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2024 Trustees Emeritus Award for Historic Site Stewardship: 16th Street Baptist Church
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Sixteenth Street Baptist Church has successfully restored its buildings and become a shining example of preservation, cultural revitalization, and social activism. During the civil rights movement of the 1960s, the church served as the organizational headquarters, site of mass meetings, and rallying point for Black Americans protesting widespread institutionalized racism in Birmingham, Alabama. The Ku Klux Klan bombing of the church in 1963 was followed by President Lyndon Johnson's signing of the 1964 Civil Rights Act into law.
Today, the church remains committed to serving the community, as well as the more than 100,000 tourists who visit annually to tour the redesigned educational spaces and multi-media museum experiences that focus not only on the bombing and its aftermath, but also on the aesthetic significance of the church's design by Black architect W. A. Rayfield.
Today, the church remains committed to serving the community, as well as the more than 100,000 tourists who visit annually to tour the redesigned educational spaces and multi-media museum experiences that focus not only on the bombing and its aftermath, but also on the aesthetic significance of the church's design by Black architect W. A. Rayfield.