By Breana Ross Click here for updates on this story BALTIMORE, Maryland (WBAL) — When we think of the Civil Rights Movement, many think of landmarks in Atlanta and across the south. But a little rowhome on Eutaw Place in Baltimore played a big role in Civil Rights history. Lillie Carroll Jackson was born in Baltimore in 1889 into a segregated society. She became the president of the Baltimore branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1935 and grew the membership from less than 200 to more than 25,000 by 1946. “I think the important thing is to realize (is) Baltimore’s leadership in the Civil Rights Movement,” said Iris Leigh Barnes, the associa
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