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The Banneker-Douglass-Tubman Museum, formerly known as the Banneker-Douglass Museum, is the state of Maryland's official museum for African American history and culture. Located at 84 Franklin Street, Annapolis , Anne Arundel County , Maryland , the museum is housed within the former Mt. Moriah African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Douglass Summer House: Douglass Summer House: February 20, 1992 : 3200 Wayman Ave. Highland Beach: Queen Anne style frame dwelling built in 1894-1895 by Major Charles Douglass, son of Frederick Douglass. 30: Elkridge Site
The reconstructed "Growlery" where Douglass worked at his writing Douglass's study. After moving to his new house, Frederick Douglass read and also wrote his books in the studio that is located in the yard of the house, one of them was his last autobiographical book, Life and Times of Frederick Douglass, first published in 1881 and reissued 10 years later. [2]
Banneker-Douglass Museum: Annapolis: Anne Arundel: Central: African American: Black life in Maryland, African and African American art, important African American Marylanders Barbara Fritchie House and Museum: Frederick: Frederick: Western: Historic house: Reconstructed house of Barbara Fritchie, heroine of John Greenleaf Whittier's poem from ...
Banneker-Douglass Museum: Annapolis: Maryland: 1984 [35] Benjamin Banneker Historical Park and Museum: Oella: Maryland: 1998 [36] Beck Cultural Exchange Center: Knoxville, Tennessee: Tennessee: 1975 [37] Bertha Lee Strickland Cultural Museum Seneca: South Carolina: 2015 [38] Birmingham Civil Rights Institute: Birmingham: Alabama: 1992 [39]
A piece of American history is changing hands in Washington, D.C.’s Dupont Circle neighborhood.The 1875 town house where civil rights pioneer Frederick Douglass married his second wife, Helen ...
Highland Beach is a town in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States.Per the 2020 census, the population was 118. [3] The town was founded late in the 19th century by affluent African Americans from Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, looking for a summer retreat on the Chesapeake Bay.
Frederick Douglass is a public artwork in front of the Hornbake Library at the University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland. The statue memorializes African-American abolitionist, suffragist, and labor leader Frederick Douglass. [1]