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Visite de l'esclavage et du chemin de fer clandestin à New York

Aperçu
Découvrez les contributions des personnes réduites en esclavage à New York, y compris les soulèvements courageux contre l'oppression. Découvrez ensuite l'histoire passionnante du chemin de fer clandestin, un réseau de routes clandestines et de refuges utilisés par les Afro-Américains réduits en esclavage principalement pour s'échapper vers des États libres et le Canada.

Visitez un site archéologique et un mémorial dédié à la mémoire des esclaves Africains dans l'Amérique coloniale. Visitez le site d'une ancienne gare du chemin de fer clandestin. Découvrez les révoltes, les enlèvements et les évasions dramatiques qui se sont produits à l'époque de l'esclavage américain. Écoutez des histoires de courage et de triomphe et découvrez les histoires de vrais New-Yorkais qui ont risqué leur vie et leurs biens pour aider les gens à échapper à l'esclavage lors de cette visite à pied historique de New York.
Ville: La ville de New York
Fri 10 Jan
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Fri 10 Jan
À partir de $35.00
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Ce qui est inclu
Local guide
Local guide
Local guide
Surcharge d'essence
Local guide
Information additionnelle
  • Accessible aux fauteuils roulants
  • Les bébés et les jeunes enfants peuvent monter dans un landau ou une poussette
  • Animaux d'assistance autorisés
  • Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
  • Les voyageurs doivent avoir au moins un niveau de forme physique modéré
À quoi s'attendre
1
National Museum of the American Indian
(Exterior Visit) Built in 1907, Alexander Hamilton Custom House stands as a Beaux-Arts treasure commemorating the rise of trade and commerce in NYC with 3 floors of art and artifacts dedicated to Native Americans.
2
Battery Park
For more than 200 years, The Battery has been an invaluable part of New York City’s history. Decades before Ellis Island was built or the Statue of Liberty gazed down at incoming boats, millions of newcomers arrived at The Battery from Europe and elsewhere.
3
Fraunces Tavern Museum
(Exterior Visit) The location played a prominent role in history before, during, and after the American Revolution.
4
Wall Street
An actual wall existed on the street from 1685 to 1699. The heart of the financial system and the former location of the Wall was built by enslaved people.
5
Foley Square
Foley Square is the location of the “Triumph of the Human Spirit,” a sculpture honoring the presence of enslaved people in New York.
6
African Burial Ground National Monument
African Burial Ground and memorial is the oldest and largest known excavated burial ground in New York documenting the lives of enslaved people in New York.
7
National Museum of the American Indian
(Exterior Visit) Built in 1907, Alexander Hamilton Custom House stands as a Beaux-Arts treasure commemorating the rise of trade and commerce in NYC with 3 floors of art and artifacts dedicated to Native Americans.
8
Battery Park
For more than 200 years, The Battery has been an invaluable part of New York City’s history. Decades before Ellis Island was built or the Statue of Liberty gazed down at incoming boats, millions of newcomers arrived at The Battery from Europe and elsewhere.
9
Fraunces Tavern Museum
(Exterior Visit) The location played a prominent role in history before, during, and after the American Revolution.
10
Wall Street
An actual wall existed on the street from 1685 to 1699. The heart of the financial system and the former location of the Wall was built by enslaved people.
11
Foley Square
Foley Square is the location of the “Triumph of the Human Spirit,” a sculpture honoring the presence of enslaved people in New York.
12
African Burial Ground National Monument
African Burial Ground and memorial is the oldest and largest known excavated burial ground in New York documenting the lives of enslaved people in New York.
13
National Museum of the American Indian
(Exterior Visit) Built in 1907, Alexander Hamilton Custom House stands as a Beaux-Arts treasure commemorating the rise of trade and commerce in NYC with 3 floors of art and artifacts dedicated to Native Americans.
14
Battery Park
For more than 200 years, The Battery has been an invaluable part of New York City’s history. Decades before Ellis Island was built or the Statue of Liberty gazed down at incoming boats, millions of newcomers arrived at The Battery from Europe and elsewhere.
15
Fraunces Tavern Museum
(Exterior Visit) The location played a prominent role in history before, during, and after the American Revolution.
16
Wall Street
An actual wall existed on the street from 1685 to 1699. The heart of the financial system and the former location of the Wall was built by enslaved people.
17
Foley Square
Foley Square is the location of the “Triumph of the Human Spirit,” a sculpture honoring the presence of enslaved people in New York.
18
African Burial Ground National Monument
African Burial Ground and memorial is the oldest and largest known excavated burial ground in New York documenting the lives of enslaved people in New York.
19
National Museum of the American Indian
(Exterior Visit) Built in 1907, Alexander Hamilton Custom House stands as a Beaux-Arts treasure commemorating the rise of trade and commerce in NYC with 3 floors of art and artifacts dedicated to Native Americans.
20
Battery Park
For more than 200 years, The Battery has been an invaluable part of New York City’s history. Decades before Ellis Island was built or the Statue of Liberty gazed down at incoming boats, millions of newcomers arrived at The Battery from Europe and elsewhere.
21
Fraunces Tavern Museum
(Exterior Visit) The location played a prominent role in history before, during, and after the American Revolution.
22
Wall Street
An actual wall existed on the street from 1685 to 1699. The heart of the financial system and the former location of the Wall was built by enslaved people.
23
Foley Square
Foley Square is the location of the “Triumph of the Human Spirit,” a sculpture honoring the presence of enslaved people in New York.
24
African Burial Ground National Monument
African Burial Ground and memorial is the oldest and largest known excavated burial ground in New York documenting the lives of enslaved people in New York.
25
Musée national des Indiens d'Amérique
(Visite extérieure) Construit en 1907, Alexander Hamilton Custom House est un trésor des Beaux-Arts commémorant la montée du commerce et du commerce à New York avec 3 étages d'art et d'artefacts dédiés aux Amérindiens.
26
Parc de la batterie
Depuis plus de 200 ans, The Battery est une partie inestimable de l'histoire de New York. Des décennies avant la construction d'Ellis Island ou avant que la Statue de la Liberté ne contemple les bateaux entrants, des millions de nouveaux arrivants sont arrivés à The Battery d'Europe et d'ailleurs.
27
Musée de la taverne Fraunces
(Visite extérieure) L'emplacement a joué un rôle de premier plan dans l'histoire avant, pendant et après la Révolution américaine.
28
Wall Street
Un véritable mur existait dans la rue de 1685 à 1699. Le cœur du système financier et l'ancien emplacement du mur ont été construits par des esclaves.
29
Place Foley
Foley Square est l'emplacement du "Triomphe de l'esprit humain", une sculpture honorant la présence d'esclaves à New York.
30
Monument national du cimetière africain
African Burial Ground and Memorial est le plus ancien et le plus grand cimetière découvert à New York documentant la vie des esclaves à New York.
Show 27 plus d'arrêts
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Photos de voyageurs
Commentaires (300)
LOctaviani25
Oct 2020
Highly recommend!! I don’t give many reviews but the Guide was spot on and she knows her history ( I hold a History degree so I can vouch it was accurate). It was informative, accurate and interesting. A must do if you’re in NYC.
skynyc2015
Aug 2020
I never write reviews but I just had to for Stacey's tour because it was INCREDIBLE. We live in NYC and obviously avoid anything that seems even a little bit touristy but this tour made us see our city in such a different way. I took my kids, who are between the ages of 8 and 14, and it was 90 something degrees on the day of our tour. But my kids remained engaged throughout the two hour tour and we all learned so much. I had no idea that enslaved people basically built NYC from the time of the Dutch onwards and that there were enslaved people in NYC until 1826 and in NJ until the 1860s (!) and that there was even a city-run slave market downtown in the 1700s. On the flip side, I didn't know that there is a statue in foley square celebrating the African-American experience and that the African Burial Grounds have been preserved and commemorated for all of us to see and know that Black Americans were as much our country's founding fathers and mothers as the Pilgrims and Alexander Hamilton and all the other white men we celebrate in our history books. Thank you, Stacey!
Jazzy1014
Aug 2020
This tour was exceptional! Your eyes will open to things you may have walked past a gazillion times. Tour guide was exceptional. I recommend and will certainly return for another tour. Glad I was one of the “inaugural” group.

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