Search Results
You looked for Black History in Select a county County
Refine Search
Geographic Area
Metro Area
County
Your search returned
27
results.
Monteith Hall, operated by the Elyria Woman's Club, is the former home of ardent abolitionist Rev. John Monteith. Rev. Monteith turned his home into a station on the famed Underground Railroad. Guided tours available.
The National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center near Dayton aims to educate the public about African American history and culture from African origins to the present through a variety of programs, including museum exhibits, research and...
Visitors of all ages, races and faith backgrounds enter the Freedom Center every day. They leave moved, changed and inspired. Much more than a museum, the Freedom Center reveals stories about freedom’s heroes and challenges guests to take steps to...
The Oberlin Heritage Center includes three beautifully preserved historic buildings that tell the unique, nationally significant story of the community and college in Oberlin, Ohio from their beginning in 1833 through the next one hundred years. ...
Enjoy the lifestyles and architecture of historic Oberlin in a guided tour of three beautifully preserved buildings that tell the unique, nationally significant story of the community and college in Oberlin from their beginning in 1833 until the...
The museum is open for tours every Friday and Saturday
from 10:00 am - 4:00 pm and Sunday from 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm. For
pre-arranged tours call 937-313-2010 to place a reservation.
Although
admission fees of $6.00 per adult and $3.00 per child are...
The Putnam Underground Railroad Education (PURE) Center preserves local and national history and and serves as a testimony to the love, cooperation and faith that characterizes the history of Zanesville.
Prior to the Civil War, the New Englanders...
The Rankin House was an important stop on the Underground Railroad in southern Ohio through which many slaves escaped from the South to freedom.John Rankin was a Presbyterian minister and educator who devoted much of his life to the antislavery...
Erected in 1809, the Stone Academy was originally constructed as the legislative seat for the newly created State of Ohio. The building was the site of two conventions of the State Abolition Society and was part of the Underground Railroad.
This museum, which is located on the second floor of the Warren-Trumbull County Public Library, features the life and times of the Sutliff family -- from pioneer times of the Ohio Western Reserve through the days of the Civil War to the height of...