Remember Fort Pillow
The massacre of Black soldiers, their white comrades and civilians here on April 12, 1864, still echoes with tragedy and grief on the road to freedom.
A Town Divided
Between 1862 and 1863, African Americans sought and defended their freedom as opposing forces and neighbors fought to control Elizabeth City.
Slave Markets, Colored Troops, Freedman’s Bank and Exodusters
Today’s cityscape obscures the history that happened at this intersection between the 1830s and 1880s, but some clues remain in the historical markers...
Abraham Wooten Monument & Mount Zion Primitive Baptist Church
This historic building and monument testify to the freedom and resiliency of the African American’s who erected them more than a century ago and...
Abraham Lincoln/ Stephen Douglas Debate Site (1st Debate)
Site of the first of seven Lincoln-Douglas senatorial debates on August 21, 1858. These debates are known for discussing the issue of slavery and...
E.D. White Historic Site
Thibodaux, Louisiana | The site was the residence of two of Louisiana’s foremost political figures: Edward Douglas White and his son, Edward Douglass...