Dr. Charles L. Cocke, founder of Hollins College. The group gained permission in 1858 to build its first church. The present church, the congregation's third, was built about 1908. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register in 1994. The nearby cemetery was expanded from a former slave burial ground.""There are many unmarked graves at this location. The listing of names is complete as of 19 June 2007."Recent upgrades in the church property included a new paved driveway from the City of Roanoke, and new kitchen and bathroom facilities, donated by local churches, individuals and organizations.