The following is a dynamic and expanding list of African-American historic places in the United States and territories that has been documented to be significant in illustrating the experience of the African diaspora in America. Some are local landmarks while others are on the National Register of Historic Places.[ 1] The stories of the contributions, hardships, and aspirations of all American people can be seen in the experiences of African Americans at these physical locations.[ 2] The formal preservation of these sites dates back to at least 1917 according to architectural historian Brent Leggs when efforts to save the Gothic Revival home of abolitionist and statesman Frederick Douglass were launched. "Even when it wasn't called 'preservation,' this work was already happening."[ 1]
The places listed below represent the achievements and struggles of African Americans. Visitors to these sites can gain a better understanding of the events and the people of that time. These places connected across time to create an understanding of what happened and why.[ 3]
African-American historic places organized by period or topic [ edit ]
This outline has been adapted from other related Wikipedia articles and The Negro Pilgrimage in America by C. Eric Lincoln and Before the Mayflower; A History of the Negro in America; 1619-1964 by Lerone Bennett Jr .
Origins [ 4]
This article needs to be updated . Please help update this to reflect recent events or newly available information. (July 2020 )
Old Slave Mart , Charleston, SC
The Negro Pilgrimage in America [ 4] or the African Past [ 5]
The story of the African Americans begins in Africa. Early histories of Africa considered it the 'Dark Continent', both in the sense of the color of its people, but also for its lack of known civilizations. Studies beginning in the 1960s have found a rich history of civilization, including arts, architecture, public thought and major civilizations.[ 5] The story of African Americans builds from these roots and can be traced through historic sites associated with the slave trade in America:[ 2]
American Revolution [ 5]
While the term 'American Revolution' connotes only the war period (1776–1783), the entire colonial experience is included. Free Negros were present during early campaigns of the war and throughout the war. In March 1770, Crispus Attucks died during the protest that has become known as the Boston Massacre .[ 5] At the Battle of Bunker Hill , Peter Salem and Salem Poor , two free Negros valiantly served. Salem Poor was commended for his actions that day.[ 5]
Slavery [ 4] [ 5]
For over 200 years, the American system of slavery held four million people of color in bondage.[ 5] The effect was felt by all the people of the nation, including black, white, yellow, and red. It was premised on a system of racial supremacy that affected the development of the American Negro and the relationships of all American's with persons of other races.[ 5]
The first blacks in the new world did not arrive on the slave ship to Jamestown in 1619. Rather, it was Pedro Alonzo Niño, navigator on the Niña the smallest of Christopher Columbus 's vessels.[ 4] From that day, Negros participated in nearly every major Spanish exploration in the new world. Neflo de Olaña and thirty other Negros were with Balboa when they discovered the Pacific Ocean.[ 4]
Antioch Missionary Baptist Church , Houston TX
Slave revolts and insurrections [ 5]
In the summer of 1791, Haiti witnessed the first successful slave revolt. This was not the first; it was one in a long series of revolts.[ 5] Between 1663 and 1864, there were 109 revolts on land and another 55 at sea.[ 4] Notable early insurrections include the 1712 uprising in New York City and the 1800 attack on Richmond, Virginia known as Gabriel's Rebellion . That same year, Denmark Vesey, a free black, planned to seize Charleston, South Carolina, but was foiled when betrayed.[ 4]
House at John Brown's Farm , North Elba, NY
Abolition crisis[ 4] With the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the United States gained a huge western dominion. With it, two aspects of American life came into stark comparison. The first was the expansion of slavery across the southern half of the nation, creating a vast agricultural empire based on a large rural workforce. The second was Manifest Destiny , the expansion of a free society westward across the continent.[ 4] The economic realities in the south precluded the development of a strong abolitionist base, while the lack of slavery among the industrialized north, neither supported nor abhorred the abolitionist cause.[ 4] By 1835, William Lloyd Garrison had established The Liberator as the nation's most militant abolitionist newspaper. Over the next 30 years, the north and the south would try to find ways to coexist with two different economic systems and a growing abolitionist movement.[ 5]
Frederick Douglass National Historic Site , Washington, D.C. Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church – Terre Haute, Indiana
Levi Coffin House – Fountain City, Indiana
Frederick Douglass National Historic Site – Washington D.C.
Eleutherian College – Lancaster, Indiana
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park – West Virginia
Little Jerusalem AME Church – Cornwells Heights-Eddington, Pennsylvania
William C. Nell House – Boston, Massachusetts
Harriet Beecher Stowe House – Brunswick, Maine
Liberty Farm – Worcester, Massachusetts
Mount Zion United Methodist Church -Washington, D.C.
White Horse Farm -Phoenixville, Pennsylvania
Civil war and emancipation [ 4] [ 5]
The American Civil War is often seen as a war between white men over the fate of the black man. From the beginning, the African-American peoples played a significant role in the war.[ 5] As early as July 1861, three months after Fort Sumter , the United States Congress passed the first Confiscation Act , granting freedom to any slave who had been used to support the Confederate war efforts, once they were behind Union Lines.[ 4] Quickly General Sherman employed this new manpower in the construction of Union facilities from which to prosecute the war.[ 4] With the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862, the First Regiment Louisiana Heavy Artillery and All Negro unit was founded by General B.F. Butler . The War Department quickly authorized the enlistment of Negro soldier with the founding of the Massachusetts Fifty-Fourth and Fifty-Fifth Infantry Regiments. By the end of the war, there were over 150 all-Negro regiments.[ 4] On September 29, 1864, the Third Division of the Eighteenth Corp of the Army of the James, moved forward to take the New Market Heights outside Richmond, Virginia. The key role in this advance was given to the 'all-Negro' division. By the end of the day, the Union Army would stand on the heights overlooking the city of Richmond with a loss of 584 men and 10 Congressional Medal honorees now in their ranks. This action marked the beginning of the dissolution of the Confederate Government and the end of the war the following April.
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial , Boston African American National Historic Site , Boston, MABoston African American National Historic Site – Boston, Massachusetts
Camilla-Zack Community Center District – Mayfield, Georgia
Fort Pillow – Tennessee
Goodwill Plantation – Eastover, South Carolina
John Mercer Langston House – Oberlin, Ohio
Lewis O'Neal Tavern – Versailles, Kentucky
Oakview – Holly Springs, Mississippi
Olustee Battlefield – Olustee, Florida
Port Hudson – Port Hudson, Louisiana
Seaside Plantation -Beaufort, South Carolina
Slate Hill Cemetery -Morrisville, Pennsylvania
Sulphur Trestle Fort Site – Elkmont, Alabama
Reconstruction-era [ 4] [ 5]
Alcorn State University Historic District – Lorman, Mississippi
Barber House – Hopkins, South Carolina
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church – Batesville, Arkansas
Clarksville Historic District – Lancaster, Indiana
Daufuskie Island Historic District – South Carolina
Fair-Rutherford and Rutherford Houses – Columbia, South Carolina
Freeman Chapel C.M.E. Church – Hopkinsville, Kentucky
Laurel Grove-South Cemetery – Savannah, Georgia
Lincoln University Hilltop Campus Historic District – Jefferson City, Missouri
Ploeger-Kerr-White House -Bastrop, Texas
Springfield Baptist Church -Greensboro, Georgia
Stone Hall, Atlanta University – Atlanta, Georgia
Charles Sumner High School – St. Louis, Missouri
Lyman Trumbull House – Alton, Illinois
Working Benevolent Temple and Professional Building – Greenville, South Carolina
Segregation [ 4] and the rise of Jim Crow [ 5]
Wililam R. Allen School – Lorman, Mississippi
Black Theater of Ardmore – Ardmore, Oklahoma
Davis Avenue Branch , Mobile Public Library – Mobile, Alabama
Fairbanks Flats – Lancaster, Indiana
Fourth Avenue Historic District – Birmingham, Alabama
Indiana Avenue Historic District – Indianapolis, Indiana
Main Building, Arkansas Baptist College – Hopkinsville, Arkansas
Smithfield Historic District – Savannah, Georgia
Sweet Auburn Historic District – Atlanta, Georgia
Tenth Street Freedman's Town – Dallas, Texas
Ward Chapel AME Church – Muscogee, Oklahoma
Northern Migration [ 4]
Langston Terrace Dwellings , Washington, D.C.
Expanding opportunities [ 4]
Alcorn State University Historic District – Lorman, Mississippi
Barber House – Hopkins, South Carolina
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church – Batesville, Arkansas
Clarksville Historic District – Lancaster, Indiana
Daufuskie Island Historic District – South Carolina
Fair-Rutherford and Rutherford Houses – Columbia, South Carolina
Freeman Chapel C.M.E. Church – Hopkinsville, Kentucky
Laurel Grove-South Cemetery – Savannah, Georgia
Lincoln University Hilltop Campus Historic District – Jefferson City, Missouri
Ploeger-Kerr-White House ,-Bastrop, Texas
Springfield Baptist Church -Greensboro, Georgia
Stone Hall, Atlanta University – Atlanta, Georgia
Charles Sumner High School – St. Louis, Missouri
Lyman Trumbull House – Alton, Illinois
Working Benevolent Temple and Professional Building – Greenville, South Carolina
Civil rights movement [ 4] [ 5]
Martin Luther King Jr.'s Boyhood home, Martin Luther King Jr. Historic District , Atlanta, GA
16th Street Baptist Church - Birmingham, Alabama
Agricultural and Technical College of North Carolina Historic District – Greensboro, North Carolina
Brown Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church – Selma, Alabama
City of St. Jude Historic District – Montgomery, Alabama
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church – Montgomery, Alabama
First African Baptist Church – Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Martin Luther King Jr. Historic District – Atlanta, Georgia
Lincolnville Historic District – St. Augustine, Florida
Little Rock Central High School – Little Rock, Arkansas
Malcolm X House Site – Omaha, Nebraska
Howard Thurman House -Daytona Beach, Florida
Dr. Cyril O. Spann Medical Office- Columbia, South Carolina
Cemeteries
The preservation of African-American cemeteries is an integral part of documenting Black history and heritage. Many lands where enslaved or freed black individuals were buried are threatened by development and neglect though new efforts are underway to protect these historic places.[ 6]
African Burial Ground National Monument , New York, New York
African Jackson Cemetery , Piqua, Ohio
Barton Heights Cemeteries , city of Richmond, Virginia
East End Cemetery , city of Richmond, Virginia
Eden Cemetery , Collingdale, Pennsylvania
Evergreen Cemetery , city of Richmond, Virginia
Gethsemane Cemetery , Little Ferry, New Jersey
Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery , Athens, Georgia
Gower Cemetery , Edmond, Oklahoma
Hampton Springs Cemetery (Black Section), Carthage, Arkansas
Harlem African Burial Ground , New York, New York
Laurel Grove Cemetery – Savannah, Georgia
Lebanon Cemetery , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Magnolia Cemetery including Mobile National Cemetery, Mobile, Alabama
Mount Pisgah Benevolence Cemetery , Romney, West Virginia
Newburgh Colored Burial Ground , Newburgh, New York
New Hope Missionary Baptist Church Cemetery, Historic Section , Lake Village, Arkansas
Portsmouth African Burying Ground , Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Rye African-American Cemetery , Rye, New York
Saint Paul's Church National Historic Site , Mount Vernon, New York
Shockoe Bottom African Burial Ground - city of Richmond, Virginia
Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground , city of Richmond, Virginia
Slate Hill Cemetery , Morrisville, Pennsylvania
St. David African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cemetery , Sag Harbor, New York
Stony Hill Cemetery , Harrison, New York
Toussaint L'Ouverture County Cemetery , Tennessee
African-American historic places organized by state or territory [ edit ]
16th Street Baptist Church , Birmingham, AL
16th Street Baptist Church , Birmingham
Alabama Penny Savings Bank , Birmingham
Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church , Selma
Butler Chapel AME Zion Church , Greenville
Calhoun School Principal's House , Calhoun
City of St. Jude Historic District , Montgomery
Dave Patton House , Mobile
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church , Montgomery
Domestic Science Building , Normal
Dr. A.M. Brown House , Birmingham
Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church , Auburn
Emanuel AME Church , Mobile
First African Baptist Church , Tuscaloosa
First Baptist Church , Greenville
First Baptist Church , Selma
First Congregational Church of Marion , Marion
Fourth Avenue Historic District , Birmingham
Hawthorn House , Mobile
Hunter House , Mobile
Jefferson Franklin Jackson House , Montgomery
West Park , Birmingham
Laura Watson House , Gainesville
Lebanon Chapel AME Church , Fairhope
Magnolia Cemetery , including Mobile National Cemetery , Mobile
Mount Zion Baptist Church , Anniston
Murphy-Collins House , Tuscaloosa
Davis Avenue Branch, Mobile Public Library , Mobile
North Lawrence-Monroe Street Historic District , Montgomery
Old Ship African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church , Montgomery
Pastorium, Dexter Avenue Baptist Church , Montgomery
Phillips Memorial Auditorium , Marion
Pratt City Carline Historic District , Birmingham
Rickwood Field , Birmingham
Searcy Hospital , Mount Vernon
Smithfield Historic District , Birmingham
St. Louis Street Missionary Baptist Church , Mobile
State Street AME Zion Church , Mobile
Stone Street Baptist Church , Mobile
Sulphur Trestle Fort Site , Elkmont
Swayne Hall , Talladega
Talladega College Historic District , Talladega
Theological Building- AME Zion Theological Institute , Greenville
Tulane Building , Montgomery
Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site , Tuskegee
Twin Beach AME Church , Fairhope
Ward Nicholson Corner Store , Greenville
West Fifteenth Street Historic District , Anniston
Westwood Plantation (Boundary Increase) , Uniontown
Windham Construction Office Building , Birmingham
Little Rock Central High School , Little Rock, AR
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church , Batesville
Dunbar Junior and Senior High School and Junior College , Little Rock
Hampton Springs Cemetery (Black Section) , Carthage
Henry Clay Mills House , Van Buren
Ish House , Little Rock
Kiblah School , Doddridge
Little Rock High School , Little Rock
Main Building, Arkansas Baptist College , Little Rock
Mosaic Templars of America Headquarters Building , Little Rock
Mount Olive United Methodist Church , Van Buren
Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church , Brinkley
New Hope Missionary Baptist Church Cemetery, Historic Section , Lake Village
Taborian Hall , Little Rock
Wortham Gymnasium , Oak Grove
Africans who had participated in the slave revolt on La Amistad attended the First Church of Christ, Congregational in Farmington, CT
District of Columbia [ edit ]
African American Diversity Cultural Center
Ida B. Wells-Barnett House , Chicago, IL
Christian Hill Historic District , Alton
Dr. Daniel Hale Williams House , Chicago
Eighth Regiment Armory , Chicago
New Philadelphia Town Site / Free Frank McWorter Grave Site , Barry
Ida B. Wells-Barnett House , Chicago
Jean Baptiste Point Du Sable Homesite , Chicago
Lyman Trumbull House , Alton
Overton Hygienic Building , Chicago
Owen Lovejoy Homestead , Princeton
Quinn Chapel of the AME Church , Chicago
Robert S. Abbott House , Chicago
Unity Hall , Chicago (located in the Black Metropolis-Bronzeville District of Chicago)
Victory Sculpture , Chicago
Wabash Avenue YMCA , Chicago
Levi Coffin House in Fountain City, IN was used to hide slaves in the Underground Railroad
Allen Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church , Terre Haute
Bethel AME Church , Franklin
Booker T. Washington School , Rushville
Crispus Attucks High School , Indianapolis
Eleutherian College , Lancaster
Flanner House Homes , Indianapolis
Iddings-Gilbert-Leader-Anderson Block , Kendallville
Indiana Avenue Historic District , Indianapolis
J. Woodrow Wilson House , Marion
Levi Coffin House , Fountain City (NHL)
Liberty Baptist Church , Evansville
Lockefield Garden Apartments , Indianapolis
Madam C. J. Walker Building , Indianapolis
Minor House , Indianapolis
Old Richmond Historic District , Richmond
Ransom Place Historic District , Indianapolis
Rockville Historic District , Rockville
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church, Gary
Theodore Roosevelt High School (Gary)
Alexander Clark House , Muscatine, IA Alexander Clark House , Muscatine
Bethel AME Church , Cedar Rapids
Bethel AME Church , Davenport
Bethel AME Church , Iowa City
Burns United Methodist Church , Des Moines
Buxton Historic Townsite , Lovilia
Fort Des Moines Provisional Army Officer Training School , Des Moines
Second Baptist Church , Centerville
First African Baptist Church , Lexington, KY A. Jackson Crawford Building , Somerset
Abner Knox farm , Danville
Anderson House , Haskingsville
Andrew Muldrow Quarters , Tyrone
Artelia Anderson Hall , Paduch
Ash Emison Quarters , Delaplain
Bayless Quarters , North Middletown
Bethel AME Church , Shelbyville
Bloomfield Historic District , Bloomfield
Broadway Temple AME Zion Church , Louisville
Central Colored School , Louisville
Chandler Normal School Building and Webster Hall , Lexington
Charity's House , Falmouth
Chestnut Street Baptist Church , Louisville
Church of Our Merciful Saviour , Louisville
E.E. Hume Hall , Frankfort
Embry Chapel Church , Elizabethtown
Emery-Price Historic District , Covington
First African Baptist Church and Parsonage , Georgetown
First African Baptist Church , Lexington
First Baptist Church , Elizabethtown
First Baptist Church , Frankfort
First Colored Baptist Church , Bowling Green
Freeman Chapel C.M.E. Church , Hopkinsville
Hogan Quarters , Versailles
Jackson Hall, Kentucky State University , Frankfort
James Briscoe Quarters , Delaplain
Jeffersontown Colored School , Jeffersontown
John Leavell Quarters , Bryantville
Johnson's Chapel AME Zion Church , Springfield
Johnson-Pence House , Georgetown
Joseph Patterson Quarters , Midway
KEAS Tabernacle Christian Methodist Episcopal Church , Mount Sterling
Knights of Pythias Temple , Louisville
Lewis O'Neal Tavern , Versailles
Limerick Historic District (Boundary Increase), Louisville
Lincoln Hall , Berea
Lincoln Institute Complex , Simpsonville
Lincoln School , Paduch
Louisville Free Public Library, Western Colored Branch , Louisville
Meriwether House , Louisville
Midway Historic District , Midway
Minor Chapel AME Church , Taylorsville
Mount Vernon AME Church , Gamaliel
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church , Middleboro
Municipal College Campus, Simmons University , Louisville
Old Statehouse Historic District , Frankfort
Perry Shelburne House , Taylorsville
Pisgah Rural Historic District , Lexington/Versailles
Poston House , Hopkinsville
Reed Road Rural Historic District , Lexington
Russell Historic District , Louisville
Solomon Thomas House , Salvisa
South Frankfort Neighborhood Historic District , Frankfort
St. James AME Church , Ashland
St. John United Methodist Church , Shelbyville
Stone Barn on Brushy Creek , Carlisle
Stone Quarters on Burgin Road , Harrodsburg
The Grange , Paris
Thomas Chapel C.M.E. Church , Hickman
Union Station School , Paducah
University of Louisville Belknap Campus , Louisville
Whitney M. Young, Jr., Birthplace , Simpsonville
Congo Square , New Orleans, LA Arna Wendell Bontemps House , Alexandria
Badin-Roque House , Natchez
Canebrake , Ferriday
Carter Plantation , Springfield
Central High School , Shreveport
Congo Square , New Orleans
Evergreen Plantation , Wallace
Fazendeville , St. Bernard Parish
Flint-Goodridge Hospital of Dillard University , New Orleans
Holy Rosary Institute , Lafayette
James H. Dillard House , New Orleans
Kenner and Kugler Cemeteries Archeological District , Norco
Leland College , Baker
Magnolia Plantation , Derry
Maison de Marie Therese , Bermuda
McKinley High School , Baton Rouge
Melrose Plantation , Melrose
Port Hudson , Port Hudson
Southern University Archives Building , Scotlandville
St. James AME Church , New Orleans
St. Joseph Historic District , St. Joseph
St. Joseph's School (Burnside, Louisiana)
St. Paul Lutheran Church , Mansura
St. Peter AME Church , New Orleans
Tangipahoa Parish Training School Dormitory , Kentwood
L'Hermitage Slave Village Archeological Site , Frederick, MD African Methodist Episcopal Church , Cumberland
Berkley School , Darlington
Don S.S. Goodloe House , Bowie
Douglass Place , Baltimore
Douglass Summer House , Highland Beach
Eagle Harbor
Frederick Douglass High School , Baltimore
Grassland , Annapolis Junction
John Brown's Headquarters , Samples Manor
Jonestown, Howard County
L'Hermitage Slave Village Archeological Site , Frederick
McComas Institute , Joppa
Mt. Gilboa Chapel , Oella
Mt. Moriah African Methodist Episcopal Church , Annapolis
Orchard Street United Methodist Church , Baltimore
Public School No. 111 , Baltimore
Snow Hill Site , Port Deposit Archeological site.
St. John's Church , Ruxton
Stanley Institute , Cambridge
Stanton Center , Annapolis
African Meeting House , Boston, MA Abiel Smith School , Boston
African Meeting House , Boston
Black Heritage Trail , Boston
Boston African American National Historic Site , Boston
Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church , Boston
John Coburn House , Boston
William C. Nell House , Boston
John J. Smith House , Boston
Maria Baldwin House , Cambridge
Howe House , Cambridge
William Monroe Trotter House , Dorchester
William E.B. Du Bois Boyhood Homesite , Great Barrington
Camp Atwater , North Brookfield
Paul Cuffe Farm , Westport
Liberty Farm , Worcester
Detroit Wall , Detroit, MI Idlewild Historic District , Idlewild
Breitmeyer-Tobin Building , Detroit
Dunbar Hospital , Detroit
Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church, Covent, and Rectory , Detroit
Second Baptist Church of Detroit , Detroit
Ossian H. Sweet House , Detroit
The Rainbow Inn , Petoskey
Brewster-Wheeler Recreation Center , Detroit
Sidney D. Miller Middle School , Detroit
Detroit Wall , Detroit
Nacirema Club , Detroit
New Bethel Baptist Church , Detroit
Underground Railroad Living Museum , Detroit
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History , Detroit
Black Bottom , Detroit
Harriet Island Pavilion , St. Paul, MN Avalon Hotel , Rochester
Casiville Bullard House , St. Paul
Edward S. Hall House , St. Paul
Harriet Island Pavilion , St. Paul
Highland Park Tower , St. Paul
Holman Field Administration Building , St. Paul
Lena O. Smith House , Minneapolis
Pilgrim Baptist Church , St. Paul
St. Mark's African Methodist Episcopal Church , Duluth
Shadow Lawn , West Long Branch, NJ Ackerman-Smith House , Saddle River
Bethany Baptist Church , Newark
Bordentown School
Fisk Chapel , Fair Haven
Gethsemane Cemetery , Little Ferry
Grant AME Church , Chesilhurst
Perth Amboy City Hall
Roosevelt Stadium
Shadow Lawn , West Long Branch
State Street Public School , Newark
William R. Allen School , Burlington
African Burial Ground National Monument , Manhattan, NY
369th Regiment Armory , Manhattan
African Burial Ground National Monument , Manhattan
A.M.E. Zion Church of Kingston and Mount Zion Cemetery , Kingston
Apollo Theater , Manhattan
Beecher-McFadden Estate , Peekskill
Bethel AME Church and Manse , Huntington
Claude McKay Residence , Manhattan
Dunbar Apartments , Manhattan
Durham Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church , Buffalo
Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington House , Manhattan
Elmendorf Reformed Church , Manhattan, and its newly discovered burial ground at 126th St and Second Avenue
Florence Mills House , Manhattan
Foster Memorial AME Zion Church , Tarrytown
Harlem African Burial Ground , New York
Harlem River Houses , Manhattan
Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged , Auburn
Houses on Hunterfly Road District , Brooklyn
Jack Peterson Memorial , Croton-on-Hudson
James Weldon Johnson House , Manhattan
Jay Estate , Rye
John Brown Farm , Lake Placid
John Roosevelt "Jackie" Robinson House , Queens
Langston Hughes House , Manhattan
Lemuel Haynes House , New South Granville
Louis Armstrong House , Queens
Macedonia Baptist Church , Buffalo
Matthew Henson Residence , Manhattan
Minton's Playhouse , Manhattan
Monument to First Rhode Island Regiment , Yorktown Heights
Newburgh Colored Burial Ground , Newburgh
New York Amsterdam News Building , Manhattan
Paul Robeson Home , Manhattan
Ralph Bunche House , Queens
Rapp Road Community Historic District , Albany
Rye African-American Cemetery , Rye
Saint Paul's Church National Historic Site , Mount Vernon
Sandy Ground Historic Archeological District , Staten Island
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture , Manhattan
Skinny House (Mamaroneck, New York) , Mamaroneck
St. Benedict the Moor Church , Manhattan
St David African Methodist Episcopal Zion Cemetery , Sag Harbor
St. George's Episcopal Church , New York
St. James AME Church , Ithaca
St. Nicholas Historic District , Manhattan
St. Philip's Episcopal Church , Manhattan
Stony Hill Cemetery , Harrison
Sylvester Manor , Shelter Island
Valley Road Historic District , Manhasset
Villa Lewaro , Irvington
Will Marion Cook House , Manhattan
Waddington Historic Distinct , Waddington
Mount Zion Baptist Church , Athens, OH
Mount Zion Baptist Church , Athens
Jacob Goldsmith House , Cleveland
Lincoln Theatre , Columbus
South School , Yellow Springs
Colonel Charles Young House , Wilberforce
William C. Johnston House and General Store , Burlington
Macedonia Church , Burlington
John Mercer Langston House , Oberlin
African Jackson Cemetery , Piqua
Classic Theater , Dayton
Dunbar Historic District , Dayton
Women's Christian Association , Dayton
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Cleveland
St. Augustine's Episcopal Church, Youngstown
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Cincinnati
A. J. Mason Building , Tullahassee
Black Theater of Ardmore , Ardmore
Boley Historic District , Boley
C.L. Cooper Building , Eufaula Straight University, New Orleans, graduating class of 1901
Douglass High School Auditorium , Ardmore
Dunbar School , Ardmore
Eastside Baptist Church , Okmulgee
First Baptist Central Church , Okmulgee
First Baptist Church , Muskogee
Gower Cemetery , Edmond
J. Cody Johnson Building , Wewoka
Johnson Hotel and Boarding House , Duncan
Manual Training High School for Negroes , Muskogee
Melvin F. Luster House , Oklahoma City
Mill-Washington School , Red Bird
Miller Brothers 101 Ranch , Ponca City
Okmulgee Colored Hospital , Okmulgee
Okmulgee Downtown Historic District , Okmulgee
Red Bird City Hall , Redbird
Rock Front , Vernon
Rosenwald Hall , Lima
Taft City Hall , Taft
Ward Chapel AME Church , Muskogee
People's Hall in Ercildoun, an abolitionist center
John Brown house in Chambersburg
Adelphi School , Philadelphia
Asbury AME Church , Chester
Bethel AME Church , Reading
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church of Monongahela City , Monongahela City
Calvary Baptist Church , Chester
Camptown Historic District , LaMott
Cheyney University of Pennsylvania , Cheyney
Clement Atkinson Memorial Hospital , Coatesville
Crozer Theological Seminary , Upland
Eden Cemetery , Collingdale
Ercildoun Historic District in Chester County
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper House , Philadelphia
Hamorton Historic District , Kennett Square
Henry O. Tanner House , Philadelphia
Institute for Colored Youth , Philadelphia
John Brown House , Chambersburg
Lebanon Cemetery , Philadelphia
Little Jerusalem AME Church , Cornwells Heights
Melrose , Cheyney
Mother Bethel AME Church , Philadelphia
Mount Gilead AME Church , Buckingham Township
Oakdale , Chadds Ford
Slate Hill Cemetery , Morrisville
Thompson Cottage , Concord Township
Union Methodist Episcopal Church , Philadelphia
Wesley AME Zion Church , Philadelphia
White Hall of Bristol College , Croyden
White Horse Farm , Phoenixville
Belmont – Virginia
Woodland Cemetery (Richmond, Virginia)
Shockoe Bottom African Burial Ground (Richmond, Virginia)
Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground (Richmond, Virginia)
First African Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia)
Lumpkin's Jail (Richmond, Virginia)
Maggie L. Walker National Historic Site (Richmond, Virginia)
Jackson Ward (Richmond, Virginia)
Sixth Mount Zion Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia)
St. Luke Building (Richmond, Virginia)
Hippodrome Theater (Richmond, Virginia)
Virginia Union University (Richmond, Virginia)
Fourth Baptist Church Richmond, Virginia)
Ebenezer Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia)
Harpers Ferry, WV
African Zion Baptist Church , Malden
Barnett Hospital and Nursing School , Huntington
Bethel AME Church , Parkersburg
Booker T. Washington High School , London
Camp Washington-Carver Complex , Clifftop
Canty House , Institute
Douglass Junior and Senior High School , Huntington
East Hall , Institute
Elizabeth Harden Gilmore House , Charleston
Garnet High School , Charleston
Halltown Colored Free School , Halltown
Halltown Union Colored Sunday School , Halltown
Hancock House , Bluefield
Henry Logan Memorial AME Church , Parkersburg
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park , Harpers Ferry
Hill Top House Hotel , Harpers Ferry
Jefferson County Courthouse , Charles Town
Kelly Miller High School , Clarksburg
Maple Street Historic District , Lewisburg
Mattie V. Lee Home , Charleston
Mount Pisgah Benevolence Cemetery , Romney
Mt. Pleasant School , Gerrardstown
Mt. Tabor Baptist Church , Lewisburg
Samuel Starks House , Charleston
Second Ward Negro Elementary School , Morgantown
Simpson Memorial United Methodist Church , Charleston
Trinity Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church , Clarksburg
Union Historic District , Union
Washington Place , Romney
West Virginia Colored Children's Home , Huntington
Weston Colored School , Weston
World War Memorial , Kimball
Ballard, Allan; One More Day's Journey: The Story of a Family and a People ; New York; McGraw-Hill, 1984
Durham, Philip, and Everettt L. Jones; The Adventures of the Negro Cowboys ; New York: Bantam Books, 1969
Ferguson, Leland G.; Uncommon Ground: Archeology and Colonial African America ; Washington, D.C.; Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992
Harley, Sharon, and Rosalyn Terborg-Penn ; The Afro-American Woman: Struggles and Images ; Port Washington; Kennikat Press; 1978
Higgans, Nathan I.; Harlem Renaissance ; New York; Oxford University Press; 1971
Lyon, Elizabeth A.; Cultural and Ethnic Diversity in Historic Preservation . Information Series, no. 65; Washington D.C.; National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1992.
McFeely, William S.; Frederick Douglass ; New York; Norton, 1990.
National Register of Historic Places: African American Historic Places ; National Park Service & National Trust for Historic Preservation; The Preservation Press; Washington D.C.; 1994
Painter, Nell Irvin ; Exodusters: Black Migration to Kansas after Reconstruction ; New York; Norton; 1976
Reynolds, Gary A. and beryl Wright; Against the Odds: African American Artists and the Harmon Foundation . Newark, New Jersey; The Newark Museum, 1989
Prominent individuals
Macon Bolling Allen (lawyer, judge)
William G. Allen (college professor)
Crispus Attucks (killed during Boston Massacre )
Leonard Black (minister, slave memoirist)
John P. Coburn (abolitionist, soldier)
Ellen and William Craft (slave memoirists, abolitionists)
Rebecca Lee Crumpler (physician)
Lucy Lew Dalton (abolitionist)
Thomas Dalton (abolitionist)
Hosea Easton (abolitionist, minister)
Moses Grandy (abolitionist, slave memoirist)
Leonard Grimes (abolitionist, minister)
Primus Hall (abolitionist, Rev. War soldier)
Prince Hall (freemason, abolitionist)
Lewis Hayden (abolitionist, politician)
John T. Hilton (abolitionist, author, businessman)
Thomas James (minister)
Barzillai Lew (Rev. War soldier)
George Latimer (escaped slave)
Walker Lewis (abolitionist)
George Middleton (1735–1815) (Rev. War soldier, Freemason, activist)
Robert Morris (lawyer, abolitionist, judge)
William Cooper Nell (abolitionist, writer)
Susan Paul (teacher, abolitionist, author)
Thomas Paul (minister)
John Swett Rock (dentist, doctor, lawyer, abolitionist)
John Brown Russwurm (college grad., teacher)
John J. Smith (abolitionist, politician)
Maria W. Stewart (abolitionist, public speaker, journalist)
Baron Stow (minister)
Samuel Snowden (minister, abolitionist)
Edward G. Walker (abolitionist, lawyer, politician, son of David Walker)
David Walker (abolitionist, father of Edward G. Walker)
Phillis Wheatley (poet, author)
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