antislavery

January 2025

MLK Day: Museum Open in Honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

By |2025-01-12T00:03:13-05:00January 9th, 2025|

January 20 @ 12:00 pm 4:00 pm

In honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the museum at the David Ruggles Center will be open Monday, January 20, 12-4 PM. Visitors can learn about Black Americans, many formerly enslaved, who lived in Florence and Northampton in the 1840s and 1850s and fought against the institution of slavery and racial injustice. This history highlights not only antislavery icons like Sojourner Truth and David Ruggles, but also the lives of ordinary local heroes like Basil Dorsey and Stephen Rush who had escaped enslavement and continued the quest for equality in Florence. Through these stories, visitors can learn about and reflect upon the Underground Railroad, Frederick Douglass, as well as Florence’s 1840s abolitionist utopian community, William Lloyd Garrison, and the 19th century quest to end slavery and racial injustice in the USA, a century before the 20th Century Civil Rights Movement emerged. Docents will be on hand. Refreshments will be provided. All are welcome!

David Ruggles Center

225 Nonotuck St.
Florence, MA 01062 United States
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June 2024

Juneteenth Open House 12-4 PM

By |2024-06-03T13:23:58-04:00June 3rd, 2024|

June 19, 2024 @ 12:00 pm 4:00 pm

In honor of the Juneteenth holiday, the David Ruggles Center will be hosting an Open House on Wednesday, June 19 from 12-4. Come learn the stories of the Black men and women in 1840s and 1850s Florence who fought to end slavery and racism including: David Ruggles, a fierce fighter for racial justice and an architect of what came to be known as the Underground Railroad, helping over 500 people escape enslavement including Frederick Douglass, and who lived the final years of his short but heroic life in Florence ; Sojourner Truth who during her 14 years in Florence launched her career as an iconic lecturer on antislavery, women’s rights, and after emancipation, the rights of the freed people; Stephen Rush, one of the several self-emancipated formerly enslaved who sought freedom and respite at the utopian community of abolitionists, the Northampton Association; and Basil Dorsey, who also escaped enslavement and ultimately settled and stayed in Florence with his family. For more information, please contact info@davidrugglescenter.org.

David Ruggles Center

225 Nonotuck St.
Florence, MA 01062 United States
+ Google Map
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