The center, housed within the former PS 103, which Justice Thurgood Marshall attended as a child, serves as a gathering space and educational hub with free legal help and free training in the fields of artificial intelligence, medicine and more.
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This marker commemorates Morgan Park, the only community specifically built for the faculty of a Historically Black College and University that still stands.
This marker is on the site of one of the few surviving African-American sandlot baseball fields. Created in 1910, it was home to Oaksville Eagles, a community baseball club that toured playing against Negro League teams before desegregation.
The oldest standing one-room schoolhouse for African-American students in Calvert County in grades one through seven in the Wallville community. The schoolhouse was built in the early 1880s (possibly as early as 1869) and remained in use until 1934.
This marker is located within the oldest cemetery for African Americans in Baltimore and describes its history. Numerous civil rights leaders are buried there including Lillie Carroll Jackson, Dr. N. Louise Young, John Henry Murphy and many others.
This marker details the heyday of the Pennsylvania Avenue District, with the Royal Theatre as its crown jewel. The world-renowned entertainment district, with performances from Billie Holiday and others, was part of the Chitlin' Circuit.
This monument is a memorial dedicated to one of the most important civil rights leaders in American history and our nation's first African-American Supreme Court Justice.
This marker is on the Pennsylvania Avenue Heritage Trail and explores the ways in which the surrounding West Baltimore neighborhood helped shape some of America’s greatest Black writers, artists and performers.
This plaque is affixed to the exterior of 1632 Division Street. It provides information on the house's history as the childhood home of Justice Thurgood Marshall and details Justice Marshall's important role in the Civil Rights Movement.
This marker traces the long struggle for equality in housing and other areas that historically defined the Black experience in Baltimore. It details new housing opportunities gained in the 1960s on both sides of the Gwynns Falls.