Apartments near Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Birmingham, AL(338 Rentals)
Athens Flatts
1112 15th St N
Bankhead Towers
Goudy's Apartments
The Thomas Lofts
1160 13th St N
Marshall on 3rd
1329 4th Ave S
The Continental Apartments
2416 1st Ave N
401 20th St S
Plaza Heights
2323 2nd Ave S
1417 17th St N
1400 20th Pl N
440 4th St N
LIV on Fifth
316 4th Ct N
1316-1320 15th Ct N
Martha Court Apartments
Uptown Stadium
1320 25th St N
Uptown Stadium
Seaboard Yard Townhomes
313 S Beta St
1609 6th St N
1601 21st
1717 18th Pl N
Stadium Court
Southtown Court Apartments
Legion Field Apartments
2501 University Blvd
1313 N 17th Pl
Southtown Senior
101 11th Ct W
Flamingo Court
The Ellys
Elyton Village
Magnolia South Apartment Homes
Black and White Apartments
Chalet on 10th
Gemini Apartments
Glen Iris Place
Highland Manor
29th Street Partners Building
12 Center St N
Birmingham, AL Local Guide
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Explore Birmingham
Birmingham was home to some of the most famous, and often horrible, events in the Civil Rights era, so as Birmingham apartment-ites, you owe it to yourself to remember and honor these events whenever possible. One place still keeping the memory of the men, women that lived, and events that transpired those many years ago is the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. Honoring both the victorious figures that came forth and helped the African American community to stand strong, and the famous figures who had to fall to get the attention of a nation, the museum is a testament to lives and lost and won during one of the tumultuous times that our nation has ever faced, reminding us all of the sacrifices that were made for equality and freedom. Birmingham apartment-ites begin their self-guided tour of the museum with a twelve minute film called "Going Up to Birmingham", covering the beginning Birmingham from its founding 1871, and following it as it gained national attention throughout the years. Following that is a touching portrait of life for African Americans during the days of segregation in the 1920s to 1950s in the Barriers Gallery. After that is the Confrontation Gallery, home to many exhibits on the violence that erupted along with segregation in the South, followed by the Movement Gallery, taking visitors through the days of the Civil Rights Movement, featuring exhibits on the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, as well as several fascinating media instalations. Step through the Processional Gallery, where you'll see a "walk to freedom", as well as a view of Kelly Ingram Park, home to some of the most famous of protests in Alabama. The museum features many more galleries and exhibitions, but you'll just have to make your way down there to find out more for yourself. No man is an island, and we are all influenced by both the world that moves alongside us, and the history that behind us, so its important to explore the world outside our own Birmingham apartments, and one place to do just that is the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, where some of the most famous events and figures of African American history are put on full display to remind us all the sacrifices and triumphs that so many African Americans went through before they finally found freedom.