Nashville celebrates Black History Month throughout February

Nashville offers diverse Black History Month events in 2025, from museum exhibits and plays to educational conferences and historical tours, celebrating African American contributions and history.

Civil Rights Room at the Nashville Public Library.

This February, the Nashville community is celebrating Black History Month, continuing the discussion of Black people and their contributions through activities such as museum exhibits, book readings, and encouraging the study of achievements by African Americans year-round. Listed here are a few events happening within our area.

Thru February 28, 2025
The City of Gallatin is celebrating Black History Month with a series of motivational banners that honor local Black achievers. The banners showcase the remarkable contributions of Black residents to the community’s heritage.

February 1-28, 2025
Shadows of Freedom

Explore the powerful exhibit, “Shadows of Freedom: The Realities of Enslavement During Union Occupation of Nashville.” This special exhibit at Belle Meade Historic Site & Winery, running throughout Black History Month, sheds light on the lives of enslaved individuals during the Union Army’s occupation of Nashville in 1862. Through vivid imagery, compelling firsthand accounts, and historical artifacts, the exhibit uncovers the complex realities faced by enslaved and free Black laborers who navigated the duality of hope and hardship during a pivotal moment in American history.

February 14, 2025
Nashville Conference on African American History and Culture

Join Tennessee State University’s College of Liberal Arts and the Metropolitan Historical Commission for the 44th Annual Nashville Conference on African American History and Culture (NCAAHC), a dynamic celebration of African Americans’ contributions to Nashville and Tennessee history. For over four decades, this award-winning conference has brought together historians, students, educators, community leaders, and others interested in African American history and culture.

February 14-23, 2025
The Mountaintop
Nashville Repertory Theatre presents The Mountaintop at Tennessee Performing Arts Center, a gripping re-imagination of what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s last night on earth could have been. In this work by Tennessee playwright Katori Hall, King is visited by a mysterious and beautiful maid in his room at the Lorraine Motel. What begins as a humorous and flirtatious conversation progresses into a soul-searching discussion laying bare the profound humanity of the civil rights leader.

February 18, 2025
Homeschool Day

During the Homeschool Day event series, the Tennessee State Museum will host a free day of fun and historical activities for homeschooled families. In February, this free event will focus on Black History Month, with gallery tours and interpreters in the Museum’s exhibitions. Participants of all ages will experience the Museum’s living history presentations, hands-on learning programs, and Children’s Gallery crafts. Homeschool Days at the Tennessee State Museum are made possible in part by the generous support of the Advance Financial 24/7 Foundation.

Ongoing
Nashville History on Tour

Your tour guide David Ewing is a nationally recognized expert on Civil Rights and helped locate the lost mugshots of John Lewis’ arrest for the lunch counter sit-ins and helped present them to Congressman Lewis in Nashville. Explore how Nashville was one of the most important cities for marches, arrests, and bombing stories. Learn about John Lewis and the African American student-led peaceful nonviolent lunch counter sit-ins to desegregate downtown eating establishments in 1960 in Nashville.

Ongoing
Nashville Public Library

The Civil Rights Room in the Nashville Public Library is a space for education and exploration of the Civil Rights Collection. The materials exhibited capture the drama of a time when thousands of African-American citizens in Nashville sparked a nonviolent challenge to racial segregation in the city and across the South.

Ongoing
Nashville Sites

Follow in the steps of those who took a stand by taking a seat. The Civil Rights Sit-Ins tour was written and narrated by Fisk University professor Linda Wynn. The Downtown Civil Rights Sit-Ins tour begins at Chuch Street and Sixth Avenue North and ends at Rosa L. Parks Boulevard and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.

Ongoing
Tennessee State Museum

Learn more about Black History at the Tennessee State Museum. The Civil War and Reconstruction were monumental times of conflict and change for the people of Tennessee. Featured artifacts and stories in this exhibit document a period that forced Tennesseans to take sides and make sacrifices.

Ongoing
The National Museum of African American Music

The National Museum of African American Music (NMAAM) officially opened to the public in January 2021. Discover the central role African Americans have played in shaping and creating all genres of American music. From classical to country to jazz and hip hop, NMAAM has integrated history and interactive technology to share the untold story of more than 50 music genres and sub-genres.Tours initially follow a weekend schedule and will be held on Saturdays and Sundays 11am-6pm.

Ongoing
United Street Tours

United Street Tours offers a Civil Rights Walking Tour of Nashville, a fascinating journey through the rich history of the Civil Rights Movement right here in the heart of Music City! This Nashville walking tour will take you on a captivating exploration of the city’s pivotal role in the pursuit for equality and inclusion.

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