Access this tour for free

Experience this tour for free. Available through our app.

Download or access the app

iOS Android Web

PocketSights Map

STQRY Directory / PocketSights / Black Activist Histories of Cypress Hills Cemetery: A Walking Tour

Black Activist Histories of Cypress Hills Cemetery: A Walking Tour

5 Stops
Cover for Black Activist Histories of Cypress Hills Cemetery: A Walking Tour
Preview Tour

Tour Overview

Welcome to Cypress Hills Cemetery.

This walking tour delves into activist histories of New York's Black communities. Through the exploration of five individuals who are interred here, it aims to offer a nuanced understanding of the many ways in which Black communities resisted structural racism and prejudice over time. Temporally, the tour covers several decades of activist histories, from the 1850s through the 1970s. At times, the individual narratives intersect with one another. Each individual's grave stop includes historical anecdotes whose significance is then situated within the context of New York City. This research is informed by both primary and secondary source research.

Historical Background of Cypress Hills Cemetery

Previously farmland, Cypress Hills was founded by the Rural Cemetery Act in 1848, which spurred the creation of several large cemeteries along the Brooklyn-Queens border in what became known as the "Cemetery Belt". From its outset, all 225 acres of Cypress Hills was denoted as a non-sectarian cemetery, and as such was dubbed “the people’s graveyard” by an 1881 guidebook entitled The Cemeteries of New York, and How To Reach Them. Today, Cypress Hills is known for the ethnic, religious, and social diversity of its residents, who are buried in groupings known as “neighborhoods of the dead.” This is especially true for New York's Black communities, who have long had a strong presence at the cemetery. Two of New York’s earliest Black churches, St. Philip’s Episcopal Church and African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, purchased lots at Cypress Hills in the mid-nineteenth century as burial grounds for their congregations.

About the Creator

Alyssa is a graduate student at New York University. As a transplant to New York City, her interest in the creation of this walking tour stems from her curiosity about the long history of the city's diverse Black communities and the context of their activism within the broader history of New York.

Stops

  1. Stop 1: Wallace Turnage: Activism in the Black Church of Postbellum New York

  2. Stop 2: Jackie Robinson: Funding Black Entrepreneurship in the Civil Rights Era

  3. Stop 3: Elizabeth Jennings: "Nineteenth Century Rosa Parks"

  4. Stop 4: Eubie Blake: A Lifetime of Activism Through Music

  5. Stop 5: Rosetta LeNoire Brown: Theater Activism in 1960s Harlem

Map