Hancock-Clarke House
Revolutionary Legends Converge This home was built for John Hancock’s grandfather, who served as the pastor for the town of Lexington for fifty-five...
Newtown Cemetery
African Americans established the community of Newtown in this area after the Civil War. In 1869 five trustees purchased land here for a cemetery open...
Colonization, African School & Happy Hill
After the Civil War, African Americans built a school and free community on farmland held by the Salem Moravian Congregation where enslaved people had...
Corling's Corner
At this highly visible downtown intersection known as Corling's Corner, local manufacturers, railroad companies, building contractors, and private...
Clara Barton Missing Soldiers Office Museum
After working on battlefields and in hospitals of the Civil War, Clara Barton found a new calling in the early months of 1865. She became keenly aware...
James F. Lipscomb
James F. Lipscomb was born a free black on 4 December 1830 in Cumberland County. He served in the House of Delegates between 1869 and 1877, one of 87...