With the global pandemic nearing its one-year anniversary, the National Park Service has temporarily closed its historical sites. But, here are five of our favorites that celebrate Black History.
TheHarriet Tubman Houseis located in Auburn and Fleming, New York, and includes three properties. One of those is dedicated to indigent and elderly African Americans and represents the lifelong dream of Tubman to build a home for the aged. The former conductor of the Underground Railroad moved into the home in 1911 and remained there until she died in 1913.
Monroe Elementary
School in Topeka, Kansas is
a symbol of the hard fought battle
to end segregated schools. Monroe was one of the schools attended by African
American students in Topeka when the Rev. Oliver Brown took his seven-year-old
daughter, Linda, to one of the all-white schools for enrollment. They were
turned away, but Brown and a group of courageous parents challenged the school
district’s all-white policy to the Supreme Court where in 1954, the Justices
declared in Brown
v. Board of Education that “separate
but equal” facilities are inherently unconstitutional ending racial
segregation in public schools.
The George
Washington Carver National Monument was the first memorial dedicated
to an African American and non-president. The historical site covers the boyhood home
of Carver who, along with his older brother, was raised by Moses and Susan
Carver after slavery was abolished. Carver enjoyed learning and attended a
school for Black students 10 miles from his home. He later moved to Fort Scott,
Kansas, to attend school and completed his education at universities throughout
the Midwest. In 1896 Booker T. Washington invited Carver to
Tuskegee to head the Agriculture Department which he did for 47 years. During
that time, Carver established a research laboratory and is credited with
creating new techniques to replenish soil and developing his many uses for the
peanut.
National Museum of
African American History and Cuture is considered by many as the crown jewel of the
Smithsonian’s collection of museums and research centers Located on the
National Mall, NMAAHC opened in 2016 while
President Barack Obama was still in office.The museum houses an astonishing
array of photographs, documents, and memorabilia curated to tell the story of
Black Americans.
.
Martin Luther King,
Jr. Memorial covers four
acres in West Potomac Park next to the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The
Stone of Hope, a granite statue of King carved by sculptor Lei Yixin, is the
centerpiece of the memorial. The memorial honoring
the Civil Rights icon’s legacy was dedicated on August 28, 2011 which was the
48th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. However, the
ceremony was postponed until October due to Hurricane Irene.