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Juneteenth Weekend Driving Tour


  • Neill-Cochran House Museum 2310 San Gabriel Street Austin, TX, 78705 United States (map)
Mrs. Gracy Murray Stephenson, Juneteenth Celebration, June 19, 1900. Collection Austin History Center (PICA 05746).  The Austin History Center records that the photograph was taken in "East Woods" on East 24th Street.

Mrs. Gracy Murray Stephenson, Juneteenth Celebration, June 19, 1900. Collection Austin History Center (PICA 05746). The Austin History Center records that the photograph was taken in "East Woods" on East 24th Street.

Juneteenth Weekend Driving Tour

Explore the African-American Histories Just Outside Our Door

June 19-21, 2020 | 11:00 AM – 4:00 PM CT

Thank You Austin!

Words cannot express how grateful we are for the overwhelming response to our tour! We are sorry to report that we have sold out for this weekend. However,

The Tour Lives On!

Thanks to the incredible response, we have decided to continue to offer the tour to those who purchase admission to the museum through the month of June. You can purchase your tickets right here through our website and set up a time to tour the museum and pick up your diving tour materials. Be sure to note when you schedule your self-guided tour to include that you are interested in the driving tour.

We can’t wait to share this experience with you!



This year marks the 155th anniversary of Juneteenth. On June 19, 1865 Union General Gordon Granger read General Order #3 on a balcony in Galveston, TX. The order began: 

"The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor."

Back in February we hosted a Community Bus Tour that was a huge success! Now we want to make it available for everyone to enjoy from the comfort of their own vehicle.

Join us Juneteenth weekend (June 19-21) for a tour of West Austin African American history. The tour is developed in coordination with the collaborative project If These Walls Could Talk, where we have worked to shed light on Austin’s difficult racial history.

The tour begins at the Neill-Cochran House Museum and winds through historic sites of Wheatville and Clarksville, two of the original fifteen freedman communities established in Austin after the end of the Civil War. The tour includes access to videos for each stop that explore the history of the site and create connections between the past and present.

Sites on the tour include

  • The Neill-Cochran House Museum

  • The Jacob Fontaine Building

  • Pease Plantation (Woodlawn)

  • Pease Park

  • Charles Clark Homestead

  • Elias Mays Homestead

  • Sweet Home Missionary Baptist Church

  • Mary Smith Homestead

  • Haskell House

  • Pease Plantation Wall

Before or after your tour, the grounds of the Neill-Cochran House Museum will be open to you. We encourage you to bring a blanket or lawn chairs and enjoy a lovely shaded afternoon lunch. You are welcome to order a boxed lunch from Hoover’s Cooking through us, or to bring your own.

We offer this lunch in recognition of one of the myriad ways people of color showed creativity and resilience in the face of segregation - the shoebox lunch, which families would pack for long trips by car, bus, or train in the knowledge that they might not be welcomed at dining establishments on their route. Jennifer Cumberbatch has described shoebox lunches thus: “. . . the resilience and creativity of Black family members, church attendees and businesswomen was packed with love inside shoeboxes.  Their sumptuous feasts became a black traveler’s delight.  Sandwiches, hardboiled eggs, pound cake or sweet potato pie with a heap of fried chicken was the fare that nourished the body and the soul . . .  a traveler’s feast.”  Shoebox lunches were a form of resistance, a weapon against the racism exhibited in the context of Jim Crow. Packing a lunch was a way of rejecting racist exclusion. It represented resilience and antifragility, a way of saying "We will not bend, we will not break; instead, we will create."

Children’s Lunch $7

Fried Chicken
Mac & Cheese

Adult Lunch $15

Fried Chicken sandwich
Potato Salad
Cowboy Beans

Parking available behind the museum, off of 23rd street. 2310 San Gabriel Street, Austin, TX 78705

For more information, please contact the museum office at 512.478.2335 or info@nchmuseum.org.

 
 

Thank you to Hoover’s Cooking for providing lunch!

 
hooverscooking.jpg
 
 

A Note About COVID-19

In an effort to ensure the safety of all guests and our staff, we require all visitors to wear masks while they are on our grounds. In an effort to maintain social distancing, tour starts will be staggered by fifteen minute intervals. We request that you also limit your groups for your tour of the Neill-Cochran House Museum to no more than six (6). You are welcome to come in multiple groups of six, but we will need to stagger your entry into the museum. Thank you for your understanding.

 
Earlier Event: June 14
Fun With Flags
Later Event: August 9
Art on the Lawn