Old Town Hall Museum/ Enfield Historical Society
Beginning service in 1775, the Old Town Hall served as the third meeting house for the First Ecclesiastical Society. After the start of the Revolution...
Stagville Plantation and Horton Grove
From the late 18th to the mid-20th centuries, Durham’s Stagville plantation was owned by the Bennehan and Cameron families, who enslaved over 900...
Franklin Pierce Homestead
Built by his father in 1804, Franklin Pierce lived in the Homestead from his infancy to his marriage in 1834. Pierce would go on to become the 14th...
Lincoln's New Salem State Historic Site
This site is a reconstruction of where Abraham Lincoln lived in his early adulthood, where he split rails, enlisted in the Black Hawk War, and was...
St. Stephen AME Church
St. Stephen African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church has deep roots in Wilmington’s enslaved and free African American community.
Wheeler School
During the summers of 1886 and 1887, W.E.B. Du Bois taught 30 African American students in rural Wilson County during the Reconstruction period...