Inside Story
The National Park Service celebrates African American Heritage throughout the year. Visit a multitude of park sites dedicated to African American history and culture. View Museum exhibits, go on a travel itinerary, or read indepth histories and interviews of famous African Americans and how they shaped the United States.
Features of People, Places & Stories
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When Rice Was King
Investigate early rice plantations in Georgetown, South Carolina, and the untold slave culture story.
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Life in the Land of Lincoln
Summer interns discover history firsthand in a national park.
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A slave's journal with Lewis and Clark
Clark's letters, and other accounts provide a sketch of the man and his importance to the Corps of Discovery.
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We Shall Overcome
Visit the 49 places listed in the National Register for their association with the modern civil rights movement, as well as the Selma-to-Montgomery March route--a Department of Transportation designated "All-American Road" and a National Park Service designated National Historic Trail.
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Features of Museum Collections, Travel & Lesson Plans
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Park Collections Exhibits
Possessions of Frederick Douglass offer unique insights into the man called the father of the civil rights movement, whose determination, brilliance, and eloquence shaped the nation.
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Lesson Plans
Teaching with Historic Places: The Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March: Shaking the Conscience of a Nations.
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African Burial Ground
Lost to history, a burial ground for free and enslaved Africans was discovered in Lower Manhattan in 1991 as a consequence of the planned construction of a federal office building.
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The Robinson House
National Park Service archeology reveals the portrait of African American Heritage at the First Battle of Manassas in 1861
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