college of charleston avery logo

 

New Saturday Tour Schedule New
12:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30

Historical and Cultural films from our Media Collection on view in the Seminar Room between tour hours.

 

FACES OF AVERY
old avery building
Avery Institute c.late 1860's

avery building sketch
Artist's rendering of Avery Institute building.

 

 

 

ABOUT AVERY

avery building

The Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture at the College of Charleston was established in 1985.From its inception, the Center has served as a source of community outreach on African-American issues.

Between 1700 and 1800, at the height of the Atlantic Slave trade, 40% of Africans who were forcibly shipped to mainland North America, came to the shores of Charleston, South Carolina. The unparalleled impact of the skill, talent and leadership of enslaved and free blacks, have produced an unprecedented history in Gullah and Sea Island culture, slavery, civil war and reconstruction, civil and women’s rights, education, business, and the arts. It is Avery’s mission to preserve this legacy.

The Center maintains an archive of primary and secondary source material of nearly 4,000 holdings that encourage scholarship, research, and presentations by scholars, researchers, and students. The Center also operates as a small museum, a national historic site with a listing on the National Register of Historic Sites, and a cultural center. Avery’s mission is intended for a diverse array of constituencies.

Through its research facilities, museum exhibits, tours of its historic site, and cultural center, Avery tells the story of African Americans from their origins in Africa through slavery, emancipation, segregation, migration, the civil rights movement, and the ongoing struggle for social and political equality. We sponsor conferences, lectures, film festivals, and exhibits about African and African American history and culture that attract local, regional and national audiences. Avery’s public programs convey the importance of collecting and preserving the records and documents of not only public figures, but also ordinary people whose stories reveal the “grassroots” experience of everyday lowcountry life. Avery’s regional focus distinguishes it from other archives in South Carolina and the nation and it is the only collection of its kind in the country.


Copyright © 2008 Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture
College of Charleston |66 George Street | Charleston, SC 29424| (843) 953-7609 | FAX (843) 953-7607