Oatlands
By the eve of the Civil War, 133 men, women, and children were enslaved at Oatlands. Their labor sustained the farm, enabled owner Elizabeth O. Carter...
Woodlawn Methodist Church
African Americans in Woodlawn, four miles southwest of here, established Woodlawn Methodist Episcopal Church ca. 1866.
Fort St. Joseph Museum
The Fort St. Joseph Museum highlights Michigan's storied history specifically as a fur trading hub for the French, British, and American settlers.
Jerusalem Baptist Church
Jerusalem Baptist Church was organized as Mt. Joy Baptist Church in 1867 at the nearby home of Mondoza Bailey, community leader and carpenter. Amelia...
Old Exchange and Provosts Dungeon
The "Old Exchange" was a symbol of the importance of Charleston as a harbor in the Southern Colonies prior to the revolution, and it maintained its...
Promise Land
After the Civil War, free people established Promise Land, the first African American community of Dickson County.