Welcome to The Safe House Black History Museum
The Safe House Black Historic Museum in Greensboro, Alabama is a site of great significance to the Black history and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s. The museum occupies a house used to conceal Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. during his organization of peaceful resistance protests of segregation in Alabama during the 1960’s.
The museum, founded by Mrs. Theresa Burroughs, a Civil Rights foot soldier who worked with Dr. King, is open by appointment and available for individuals, groups, and school field trips. It contains many artifacts of the struggle from slavery to equality, as well as unpublished local and state photos of the Movement.
The Safe House Museum is located at 2401 Davis St. in Greensboro, Alabama.
- Lessons In Civil Rights (coming soon)
Contact the Safe House Museum
phone: 334.624.2030
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| (photo taken by Robert Laramie, http://www.rjlphoto.com/RJLPhoto/Welcome.html) |
| (photo taken by Theresa Burroughs of Dr. King arriving in Greensboro, Alabama) |
...and here is the location of the safe house:
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