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Talk:Bethany Hills Camp: Difference between revisions

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This page should not be speedily deleted because... the section on the page that held speculative information was deleted and all that remains is factual, verifiable information about a piece of Tennessee history that should remain on Wikipedia. [[User:Samtbartholomew|Samtbartholomew]] ([[User talk:Samtbartholomew|talk]]) 14:20, 20 September 2019 (UTC)
This page should not be speedily deleted because... the section on the page that held speculative information was deleted and all that remains is factual, verifiable information about a piece of Tennessee history that should remain on Wikipedia. [[User:Samtbartholomew|Samtbartholomew]] ([[User talk:Samtbartholomew|talk]]) 14:20, 20 September 2019 (UTC)

== Contested deletion ==

This page shouldn't be deleted. The camp is a local landmark, and the page has been rewritten to provide an accurate, historical view. It has sources and is properly cited.
The camp was created in the 1900s by Fannie Battle, a social reform worker and Civil War spy, as a place in the countryside for mothers and children to escape from the business of city life and recover from tuberculosis. It has historical and cultural significance.
--[[User:The 5th Dimension of Hades|The 5th Dimension of Hades]] ([[User talk:The 5th Dimension of Hades|talk]]) 15:00, 20 September 2019 (UTC)

Revision as of 15:00, 20 September 2019

Contested deletion

This page should not be speedily deleted because... the section on the page that held speculative information was deleted and all that remains is factual, verifiable information about a piece of Tennessee history that should remain on Wikipedia. Samtbartholomew (talk) 14:20, 20 September 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Contested deletion

This page shouldn't be deleted. The camp is a local landmark, and the page has been rewritten to provide an accurate, historical view. It has sources and is properly cited. The camp was created in the 1900s by Fannie Battle, a social reform worker and Civil War spy, as a place in the countryside for mothers and children to escape from the business of city life and recover from tuberculosis. It has historical and cultural significance.

    --The 5th Dimension of Hades (talk) 15:00, 20 September 2019 (UTC)[reply]