Browse Resources (20 total)
Manassas Industrial School, circa 1940
Jennie Dean, born a slave in Prince William County, founded the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth in 1894. Originally a private boarding school, it was a segregated regional high school for African Americans between 1938 and 1966.…
Home of Moses Parker
Moses Parker, a former slave who purchased his freedom, opened a blacksmith shop on Little River Turnpike with his partner, former slave, Horace Gibson. Gibson and Parker moved to Fairfax from Culpeper, purchasing five acres of land each near the…
Tags: african american, ilda
Blacksmith Shop, circa 1890
Moses Parker and Horace Gibson, former slaves who purchased their freedom, moved to Fairfax County from Culpeper. They opened a blacksmith shop on the corner of Little River Turnpike and today's Prosperity Avenue and served travellers between…
Tags: african american, commerce, ilda, segregation
Page Parker Family, circa 1887
Page Augustus Parker and Matilda Gibson Parker and their daughters, Maude, Molly, and Alice, circa 1887. The couple took over the blacksmith shop founded by Moses Parker, father of Page Augustus, and his partner, Horace Gibson. The blacksmith shop…
Tags: african american, commerce, ilda, occupations, segregation
Cosmetology Class, Manassas Industrial School, 1950s
Jennie Dean, born a slave in Prince William County, founded the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth. The school, a private facility which offered academic subjects as well as skilled trade courses, opened in October 1894. From 1938 until…
Tags: african american, education, segregation
Cheerleaders, Manassas Industrial School
Jennie Dean, born a slave in Prince William County, founded the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth. The school, a private facility which offereed academic subjects as well as skilled trade courses, opened in October 1894. From 1938 until…
Tags: african american, education, segregation
Carpentry class, Manassas Industrial School, circa 1961
Jennie Dean, born a slave in Prince William County, founded the Manassas Industrial School for Colored Youth. The school, a private facility which offered academic subjects as well as skilled trade courses, opened in October 1894. From 1938 until…
Tags: african american, education, segregation
Little Zion Baptist Church
In 1891, the Little Zion Baptist Church was built for $25 by freed slaves on land donated by Jack Pearson, a former slave of the Fitzhugh family.
The founding congregation was known as the Old School Baptist Group of Blacks and Whites. Reverend…
The founding congregation was known as the Old School Baptist Group of Blacks and Whites. Reverend…
Tags: african american, fitzhugh, historic site, korean, segregation
Ashford House
In 1829, Mary Goldsborough inherited land from William Henry Fitzhugh and, in 1856, William Ashford purchased 20 of the Goldsborough acres. The property probably included at least one slave cabin. The Ashford House combines two log cabins, one made…
Tags: african american, fitzhugh, historic site, occupations
Annandale United Methodist Church
The Annandale United Methodist Church was built in 1846. During the Civil War, the Union Army used the church as a hospital, then burned the building and the village of Annandale as it withdrew from the area. A new building with a small balcony for…
Tags: african american, annandale, civil war, historic site