BIG BLOCKS GLASS LLC.

BIG BLOCKS GLASS LLC. Glass blocks sales and install BIG BLOCKS GLASS LLC.

is specializies in the Distribution and Installation of prefabicated glass block panels in the Midwest since 2003. A large portion of our business is the fabicating standard and custom panels for commercial, industrial, and residential customers

11/28/2025

Met up with my boy Heavens & Monica in Chi Town today! We literally touched down and took off the same day! Exhausted bu...
03/09/2025

Met up with my boy Heavens & Monica in Chi Town today! We literally touched down and took off the same day! Exhausted but got it done!!🤷🏽‍♂️💯❤️

Guess who Back!!❤️❤️❤️💯
01/01/2025

Guess who Back!!❤️❤️❤️💯

08/04/2024
Happy Birthday Brother🎁🎉🎊!!!
07/11/2024

Happy Birthday Brother🎁🎉🎊!!!

All the way to Toledo with the chair!!❤️❤️   www.plentyofthrones.com This is a very place!!💯💯💯❤️
04/07/2024

All the way to Toledo with the chair!!❤️❤️ www.plentyofthrones.com

This is a very place!!💯💯💯❤️

I had the pleasure of attending the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Kelly and Matthew Stafford& Friends Education Center...
04/02/2024

I had the pleasure of attending the ribbon cutting ceremony for the Kelly and Matthew Stafford
& Friends Education Center. I also met  Matthew Stanford, who does so much for this community!!💯💯💯

02/23/2024
Wow
01/01/2023

Wow

James Parks was born into slavery in 1843 at Arlington Estate, the home of the Custis-Lee family. He was 18 when the Civil War broke out in April 1861 and by May of that year, the Lees had moved to Richmond, leaving behind their slaves and overseer at Arlington. The will of George Washington Parke Custis, Parks’ former owner, officially freed him from slavery in 1862.

After the U.S. Army took over the Arlington House and its grounds, Parks began working for the U.S. government to help construct Forts McPherson and Whipple (today Fort Myer). In 1864, when two hundred acres of the Arlington estate were set aside to form Arlington National Cemetery, Parks began working as a grave digger and groundskeeper. He continued this work until June 1925, when he was in his 80s.

Parks spent his entire life living and working on the land that had been the Arlington estate –he grew up in the Arlington House slave quarters, then lived at the Arlington Freedman’s Village until 1888, and then moved into a cabin near the cemetery’s south entrance. During Parks’ lifetime, he married twice and was the father of 22 children, five of whom served in the U.S . military during World War I.

James Parks died on August 21, 1929, at age 86. Prior to his death, the Secretary of War authorized for him to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery even though he was a civilian. On August 23, 1929, Parks' long service to Arlington, in both slavery and freedom, was honored with a full military honors funeral.

You can learn more about James Parks and other African American contributions to Arlington National Cemetery and our nation in our African American History module - https://education.arlingtoncemetery.mil/Themes/African-American-History

Address

20260 Van Dyke Street
Detroit, MI
48234

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 9pm
Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 9am - 9pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 9pm
Saturday 9am - 9pm
Sunday 9am - 9pm

Telephone

+13133664527

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