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History comes alive on the African-American Heritage Trail! Tours enlighten Mobile's culturally diverse heritage by linking historic contributions and events with significant locations. Forgotten chapters of history are remembered through the stories of courage and contributions from Mobiles ethnically diverse past.
The African-American Heritage Trails primary objective is to share Mobile's multicultural legacy through disclosure of the following:
1) the early Creoles de Color; 2) African survivors from the Clotilda, the last slave ship to enter the US in 1860); 3) newly freed blacks who worshipped and built some of the oldest churches in Alabama; 4) African-Americans who settled in an area named ironically for Jefferson Davis Davis Avenue, and later renamed Dr. Martin Luther King Ave; and 5) the Civil Rights advocates integral to the desegregation of the citys schools, workforce, and public offices.
Through the African American Heritage Trail experience, participants will develop a taste for the rich gumbo of history as revealed by Mobile's past.
Our Sincerest Thanks to:
Organizer
City Councilman William Carroll, District 2
Historic Markers funded by:
Hon. Samuel L. Jones, Mayor
Councilman William Carroll, District 2
Councilman Fredrick Richardson, Jr., District 1
Historic Markers and Tours funded by:
County Commissioner Merceria Ludgood
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Special Recognitions:
University of South Alabama College of Education,
Department of Instructional Design and Development
Mobile County School Board
Southern Poverty Law Center
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Archival Photographs courtesy of
The University of South Alabama Archives
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African American Heritage Trail Committee
Devereaux Bemis
Chandra Brown Sheila Flanagan
Sandra Franks Dr. Kern Jackson
Marcia Robinson
Dora Franklin Finley, Chairperson
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