@y_not_eat: 굴뚝 모양을 닮은 바삭 크림 파이 & 크림 가득 찰깨빵! 체코 전통 굴뚝빵의 미니 버전? 바삭한 코르네 파이~ 그 안에 총 10가지 맛의 맛있는 크림 가득 채우고, 심지어 소세지 들어있는 코르네 파이도 있어요 ㅋㅋ 파이가 진짜 누네띠네처럼 겹겹이 바삭한 파이에, 겉에 두툼한 설탕이 와작 씹히고 크림도 존맛임다;; 특히, 커스터드 크림 미쳤고 얼그레이 찌인-해요 🫢 그 다음으로는 짭짤 꼬릿한 옐로우치즈도 제 스타일! 그린티, 초코, 요거트 순으로 맛있게 먹었습니다아 :) 사실 제 원픽 오브 원픽은 #커스터드찰깨찰깨 (강추) 쫀득한 깨찰빵 안에 부드러운 커스터드 크림 그득~ 얼그레이 크림도 찐맛집이라 #얼그레이찰깨찰깨 완전 빠삐코 맛 크림 #초코찰깨찰깨 까지 완전 성공적 아이스크림 쉐이크 느낌 #치플러리 메뉴도 추천 🍦 딸기초코크럼블 치플러리는 완전 돼지바 느낌이고 말차 치플러리는 부드러운 말차맛인데 둘다 맛있~ 🔎 #치키차카초코합정 🗺️ 위치: 서울 마포구 잔다리로 40 1층 ⏰ 영업: 월-토 09:00-23:00 💳 가격: 코르네파이 2,800원~ (소세지 3,800원) 크림 찰깨찰깨 3,800원 치플러리 3,300원~ #합정맛집 #합정역맛집 #빵지순례 #디저트 #수능선물 #선물세트 #수능선물세트 #빵맛집 #크림빵 #크림빵맛집 #아이스크림맛집 #깨찰빵 #핫플추천 #서울

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On this day in February 26, 1870: Wyatt Outlaw’s life and brutal lynching in 1870 illustrate both the promise and failure of Reconstruction in securing civil rights for African Americans. As a Civil War veteran, Outlaw became the first Black town commissioner of Graham, North Carolina. He was a vocal leader, serving as president of the Alamance County Union League and advocating for Black education and political participation. His activism and appointment to a police patrol to counter Ku Klux Klan violence made him a target. On the night of February 26, 1870, a Klan-led mob of over sixty men dragged him from his home amongst cries of his children and threats against his mother. They lynched him from an elm branch in front of the Alamance Courthouse. A warning note left in his slit-open read, “Beware, you guilty, both white and black.”A Klansman later testified “Outlaw was hung because he was a politician… He had been a leader of the negroes; had been elected once. There was no other crime alleged.” Outlaw’s murder, along with the assassination of State Senator John W. Stephens, led North Carolina Governor William Holden to declare martial law in Alamance and Caswell counties. Holden’s crackdown on Klan violence, however, faced fierce opposition, ultimately leading to his impeachment and removal from office, signaling the unraveling of Reconstruction in North Carolina. While eighteen Klansmen were indicted for Outlaw’s murder in 1872, none were ever brought to trial, reflecting the failure of the legal system to hold white supremacists accountable. By 1873, the North Carolina legislature followed the federal government’s lead in granting amnesty for crimes committed by disguised Klansmen before 1871, ensuring that Outlaw’s killers—and many others—escaped justice. His death became a stark reminder of the violent resistance to Black political participation during Reconstruction. Though his legacy was largely erased for decades, modern efforts to recognize his contributions highlight his role in fighting for equality in the face of deadly opposition. #beajoan #america #northcarolina #ushistory #divinenine #education #fietts #blackhistory #blackhistorymonth #fyp
On this day in February 26, 1870: Wyatt Outlaw’s life and brutal lynching in 1870 illustrate both the promise and failure of Reconstruction in securing civil rights for African Americans. As a Civil War veteran, Outlaw became the first Black town commissioner of Graham, North Carolina. He was a vocal leader, serving as president of the Alamance County Union League and advocating for Black education and political participation. His activism and appointment to a police patrol to counter Ku Klux Klan violence made him a target. On the night of February 26, 1870, a Klan-led mob of over sixty men dragged him from his home amongst cries of his children and threats against his mother. They lynched him from an elm branch in front of the Alamance Courthouse. A warning note left in his slit-open read, “Beware, you guilty, both white and black.”A Klansman later testified “Outlaw was hung because he was a politician… He had been a leader of the negroes; had been elected once. There was no other crime alleged.” Outlaw’s murder, along with the assassination of State Senator John W. Stephens, led North Carolina Governor William Holden to declare martial law in Alamance and Caswell counties. Holden’s crackdown on Klan violence, however, faced fierce opposition, ultimately leading to his impeachment and removal from office, signaling the unraveling of Reconstruction in North Carolina. While eighteen Klansmen were indicted for Outlaw’s murder in 1872, none were ever brought to trial, reflecting the failure of the legal system to hold white supremacists accountable. By 1873, the North Carolina legislature followed the federal government’s lead in granting amnesty for crimes committed by disguised Klansmen before 1871, ensuring that Outlaw’s killers—and many others—escaped justice. His death became a stark reminder of the violent resistance to Black political participation during Reconstruction. Though his legacy was largely erased for decades, modern efforts to recognize his contributions highlight his role in fighting for equality in the face of deadly opposition. #beajoan #america #northcarolina #ushistory #divinenine #education #fietts #blackhistory #blackhistorymonth #fyp

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