Peek into 1870s St. Augustine with this article, which is part fiction / part travel guide.
Now a Civil Rights Museum, this building was originally a dentist's office.
Commemorates the night of June 9, 1964.
This African-American owned bookstore focuses on the literature of the African diaspora.
African slave, Haitian revolutionary, Spanish general, and Florida's only black caudillo. When Jorge Biassou arrived in St. Augustine in 1796, he was already a legend in his own time.
Center of defense and heritage.
Writer, abolitionist, and political leader.
The National Parks Service's official guide to Fort Matanzas National Monument.
The original destination of the Underground Railroad.
Leader of the St. Augustine Civil Rights Movement.
Anthropologist, author, preserver of memories.
Orator, Reverend, and iconic Civil Rights activist.
Historic District founded by freed people in 1866.
First Public school for Black students in the city.
Leader of the fort and town of Mose.
1915 Motor Age Magazine article about St. Augustine's history.
A 1925 article about the history of the Castillo de San Marcos
Founded in 1873.
What was the Stono Rebellion? Discover a South Carolina Freedom Struggle
Local WWII patriot and Civil Rights activist.
Site of student-led sit-in protests.
Enslaved woman who lived during the Second Spanish Period.
Built in 1798, revived in 1939.