Civil Rights Walking Tour in Wooster Sheds Light on African American History

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Civil Rights Walking Tour in Wooster Sheds Light on African American History
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A new self-guided walking tour in Wooster, Ohio, highlights the city's African American history, showcasing significant sites and events from the Civil Rights era. Visitors can follow the mile-long route through historic downtown, visiting locations where abolitionist Frederick Douglass spoke and the United Methodist Church, a former meeting place for the Wayne County Anti-Slavery Society. The tour also explores a former bus station vital to African American migrants in the 1930s and the history of First Baptist Church, which faced segregation but later gave rise to a thriving congregation now known as Second Baptist Church. The tour aims to shed light on often-overlooked stories and celebrate the contributions of African Americans who shaped Wooster's past.

A self-guided walking tour in Wooster is shedding light on the city’s African American history, showing how the past is woven into the fabric.The Civil Rights walking tour in Wooster , created last year, offers visitors a chance to stand where history was made. The mile-long route through historic downtown highlights significant sites and events, including speeches by abolitionist Frederick Douglass.

”One tour stop highlights a former bus station that played a critical role in the lives of African Americans in Wooster during the 1930s. While today the area is mostly parking lots, it once served as a vital hub where many started their new lives up north.The tour also stops at First Baptist Church, identified by its white steeple. It was a place of worship for African Americans seeking jobs after slavery was abolished.

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