Results for L
Old Lincoln High School
The academic body that became Lincoln Academy was first or...
Historic Capitol Museum & Florida Legislative Research Center
Highlighting the history of Florida politics and encouragi...
Old City Cemetery
The present boundaries of the Old City Cemetery were estab...
John G. Riley House
The John G. Riley house represents the thriving black neig...
Fred Douglas Lee Statue
Fred Douglas Lee was the first black policeman in Tallahas...
Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
Established in 1887 as the Florida State Normal College fo...
Florida State Archives
In addition to on site research, the Florida State Archive...
Carnegie Library/Black Archives Research Center & Museum
The Carnegie Library was completed in 1907 and is the olde...
Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
The Rev. C. K. Steele, pastor of Bethel Missionary Baptist...
Howard Academy High School
In 1936, African American students in grades one through t...
Results for L
Old Lincoln High School
The academic body that became Lincoln Academy was first organized in 1869. The first building at Lafayette and Copeland burned, and a new structure was built at Copeland and Park Avenue.
In 1906, lincoln Academy moved into a frame building ...
Historic Capitol Museum & Florida Legislative Research Center
Highlighting the history of Florida politics and encouraging citizen involvement in the political process, exhibits examine the struggle for civil rights in Florida with displays about Martin Luther King, Jr., the Tallahassee bus boycott and civil rights activist Harry T. ...
Old City Cemetery
The present boundaries of the Old City Cemetery were established by the Florida Territorial Council in 1829. Many pioneers and their slaves are buried here, although some early Tallahasseans were buried several hundred feet east of this site.
As Tallahassee's ...
John G. Riley House
The John G. Riley house represents the thriving black neighborhood that once existed in what is now the downtown area of Tallahassee. John Gilmore Riley was a black educator and civic leader in Tallahassee in the late 19th and early ...
Fred Douglas Lee Statue
Fred Douglas Lee was the first black policeman in Tallahassee assigned to a regular beat. He was recruited by civil rights activist Rev. C. K. Steele, Sr., and others, to break the color barrier that existed in law enforcement prior ...
Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
Established in 1887 as the Florida State Normal College for Colored Students, FAMU is the oldest historically black public university in Florida. The first president, Thomas DeSaille Tucker, and his assistant, Thomas Van Rennasaler, guided the school's beginning including its ...
Florida State Archives
In addition to on site research, the Florida State Archives offers web-based access to an extensive collection of original documents, photographs, and other materials for historical research on state history through the Florida Memory Project at: www.floridamemory.com.
Information provided by ...
Carnegie Library/Black Archives Research Center & Museum
The Carnegie Library was completed in 1907 and is the oldest standing building on the Florida A&M University campus.
Its mission is to collect, preserve, display and disseminate information about African Americans and people of African descent worldwide, especially the ...
Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
The Rev. C. K. Steele, pastor of Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, was one of Tallahassee's most notable civil rights activists. Many meetings associated with the Tallahassee bus boycott were held in this church, which made it a target of Ku ...
Howard Academy High School
In 1936, African American students in grades one through twelve consolidated in this public school building from the Masonic Lodge, Bethel AME Church and Miss Lenora Mills' store. Constructed in 1940, the second building became the high school and the ...