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Date/Time
Date(s) - 10/26/2024
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Location
Sheraton Pentagon City

Categories


The Arlington Historical Society and its Memorializing the Enslaved of Arlington project in partnership with the Black Heritage Museum of Arlington and WalkArlington are hosting a walking tour highlighting the lives of free Blacks who had farms on the eastern end of Columbia Pike.

In this afternoon walk near Columbia Pike, Craig Syphax, board member and former president of The Black Heritage Museum of Arlington, and Jessica Kaplan, board member of the Arlington Historical Society, will share the stories of free and enslaved Black people who were part of this neighborhood in the 19th century. As we pass by places where they once lived and worked, we’ll learn about their lives, their struggles, and their great resilience, courage, and strength in the face of adversity.

In November, several sites on the Routes of Resilience walk will be dedicated with bronze markers emblazoned with the names of the people we will learn about. The markers will be placed as part of the Memorializing the Enslaved in Arlington project, an effort to commemorate the lives of the County’s enslaved population. The first markers in this project were dedicated at the oldest house in Arlington, the Ball-Sellers House, in fall 2023.

Need To Know
We’ll meet on the sidewalk in front of the Sheraton Pentagon City Hotel before heading toward Freedman’s Village Bridge. Our group will have a sandwich board sign with the name of the walk.

After the walk, we’ll head down The Pike to The Black Heritage Museum of Arlington for a reception and an opportunity to view the museum’s exhibits.

Reserve your spot here: Routes of Resilience: From Enslavement to Freedom Along The Pike Tickets, Sat, Oct 26, 2024 at 2:00 PM | Eventbrite