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.
TEXAS ROAM PRESENTS
Georgetown's Fight for Rights
A suffragist, a Black school, and a stand against the Klan
A self-guided driving tour · Civil Rights
7 stops · ~20 min · 1.4 mi · Driving tour
Driving tourCivil Rights7 stops1.4 mi~20 minTexasRoam+
About this tour
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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