Real Estate

Museum to host NC Black architects and builders exhibit

By Staff Report, posted 1 year ago
Image courtesy of Preservation North Carolina 

The Museum of the Cape Fear Historical Complex (801 Arsenal Ave, Fayetteville, NC 28305) is hosting the Preservation North Carolina (PNC) traveling exhibit, We Built This: Profiles of Black Architects and Builders in North Carolina.

On display until the end of 2023, the exhibit first debuted on Sept. 6 and is part of a multi-faceted educational program about the history, legacy and stories of this state’s Black builders and architects. This traveling exhibit acknowledges and celebrates the Black builders and craftspeople who constructed or designed many of North Carolina’s most treasured historic sites.

Spanning more than three centuries, “We Built This" provides more than two dozen personal profiles and historical context on key topics including the enslavement and Reconstruction eras; founding of HBCUs and Black churches; Jim Crow and segregation; and the rise of Black civic leaders and professionals.

The exhibit features many stories from across North Carolina about skilled Black builders, including Cicero Richardson, a skilled brick mason in Fayetteville, NC. At the young age of 13 or 14 years, Cicero was determined to learn brick masonry. In 1832, with his Certificate of Freedom, he traveled 100 miles from New Bern to Fayetteville alone, to begin an apprenticeship with Fayetteville brick mason Jacob Harris (circa 1799-1847).

The Harrises were a prominent free Black family in Fayetteville, and welcomed Cicero who later married Jacob’s oldest child, Sarah Ann. The Harris family, including Cicero, migrated to Ohio in the 1850s to escape the restrictive laws and increasing hostilities toward free Black people in North Carolina.

Also worth noting, after the Civil War, Jacob Harris’s sons, Robert and Cicero (named after Cicero Richardson), returned to Fayetteville to teach with the American Missionary Association. Robert Harris would become the founding principal at the Howard School (1867) and the State Colored Normal School (1877), the predecessors of Fayetteville State University.

Tours of the exhibit are free to the public and available from Tues- Sat from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Sunday from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. 

Find out more about current exhibitions and events on the Museum’s Facebook page here and more about the museum on their website here.

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