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Calendar:
May 31, 2013 Last Fridays: Blues on the Burwell Lawn summer concert series June 1, 2013 Elizabeth Keckly Lecture at Dickerson Chapel AME Church June 8, 2013 The Homefront in Hillsborough: Civil War Living History Event |
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History In the three decades prior to the Civil War, the property was the home of Robert and Anna Burwell, their twelve children and the enslaved members of their household. The Burwell Residence (ca. 1821, 1846) and a rare brick Necessary (ca. 1837) remain from this period. In the summer of 1837, the Burwells opened their landmark school, one of the earliest female academies in North Carolina, in a brick school building in their backyard. The school building also still stands on the property. For two decades (1837 – 1857), the Burwell School educated 200 students in an academically rigorous curriculum designed by Mrs. Burwell to make them “thorough scholars and useful members of society.” The Burwell School was also the girlhood home of Elizabeth Hobbes Keckly, who was enslaved in the Burwell household as a teenager. Mrs. Keckly went on to become a successful businesswoman, author, activist, educator, and the confidante of Mary Todd Lincoln. During the Civil War, the Burwell School acquired the nickname of the “Beehive” as it served as a temporary residence for over 30 enslaved people and members of the Collins and Warren families from coastal North Carolina.
The Burwell School Today Today, the Burwell School is a unique landmark facility in Historic Hillsborough. It thrives as a place of learning, offering guided tours that explore the Site’s diverse history and dynamic children’s heritage education programs. It also serves as a community gathering place, hosting lectures, exhibits, concerts and special events such as Neighborhood Night, Dog Day Afternoon, the Community Ice Cream Social and author readings and signings for the Hillsborough Literary Association. The Burwell School is listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places and is home to a North Carolina State Road Marker that commemorates the life and work of Elizabeth Hobbes Keckly.
Contact us for more information |
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