Driving tourCivil Rights7 stops1.4 mi~20 minTexasRoam+
About this tour

Georgetown holds a civil-rights record deeper than most Texas towns its size. It raised Jessie Daniel Ames, a Southwestern graduate who became a national suffrage leader and then founded the pioneering white women's movement against lynching. It was the county where a district attorney and courageous juries actually put Ku Klux Klan members on trial in the 1920s, a rare stand when the Klan held sway across much of the state. And it built a lasting Black community — churches, an attorney, a fine-arts school, and a school for Black students — whose institutions still mark the map. This drive gathers those stories: a suffragist and reformer, the Klan trials, and the churches and schools of Black Georgetown. It's told plainly, as history, honoring the people who pushed a small county toward justice.

Where it starts

The tour begins in Georgetown. Open Texas Roam to follow the full route stop by stop, with directions and audio narration as you go.

📍 General area · Starts in Georgetown
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