You’ve seen the African American Civil War Memorial situated right outside the 10th Street NW exit of the U Street Metro stop, but have you been to the museum? The African American Civil War Memorial Museum easily one of DC’s most hidden treasures.
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You’ve seen the African American Civil War Memorial situated right outside the 10th Street NW exit of the U Street Metro stop, but have you been to the museum? The African American Civil War Memorial Museum easily one of DC’s most hidden treasures.
Hari Jones spoke about the Battle of Gettysburg, which took place 150 years ago on July 1-3, 1863. It is considered the bloodiest battle ever on U.S. soil.
The Kalorama Citizens Association on March 14, 2013, approved an acclamation of Resolution of Appreciation to you, the African American Civil War Memorial Museum, and the re-enactors who have played such an important role in our Walter Pierce Park Archaeology Project events over the past several years.
Morehouse College will bestow the Presidential Renaissance Medallion award to Dr. Frank Smith on February 14, 2013. The award is the highest honor awarded by the president of Morehouse College
Back in 1962, Frank Smith Jr. left Morehouse College in Atlanta and went to Mississippi as a civil rights activist with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. In Holly Springs, he met a man who turned out to be the descendant of an African American Civil War veteran.
The ribbon cutting is scheduled for Monday, July 18, but museum organizers have put together an entire weekend of events to mark the opening of the new location.
In 1862, Abraham Lincoln went to visit Camp Barker, a contraband camp just south of U Street NW where freed and escaped slaves found sanctuary.
Nearly 150 years later, a photograph of camp residents — the slaves themselves were considered contraband of war — hangs in a museum in that same neighborhood.