2.5 hours
Zion Senior Center
Free Tickets Available
Sat, 31 May, 2025 at 05:00 pm to 07:30 pm (GMT-06:00)
Zion Senior Center
5151 East 33rd Avenue, Denver, United States
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https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82473845315?pwd=zdbadb3Zikbp4KmEvgAJTi0uyIXIOM.1
Meeting ID: 824 7384 5315
Passcode: 114751
The Wilmington insurrection of 1898, also known as the Wilmington massacre of 1898 or the Wilmington coup of 1898,[6] was a municipal-level and a massacre that was carried out by white supremacists in Wilmington, North Carolina, United States, on Thursday, November 10, 1898.[7] The white press in Wilmington originally described the event as a race riot perpetrated by a mob of black people. In later study, the event has been characterized as a violent overthrow of a duly elected government by white supremacists.[8][9]
The state's white Southern Democrats conspired to lead a mob of 2,000 white men to overthrow the legitimately elected Fusionist biracial government in Wilmington. They expelled opposition black and white political leaders from the city, destroyed the property and businesses of black citizens built up since the American Civil War, including the only black newspaper in the city. They killed at least 14 Black people;[1] estimates of the actual toll run from 60 to more than 300.[2][3][4][5] Many leaders of the coup remained important figures in North Carolina politics, some into the 1920s.
The Wilmington coup is considered a turning point in post-Reconstruction North Carolina politics. It was part of an era of more severe racial segregation and effective disenfranchisement of African Americans throughout the South, which had been underway since the passage of a new constitution in Mississippi in 1890 that raised barriers to the registration of black voters. Other states soon passed similar laws. Historian Laura Edwards writes, "What happened in Wilmington became an affirmation of white supremacy not just in that one city, but in the South and in the nation as a whole", as it affirmed that invoking "whiteness" eclipsed the legal citizenship, individual rights, and equal protection under the law that black Americans were guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment.[10][11][12] SOURCE: Wikepedia
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Tickets for African American History cannot be Hidden (FOREVER)! can be booked here.
Ticket type | Ticket price |
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General Admission | Free |
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