Green-Wood and Weeksville Heritage Center Celebrate Black History Month with a History-Rich Trolley Tour Across Brooklyn

Join Green-Wood and Weeksville Heritage Center as they celebrate and recognize their shared history on a special Black History Month trolley tour. Green-Wood and Weeksville Heritage Center will take tour-goers on a journey of their common past, highlighting many prominent black New Yorkers and abolitionists.

Beginning with a trolley ride through Green-Wood, attendees will visit the graves of several influential New Yorkers, including Margaret Pine (1778-1857), the last woman to have lived as a slave in New York; Susan Smith McKinney Steward (1847-1918), whose family owned land in Weeksville and who became first black female doctor in the state; James Weldon Johnson (1871–1938), a lawyer and diplomat famous for penning the popular hymn “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing”; and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1959-1988), one of the most accomplished artists of his generation; among many others. We will also visit Green-Wood’s “Colored Lots,” where new research has unearthed a fascinating story.

Following the tour of Green-Wood, the trolley will head to Weeksville Heritage Center in Crown Heights, now Brooklyn’s largest African-American cultural institution, to see the new permanent exhibition Weeksville, Transforming Community/ In Pursuit of Freedom and the 19th-century Hunterfly Road houses. A box lunch will be provided and visitors will dine in the new and beautiful main room of the Weeksville Heritage Center. The trolley will then return to Green-Wood.

Reservations are required. To make an online reservation  or to find out more information, visit www.green-wood.com/toursevents or call 718-210-3080.

NOTE:  Please email [email protected] with any food allergies.











When: Sat., Feb. 25, 2017 at 11:00 am - 3:00 pm
Where: Green-Wood Cemetery
500 25th St., Brooklyn
718-210-3080
Price: $40; $35
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Join Green-Wood and Weeksville Heritage Center as they celebrate and recognize their shared history on a special Black History Month trolley tour. Green-Wood and Weeksville Heritage Center will take tour-goers on a journey of their common past, highlighting many prominent black New Yorkers and abolitionists.

Beginning with a trolley ride through Green-Wood, attendees will visit the graves of several influential New Yorkers, including Margaret Pine (1778-1857), the last woman to have lived as a slave in New York; Susan Smith McKinney Steward (1847-1918), whose family owned land in Weeksville and who became first black female doctor in the state; James Weldon Johnson (1871–1938), a lawyer and diplomat famous for penning the popular hymn “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing”; and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1959-1988), one of the most accomplished artists of his generation; among many others. We will also visit Green-Wood’s “Colored Lots,” where new research has unearthed a fascinating story.

Following the tour of Green-Wood, the trolley will head to Weeksville Heritage Center in Crown Heights, now Brooklyn’s largest African-American cultural institution, to see the new permanent exhibition Weeksville, Transforming Community/ In Pursuit of Freedom and the 19th-century Hunterfly Road houses. A box lunch will be provided and visitors will dine in the new and beautiful main room of the Weeksville Heritage Center. The trolley will then return to Green-Wood.

Reservations are required. To make an online reservation  or to find out more information, visit www.green-wood.com/toursevents or call 718-210-3080.

NOTE:  Please email [email protected] with any food allergies.

Buy tickets/get more info now