On Bethabara Rd., on the right when traveling north. Reported missing.
A Federal House later modified in the Greek-Revival style. Research currently being conducted to prepare building as an exhibition of Historical Restorations. — — Map (db m162108) HM
On Cameron Avenue, 0.1 miles north of East 12th Street, on the right when traveling north.
Named for prominent local African-American education pioneer, Dr. Simon Green Atkins, Atkins High School was designed by Harold Macklin in the Classical Revival style and constructed 1930-1931. Atkins was the first school in Winston-Salem built as a . . . — — Map (db m83275) HM
On Bethania Station Road at Bethabara Road, on the right when traveling south on Bethania Station Road.
The most heavily traveled in Colonial America passed near here, linking areas from The Great Lakes to Augusta, GA. Laid out on animal and Native American Trading & Warrior Paths. Indian treaties aming NY, PA, VA and the Iroquois League of Five . . . — — Map (db m52540) HM
On Cemetary Street, on the left when traveling east.
Organized in Salem, NC, March 1862, with members from local Moravian congregations. This volunteer Confederate band provided morale-building music for southern troops in many of the major campaigns during the War Between the States. The band was . . . — — Map (db m52153) HM
On Peters Creek Pkwy. just south of Park Circle SW, on the right when traveling north.
The neighborhood formerly located on the site of the baseball stadium was a noteworthy African-American area. It was established on land originally owned by Nathaniel T. Watkins, a local merchant. By the early 1900s, the area functioned as part of . . . — — Map (db m52152) HM
On Patterson Avenue, 0.1 miles south of Northwest Boulevard, on the right when traveling north.
Benjamin F. Huntley established the B.F. Huntley Furniture Co. and began manufacturing furniture on this site in 1906. A small building on this corner housed the office, and the factory extended north and east. An active Baptist, Mr. Huntley donated . . . — — Map (db m140219) HM
On 3rd Street East at Research Parkway, on the right when traveling east on 3rd Street East.
The Belews Street neighborhood developed ca. 1900 and largely stood where present-day U.S. 52 and Business 40 intersect. By the early 1940s, the mixed-race neighborhood became one of predominantly working-class African-Americans, many of whom were . . . — — Map (db m98778) HM
On Thurmond Street at West 14th Street, on the right when traveling south on Thurmond Street.
In 1893, Boston Cottage Co. sold the first lots here,
just north of the Winston city limits and west of Old
Town Road. Builders constructed small rental houses
for African Americans, many of whom worked in
tobacco factories. Except for 40 sold . . . — — Map (db m239164) HM
On Brookstown Avenue just west of Old Salem Road, on the left when traveling west.
On January 6, 1766, a dozen brethren came from nearby Bethabara and Bethania to the site chosen for the new Moravian town of Salem. That afternoon they felled trees to build a one-story log structure, known as the "Builders' House," for shelter . . . — — Map (db m172153) HM
On Brookstown Avenue just west of Old Salem Road, on the left when traveling west.
As part of the 250th anniversary of Salem celebration, Old Salem Museums & Gardens collaborated with Norman Coates and Jack Miller of the UNC School of the Arts to create this lighting project on the site of the Builders' House, the first building . . . — — Map (db m172154) HM
On West Northwest Boulevard north of Hawthorne Road NW, on the right when traveling north.
Calvin Henderson Wiley (1819-1887) was a lawyer, author, legislator, minister, and champion of public education. Wiley became North Carolina's first Superintendent of Common Schools in 1853 and remained in that position until 1865. In 1869, he moved . . . — — Map (db m98784) HM
On Carver School Road at Branch Drive, on the right when traveling north on Carver School Road.
Since 1936, Carver High School has been a source of pride, accomplishment and enthusiasm for Winston-Salem and Forsyth County. It was the first high school to serve African-American students outside the Winston-Salem city limits, who otherwise would . . . — — Map (db m52750) HM
Completed in 1926, City Hall has been the seat of Winston-Salem's government since its construction. An integral part of Winston-Salem's downtown streetscape, City Hall was designed by the local architectural firm of Northup and O'Brien. City Hall . . . — — Map (db m51721) HM
On Moravia Street at Burgandy Street, on the right when traveling west on Moravia Street.
A significant feature of the Bellview neighborhood, the Colored Baptist Orphanage Home opened in 1905 and was the only African-American orphanage in North Carolina. About 1919, the organization moved from a nearby farm house to a new building on . . . — — Map (db m63744) HM
Near Bethabara Road, on the left when traveling west.
The only known well-documented Colonial Community Garden and the earliest known well-documented Colonial Medical Garden in the United States. — — Map (db m53102) HM
Near 1st Street W west of Liberty Street, on the right when traveling west.
First Street marks the former boundary of Salem and Winston. Salem was founded in 1766 as the central congregational town for the Moravian Church in North Carolina. In 1849, when Forsyth County was formed, the Moravian Church sold 50¼ acres . . . — — Map (db m98796) HM
On Reynolda Road at West End Blvd, on the left when traveling south on Reynolda Road.
In Memory of Trail Maker
Hunter and Pioneer
DANIEL BOONE
Who Hunted Fished and Fought
in the Streams and Forests of
this and Adjoining Counties During
the Middle of the 18th Century
---
This Monument is erected by the . . . — — Map (db m53726) HM
On Waughtown Street just south of Glenndale Street, on the right when traveling south.
Daniel Boone lived 18 miles S.W.
His Parents are buried 13 miles S.W.
--.--
Here Passes the Trace of the
Old Plank Road, The Fayetteville
and Western, Chartered 1848
--.--
This Memorail Erected by the Boone Trail Highway . . . — — Map (db m98651) HM
On South Church Street south of East Bank Street, on the right when traveling north.
An enslaved African American named David (also known as Davy) lived in a house built here on Lot 7 in 1835. David was purchased by the Wachovia Administration in 1805, eventually becoming the servant of the Administrator, Rev. Ludwig von . . . — — Map (db m172141) HM
On Patterson Avenue, 0.1 miles south of Seventh Street, on the right when traveling north.
When built in 1887, the Depot Street Graded School was the largest and most important public school for African-Americans in North Carolina. Education pioneer, Dr. Simon Green Atkins, came to Winston as principal of the school in 1890. Under Atkins' . . . — — Map (db m63688) HM
On Trade Street at West 6th Street, on the right on Trade Street.
The Downtown North Historic District is an area of commercial buildings that developed during the early part of the 20th century. Located north of Winston-Salem's central business district, the district served as the working person's downtown, where . . . — — Map (db m51973) HM
Near 4th Street East at North Dunleith Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
spoke here at Goler Metropolitan A.M.E. Zion Church on Monday Apr. 13, 1964 for the Voter Registration Project of Winston-Salem — — Map (db m239243) HM
On Marshall Street North, 0.1 miles south of West 4th Street, on the right when traveling south.
The work of this prolific Winston-Salem sculptor is exhibited in international galleries. During her career, Earline Health King completed 345 private commissions and public art works including statues of Bowman Gray, Dr. Simon Green Atkins and a . . . — — Map (db m172164) HM
On North Cleveland Avenue at 7th Street, on the left when traveling north on North Cleveland Avenue.
In April of 1953, three African—American physicians and their wives, Dr. H. Darius and Laney Malloy, Dr. H. Rembert and Elaine Malloy, and Dr. J. Charles and Beatrice Jordan offered to the city a site for the new African-American branch . . . — — Map (db m98989) HM
On Woodcote Street SE at Clemmonsville Circle, in the median on Woodcote Street SE.
Easton is a post-World War II subdivision built in 1949 to ease Winston-Salem's housing shortage. The GI Bill of 1944, which guaranteed low-interest home loans for veterans, promoted the construction of houses in new subdivisions and on vacant lots . . . — — Map (db m100413) HM
Near South Church Street just north of Race Street, on the left when traveling south.
In the opening year of the Civil War, the church behind you (now St. Philips Moravian) was constructed for enslaved and free black Moravians. Its cornerstone was laid on August 24, 1861, and it was consecrated on December 15. It replaced an . . . — — Map (db m172121) HM
On North Chestnut Street just north of East 6th Street, on the right when traveling north.
The Rev. George Washington Holland organized First Baptist Church, the first African-American Baptist church in Winston. On July 23, 1879, the congregation purchased the property on this corner from the United Brethren of Salem, dedicating a wooden . . . — — Map (db m172158) HM
On West 4th Street, 0.1 miles east of NW Liberty Street, on the left when traveling east.
On February 8, 1960, Carl Wesley Matthews began the city's sit-in demonstration alone at lunch counters near this site and was soon joined by students from Winston-Salem Teachers College, Atkins High School, and Wake Forest College. The nonviolent . . . — — Map (db m16905) HM
The original frontier settlement of the 15 single brothers who arrived from Bethlehem, PA on November 17, 1753
They travelled on the nearby Great Philadelphia Wagon Road. — — Map (db m53103) HM
On Silas Creek Parkway (State Highway 67) at Wake Forest Road on Silas Creek Parkway.
Five Row was community of African-American farmworkers and their families who worked at Reynolda, the estate of Katharine and R.J. Reynolds. First occupied in 1916, it began as two rows of five cottages and gardens that fronted an unpaved road along . . . — — Map (db m99309) HM
On Marshall Street North, 0.1 miles south of West 4th Street, on the right when traveling south.
She used theatre to break area racial barriers. Flonnie Anderson formed the Community Players Guild (1952), the first Black community theatre troupe in the South. Later she expanded it to Flonnie Anderson Theatrical Association . . . — — Map (db m172160) HM
On 14th Street at Cameron Avenue, on the right when traveling east on 14th Street.
In 1922, the 14th Street School was built on this corner as a Colored Graded School. The four-story, Classical Revival style facility was located in the prominent African-American E. 14th Street neighborhood, and was soon expanded with a . . . — — Map (db m140223) HM
On West Academy Street west of South Main Street, on the right when traveling west.
This garden presents a design inspired by early kitchen garden at Bethabara, the first Moravian town in Wachovia. In 1759, Moravian surveyor Philip Christian Gottlieb Reuter recorded Der Up-Land Gartten, or the Upland Garden (see image . . . — — Map (db m172056) HM
On Bethabara Rd., on the left when traveling north.
The only German Colonial Church with attached living quarters remaining in the United States. Moravian Wachovia tract leader Frederic Marshall designed building. — — Map (db m162109) HM
On Dellabrook Road, on the right when traveling east.
This was the home and brickyard of the nationally-known brickmaker George H. Black from 1934 until his death in 1980 at the age of 101. Black, the son of former slaves, came Winston-Salem as a child. He worked for the Hedgecock and Hime Brickyard, . . . — — Map (db m52674) HM
On Waughtown St. at Alder St., on the right when traveling west on Waughtown St..
Happy Hill has played a prominent role in the life of Winston-Salem's African American community since the early years of the 19th century, when it was home to slaves on a farm serving the Moravian town of Salem. The first school for . . . — — Map (db m52814) HM
Near South Church Street just north of Race Street, on the left when traveling south.
Many African Americans sought to have their own homes after Emancipation. Although in Salem white landowners sold a few lots to people of color, Moravian Church leaders, under pressure from residents who feared black encroachment, rejected . . . — — Map (db m172125) HM
On South Main Street just south of East Bank Street, on the right when traveling north.
In 1821, the newly married Salem saddler Heinrich (Henry) Herbst moved from the Single Brothers' House to the house he built here on Lot 33 (to your left). Like other artisans in town, Herbst both lives and worked in his house; however, while many . . . — — Map (db m172151) HM
On Bethabara Road, on the right when traveling north.
Distiller's house rebuilt from materials of the 1779 House and Distillery, which burned in 1802. Only Distiller's house in Forsyth County. — — Map (db m53092) HM
Welcome to the Historic Bethabara Park Community Garden. Restored in 1990, this garden is the only well-documented colonial community garden in America. The original frontier garden of the Moravian settlers was established in 1754 to nourish the . . . — — Map (db m54352) HM
In 1902, Pleasant Henderson Hanes established a knitting company on Stratford Road, initially producing cotton-ribbed men's underwear. He partnered with his sons P. Huber Hanes and William M. Hanes to operate the business, which encompasses a second . . . — — Map (db m140053) HM
On South Church Street just north of East Academy Street, on the right when traveling north.
Home Moravian Church is an active Christian congregation. Our mission statement, "Fulfilling Christ's call to love God, live in community, and serve our neighbor," describes the role of Home Church within its community and the world. The . . . — — Map (db m172137) HM
On Clover Street NW just south of West 5th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Opening in May 1892, the Hotel Zinzendorf was a resort hotel developed by the West End Hotel and Land Company. The hotel was a venture by local business leaders to add tourism to a booming industrial, and largely tobacco-based, economy. Designed by . . . — — Map (db m51983) HM
On North Cleveland Avenue at 7th Street, on the right when traveling south on North Cleveland Avenue.
The 1938 Kate Bitting Reynolds Memorial Hospital was the first facility offering comprehensive medical care and professional medical education for African-Americans in Winston-Salem. Prompted by petitions to Mayor W.T. Wilson, William Neal Reynolds . . . — — Map (db m98990) HM
On Bethabara Road, on the left when traveling north.
The oldest brick house in Forsyth County. Built by Johannes Schaub, Jr., as a Home and Dyer Shop. Sold to Gottlob Krause for home and pottery in 1789. John Butner purchased Home and Pottery in 1802. — — Map (db m53094) HM
On South Church Street just north of Race Street, on the right when traveling north.
Archaeologists have located 28 of the graves in the original Parish Graveyard. Rebecca Hill was the last person buried in the Parish Graveyard, prior to the racial segregation of Salem cemeteries in 1816. Rebecca was born on January 23, 1772 and . . . — — Map (db m172104) HM
On Race Street at Church Street South, on the left when traveling west on Race Street.
When George and Mary Catherine Hege move to the house at Lot 101 in 1851, they brought with them at least two enslaved African Americans, including Lewis, who had been born in 1840 at the Hege grist and saw mill outside of Salem. Lewis likely . . . — — Map (db m172101) HM
On N. Chestnut St., 0.1 miles north of E. 7th St., on the left when traveling north.
The congregation of Lloyd Presbyterian Church was formed in the 1870s as part of a national movement by Northern missionaries to establish African-American Presbyterian churches in the South. Lloyd Presbyterian Church's current building was . . . — — Map (db m51974) HM
Near Old Salem Road at Walnut Street Southwest, on the right when traveling south. Reported damaged.
Presently sealed under the Old Salem Visitor Center driveway and parking lot are the archaeological remains of the 1789 Abraham Loesch House, examined in 1999. The house stood with its side to Walnut Street, here paved in brick. A well was dug at . . . — — Map (db m172054) HM
On Rich Avenue at East 12th Street, on the right when traveling north on Rich Avenue.
The "5" Royales – Winston-Salem natives Lowman Pauling, Obadiah Carter, James Moore, Johnny Tanner, Otto Jeffries, and Jeffries' successor Eugene Tanner – climbed the R&B charts in the 1950s with songs written by Pauling, including the . . . — — Map (db m140221) HM
On Kernersville Road at Maynard Drive, on the right when traveling west on Kernersville Road.
Operating from 1919 until the mid-1930's, Maynard Field was the first commercial airfield in North Carolina. The airfield was named for Lt. Belvin W. Maynard, a North Carolina native and pioneer aviator. In October 1919, the Winston-Salem Board of . . . — — Map (db m52852) HM
On Marshall Street North, 0.1 miles south of West 4th Street, on the right when traveling south.
This award-winning poetry slam artist is known for telling powerful stories of human struggles and triumphs. She competed nationally and in the late 1990's captured a championship in the Southern Fried Regional Poetry Slam Festival.
Britton . . . — — Map (db m172162) HM
In 1890, New Bethel Baptist Church was organized by the Reverend George Holland, a minister from Danville, Virginia. The congregation first met in the Trade Street home of John Lee and his wife, Alice Snow Lee. The 25-member congregation later . . . — — Map (db m98783) HM
On South Main Street at Giannini Drive, on the left when traveling south on South Main Street.
Est. 1963; opened 1965. First state-supported school for performing arts in U.S. A campus of The University of North Carolina since 1971. — — Map (db m54390) HM
On Shorefair Drive NW, on the left when traveling south.
The Odd Fellows Cemetery is believed to have started in 1911 by the Twin City Lodge and the Winston Star Lodge, both African-American fraternal organizations. The Odd Fellows Cemetery is one of Winston-Salem's oldest African-American graveyards . . . — — Map (db m52623) HM
On Old Rural Hall Road at Old Walkertown Road, on the right when traveling north on Old Rural Hall Road.
In 1800, Edmund Ogburn arrived in North Carolina from Pennsylvania and purchased 51 acres north of Salem from the Moravians. Ogburn and his descendants, who expanded the family property, were among North Carolina's first tobacco farmers. By 1840, . . . — — Map (db m100412) HM
On South Main Street just south of East Academy Street, on the left when traveling south.
Old Salem Historic District
has been designated a
National Historic Landmark
This district possesses national significance as an exceptional reflection of the culture of German immigrants who established the theocratically . . . — — Map (db m172063) HM
On 4th Street at Liberty Street, on the right when traveling east on 4th Street.
[Front]
Erected by the
James B. Gordon Chapter
United Daughters of the Confederacy
October 1905
Winston-Salem, N.C.
[Back]
"Sleeping, but glorious,
Dead in Fame's portal,
Dead, but victorious,
Dead, but . . . — — Map (db m55494) HM
On Bethabara Rd., on the left when traveling north.
The only French and Indian War Fort in the Southeast reconstructed on its original site. This five-sided palisade was built around the central part of the community for protection from Indian aggression. A second fort was located at the Mill Site on . . . — — Map (db m162107) HM
The farming community of Pfafftown was settled on the west bank of Muddy Creek around the farm of Peter Pfaff Sr., who purchased the land in 1784. In the mid- to late-1800s, several houses in the Greek Revival and other popular styles were built, . . . — — Map (db m99753) HM
On North Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. (U.S. 311) just east of Carl Russell Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
Phi Omega was established in 1924 as the first graduate chapter in North Carolina of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, the nation's oldest African-American sorority. Members have built a legacy of "Service to All Mankind", including . . . — — Map (db m172156) HM
On Polo Road, 0.1 miles Miller Pointe Drive, on the right when traveling north.
In 1923. Katharine Smith Reynolds built a forty-five acre polo complex for the newly formed Winston-Salem Polo Team. The team competed throughout the Southeast and included members of the Hanes, Reynolds, and Chatham families. The complex was part . . . — — Map (db m135928) HM
On South Main Street, 0.1 miles East Bank Street, on the right when traveling north.
Though Salem's main pottery shop and kiln were located across the street on Lots 48 and 49, potters fired some of their most innovative work here on Lot 38. Once a vacant lot used for storage by the town's first master potter, Gottfried Aust, Lot . . . — — Map (db m172145) HM
On 7th Street at North Chestnut Street on 7th Street.
Pythian Hall was constructed at this site in 1902 in a prominent African-American community. The three-story brick building housed the Prince Hall Mason's and the Knights of Pythias on the second and third floors. These fraternal organizations . . . — — Map (db m98782) HM
On Hawthorne Rd. North, on the right when traveling north.
R. J. Reynolds High School and Auditorium were designed by Charles Barton Keen in the Neo-Classical Revival style and completed in 1923-1924. Made possible through the philanthropy of Katherine Smith Reynolds, wife of R. J. Reynolds, the complex is . . . — — Map (db m51984) HM
On North Research Parkway at Power Plant Circle, on the left when traveling north on North Research Parkway.
The R.J.R. Factory 64 is one of the local sites where large labor strikes occurred. The first took place in 1943 after a factory worker died on the job. Several hundred female workers, primarily African-American, began an immediate strike that . . . — — Map (db m98776) HM
On Race Street at Church Street South, on the left when traveling west on Race Street.
This exhibit represents the partial façade of the Reich-Hege house as it appeared in the mid-1800s. Built in 1830, the house stood until 1922. Archaeological excavations, written records, and photographic evidence have helped clarify the . . . — — Map (db m172102) HM
On Race Street just west of Church Street South, on the right when traveling east.
This is the cellar hole of the Reich-Hege house excavated by Old Salem Department of Archaeology in 2005-2006. Shoemaker Emanuel Reich built a house with a shop here on Lot 101 in 1830. The traditional German Moravian house form was built in frame . . . — — Map (db m172073) HM
On Reynolda Road, on the right when traveling north.
The Reynolda Historic District was part of the country estate developed from 1912-1919 by Richard Joshua Reynolds and his wife, Katherine Smith Reynolds. Financed by the enormous wealth generated by Reynolds' tobacco industry, the estate was a farm . . . — — Map (db m51370) HM
On East 8th Street at North Cameron Avenue, on the right when traveling east on East 8th Street.
In 1919, the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company built this neighborhood of bungalows to ease a housing shortage. Initially, a majority of the development was designated for Reynolds's white employees. The 1931 construction of Atkins High School for . . . — — Map (db m98988) HM
On North Main Street at Second Street, on the right on North Main Street.
In 1875 this young Virginian aged 24 rode into Winston in search of a town in which to build his first tobacco factory.
Through the generosity of the citizens of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County this memorial has been erected to honor a . . . — — Map (db m51717) HM
On Marshall Street North, 0.1 miles south of West 4th Street, on the right when traveling south.
An international film, television and award-winning Broadway actress. At 25, Rosemary Harris dazzled Broadway audiences in the 1952 production of Climate of Eden. Some of her most notable works include The Seven Year Itch, Eleanor of . . . — — Map (db m172161) HM
On Church Street South just north of East Academy Street when traveling north.
This building
is erected to the Glory of the
Triune God and in memory of
Rt. Rev. Edw. Rondthaler, D.D.
Pastor of the Home Church 1877 to 1908
Member of Provincial Elders Conference 1880
President of Provincial Elders . . . — — Map (db m172138) HM
The Safe Bus Company was chartered in 1926, when several small "jitney" services merged their operations to better serve Winston-Salem's African-American citizens. With the motto "safety and service," Safe Bus Company eventually employed more than . . . — — Map (db m51971) HM
On Liberia Street at Free Street, on the right when traveling west on Liberia Street.
In October 1836, 18 formerly enslaved and 5 free
African Americans left Salem for Millsberg, Liberia.
Seventeen of these emigrants had been owned by
Friedrich Schumann, laboring on his plantation
here on the high ground south of Salem. In . . . — — Map (db m239158) HM
On South Main Street at Race Street, on the left when traveling south on South Main Street.
Between 1854 and 1862, the economic and communication needs of Salem were met by the Fayetteville and Western Plank Road. Stretching 129 miles from Fayetteville, the head of navigation on the Cape Fear River, to the Moravian village of . . . — — Map (db m172071) HM
On East Salem Avenue, 0.1 miles south of Cemetery Street, on the right when traveling south.
Salem Cemetery Co. was chartered as a
nondenominational corporation by some of Winston
and Salem's most prominent citizens in 1857. E.A.
Vogler's picturesque design for the cemetery – part
of the Old Salem Historic District National . . . — — Map (db m239160) HM
On Brookstown Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
Known also as the Fries Mill Complex, the former Salem Cotton Manufacturing Company and Arista Cotton Mill is the oldest physical reminder of the textile industry in Winston-Salem. Completed in 1836, the Salem Cotton Manufacturing Company was . . . — — Map (db m51815) HM
The Moravian Graveyard is still known fondly by the old Germanic name of "God’s Acre" (Gottesacker). This burial ground is characterized by its simplicity and uniformity. As the name implies, this is a field where the bodies are "sown as perishable . . . — — Map (db m54684) HM
158 entries matched your criteria. The first 100 are listed above. The final 58 ⊳