Civil Rights Trail Attractions List

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Civil Rights Trail Attractions List THE U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS TRAIL MORE THAN 100 ATTRACTIONS ACROSS 15 STATES Alabama Tuskegee St. Augustine Anniston Butler Chapel AME Zion Church National Historic Preservation District Freedom Riders Tuskegee Airmen National National Monument Historic Site Vero Beach Tuskegee History Center Birmingham Jackie Robinson Training Complex Tuskegee University 16th Street Baptist Church Georgia Bethel Baptist Church Arkansas Birmingham Civil Rights Institute Albany Little Rock Kelly Ingram Park Albany Civil Rights Movement Arkansas Civil Rights Heritage Trail Museum at Old Mount Zion Monroeville Clinton Presidential Center Shiloh Baptist Church Old Courthouse Museum Daisy Bates House Little Rock Central High School Atlanta Montgomery National Historic Site APEX Museum Alabama State Capitol Little Rock Nine Memorial Center for Civil and Human Rights City of St. Jude Mosaic Templars Cultural Center Ebenezer Baptist Church Civil Rights Memorial Center Elbert P. Tuttle United States Court Dexter Avenue King Memorial Delaware of Appeals Building Baptist Church Wilmington Martin Luther King Jr. Birth Home Dexter Parsonage Museum Howard High School of Technology Martin Luther King Jr. National First Baptist Church Historical Park (Ripley Street) The Jimmy Carter Presidential Frank M. Johnson Jr. Federal District of Columbia Library and Museum Building and United States Washington The King Center Courthouse Howard University: Andrew Freedom Rides Museum Rankin Memorial Chapel, Frederick Midway Douglass Memorial Hall, Holt Street Baptist Church Dorchester Academy Founders Library Boys’ Dormitory National Memorial for Peace and Lincoln Memorial Justice and the Legacy Museum Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Rosa Parks Museum Kansas National Museum of African Topeka Scottsboro American History and Culture Brown v. Board of Education The Scottsboro Boys Museum Sousa Middle School National Historic Site and Cultural Center Supreme Court of the United States Sumner Elementary School Selma Brown Chapel AME Church Florida Kentucky Edmund Pettus Bridge Mims Berea Lowndes Interpretive Center Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Lincoln Hall at Berea College Memorial Park & Museum National Voting Rights Museum Louisville and Institute Panama City Louisville Downtown Civil Rights Trail Selma Interpretive Center Gideon v. Wainwright Historical Muhammad Ali Center Selma to Montgomery National Marker at the Bay County Historic Trail Courthouse Russellville Tuscaloosa Sarasota SEEK Museum Foster Auditorium at the Newtown African American Simpsonville University of Alabama Heritage Trail Whitney M. Young Jr. Birthplace Continued on next page Louisiana Tennessee St. Louis Baton Rouge Clinton Old Courthouse Louisiana State Capitol Clinton 12 Statue at Green McAdoo Shelley House Southern University and Cultural Center A&M College North Carolina Memphis New Orleans Durham Beale Street Historic District 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Hayti Heritage Center Clayborn Temple New Zion Baptist Church Mason Temple Church of God Tremé Neighborhood Greensboro in Christ William Frantz Elementary School February One Monument National Civil Rights Museum International Civil Rights Center & at the Lorraine Motel Mississippi Museum (Woolworth’s) WDIA Radio Station Canton Raleigh Nashville Canton Freedom House Civil Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Rights Museum Memorial Gardens Civil Rights Room at the Nashville Public Library Estey Hall at Shaw University Glendora Clark Memorial United Emmett Till Historic Intrepid Center Methodist Church South Carolina Davidson County Courthouse Jackson Charleston and Witness Walls Medgar Evers Home Museum Emanuel AME Church Fifth Avenue Historic District: Mississippi Civil Rights Museum Woolworth’s on 5th Columbia Mississippi Freedom Trail Fisk University Modjeska Monteith Simkins House Tougaloo College Griggs Hall at American Baptist South Carolina State House College Money Greenville Bryant’s Grocery & Meat Market Virginia Springfield Baptist Church Farmville Oxford Greenwood Robert Russa Moton High School Lyceum – The Circle Historic District, and Museum Benjamin E. Mays House Museum University of Mississippi Richmond Philadelphia Orangeburg Virginia Civil Rights Memorial Neshoba County Historic Sites Orangeburg Massacre Ruleville Rock Hill West Virginia Fannie Lou Hamer Statue Five & Dine (McCrory’s) Charleston Elizabeth Harden Gilmore House Sumner St. Helena Island Emmett Till Interpretive Center Penn Center (formerly Penn School) Harpers Ferry Tallahatchie County Courthouse Summerton Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Historic Liberty Hill AME Church Missouri Huntington Independence Memphis Tennessee Garrison House Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum CivilRightsTrail.com.
Recommended publications
  • A Soldier Is Remembered of Meatballs 2” in Eva Lion Park on Saturday, August 9 at Dusk, Rain Or Shine
    Serving Satsuma ● Pomona Park ● Lake Como ● Crescent City ● Seville ● Pierson ● Welaka ● Fruitland ● Georgetown ● East Palatka ● Palatka ● Interlachen ● Melrose ● San Mateo since 1898 Putnam County Only Putnam County’s Favorite Weekly Community Newspaper 50 August 6, 2014 • Volume 70, No. 12 (2 sections) Crescent City, Florida (Includes 7% FL Sales Tax) ¢ Movies in the Park The City of Crescent City will hold “Movies in the Park” featuring “Cloudy With a Chance A Soldier is Remembered of Meatballs 2” in Eva Lion Park on Saturday, August 9 at dusk, rain or shine. In case of rain the event will be moved to City Hall’s Commission Meeting room. Bring your blan- kets and low back chairs. There will be hot- dogs, popcorn and drinks available. Full Moon Paddle Full Moon Paddle and Movie on Melrose Bay. A moon light paddle complete with a movie and pass-around picnic. Boat Launch at end of Trout Street in Melrose. Friday, August 8, from 7 to 10 p.m. The movie will be shown at the end of a dock and can be viewed from kayaks. Meet at the boat launch at the end of Trout Street at 7 p.m. to start. Bring pass around food to share and your beverage of choice. This paddle is for experienced pad- dlers only. Putnam Blueways and Trails sponsor’s daytime trips that are more appro- priate for new paddlers. Boat light, whistle, Photos by Mike Jones and PFD are mandatory. For more informa- tion email putnambluewaysandtrails@gmail. com or visit www.putnambluewaysandtrails. org. Spark a Reaction The Putnam County Library System is hav- ing a Spark A Reaction: Graphic Novel work- shop in all its locations.
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  • Race, Gender and Class in the Autobiography of Huey P. Newton 1
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  • Occam's Razor Vol. 3 - Full (2013)
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  • Commonlit | Showdown in Little Rock
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  • CONGRESSIONAL RECORD—HOUSE September 25, 1997
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  • Archived News
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  • A Summary of the Contributions of Four Key African American Female Figures of the Civil Rights Movement
    Western Michigan University ScholarWorks at WMU Master's Theses Graduate College 12-1994 A Summary of the Contributions of Four Key African American Female Figures of the Civil Rights Movement Michelle Margaret Viera Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/masters_theses Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Viera, Michelle Margaret, "A Summary of the Contributions of Four Key African American Female Figures of the Civil Rights Movement" (1994). Master's Theses. 3834. https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/masters_theses/3834 This Masters Thesis-Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate College at ScholarWorks at WMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at WMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A SUMMARY OF THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF FOUR KEY AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMALE FIGURES OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT by Michelle Margaret Viera A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of The Graduate College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan December 1994 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS My appreciation is extended to several special people; without their support this thesis could not have become a reality. First, I am most grateful to Dr. Henry Davis, chair of my thesis committee, for his encouragement and sus­ tained interest in my scholarship. Second, I would like to thank the other members of the committee, Dr. Benjamin Wilson and Dr. Bruce Haight, profes­ sors at Western Michigan University. I am deeply indebted to Alice Lamar, who spent tireless hours editing and re-typing to ensure this project was completed.
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  • Address at Youth March for Integrated Schools in Washington, D.C., Delivered by Coretta Scott King the Martin Luther King, Jr. P
    25 Oct vividly, is the vast outpouring of sympathy and affection that came to me literally 1958 from everywhere-from Negro and white, from Catholic, Protestant and Jew, from the simple, the uneducated, the celebraties and the great. I know that this affection was not for me alone. Indeed it was far too much for any one man to de- serve. It was really for you. It was an expression of the fact that the Montgomery Story had moved the hearts of men everywhere. Through me, the many thou- sands of people who wrote of their admiration, were really writing of their love for you. This is worth remembering. This is worth holding on to as we strive on for Freedom. And finally, as I indicated before, the experience I had in New York gave me time to think. I believe that I have sunk deeper the roots of my convic- tion that (non-violent}resistence is the true path for overcoming in- justice and- for stamping out evil. May God bless you. TAD. MLKP-MBU: Box 93. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project Address at Youth March for Integrated Schools in Washington, D.C., Delivered by Coretta Scott King 25 October 1958 New York, N.Y. At the Lincoln Memorial Coretta Scott King delivered these remarks on behalf of her husband to ten thousand people who had marched down Constitution Avenue in support of school integration.’ During the march Harry Belafonte led a small integrated contingent of students to the White House to meet the president. They were met at the gate by a guard who informed them that neither the president nor any of his assistants would be available.
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  • Thomas L. Bynum, Ph.D
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  • Alabama Civil Rights History Tour 6 Days - 5 Nights August 23 - 28, 2021
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  • Expanding the Table for Racial Equity~
    Putting Racism on the Table ~Expanding the Table for Racial Equity~ Civil Rights Learning Journey September 23 – 27, 2018 Memphis, TN Birmingham, AL Join us on a journey through history. Throughout the Putting Racism on the Table series, we will underscore the importance of understanding the history of race in America. You are invited to explore history first‐ hand on a learning journey through the South. This is an opportunity to build a deeper understanding of the movement for civil rights and racial justice in America. Over the course of 3.5 days, we will visit major museums, houses of worship that played significant roles in the activism of the 1960s, and sites of key protests. We will meet individuals who were leaders on the ground in the 1960s and those who are pushing for change today. Details Cost: $3,500/per person Included: All site fees; single‐occupancy hotel room each night; all meals (except Sunday & Tuesday dinners); transportation to Birmingham‐Shuttlesworth International Airport Not included: Airfare to Memphis & from Birmingham; transportation from Memphis International Airport; Sunday & Tuesday dinners Registration & Payment Deadline: July 2. Please see page 8 for our cancellation policy. Questions? Contact Rebekah Seder, [email protected] 1 Sunday, September 23, 2018 12:00‐5:00 pm: INDIVIDUAL ARRIVALS VIA MEMPHIS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (MEM) (Memphis, TN) Early arrivals have the option to enjoy a number of Memphis attractions. Music lovers, head to Beale Street for live Delta Blues, or tour Elvis Presley’s Graceland or Sun Records. Memphis may be known for its great BBQ, but there are a variety of southern dishes to enjoy close to the hotel.
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