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    Slave Haven Underground Railroad

    4.4 (118 reviews)

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    Tour prices 7/18/23
    Betty L.

    This tour is @ 1 hr long. It is very informative. It is not that cool inside so take a fan. It might not be suitable for kids because they have to heat an audio recording of all the pictures posted on the walls. The audio recording is @ 30 or more minutes long. It can get pretty long especially when you are with 24 other people taking the tour. There is free parking. It was nice experiencing the underground cellar where it is believed they kept the slaves that were escaping. You do have someone pointing to the various pictures as the audio recording is telling you the stories. I would've preferred someone telling the story live instead of a recording and for the ac to function properly because it was 96 degrees outside. Website info https://slavehavenmuseum.org/ They do not allow you to take pics or videos inside.

    Jessica C.

    I would give this place 20 stars if I could!! Amazing, amazing experience where I learned SO much and it really helps give you perspective. Elaine Lee Turner gave us a fantastic tour!! This place was formally Jacob Burkle's estate where he was an abolitionist that helped the enslaved escape. He even intentionally made his house with hiding places underneath and holes to let in light and air for the enslaved hiding beneath. We had the honor of standing in the basement space and they turned the light off and you immediately got a sense of what they felt being down there and adjusting to the darkness&thankful for the light that was coming through the holes. It was such a humbling experience. All these horrid acts led to the enslaved inventing Amazing ways to resist: -Drums were a form of communicating -Singing was a form of communicating too *The song Swing Low Sweet Chariot, had a metonymic double meaning. These double meanings allowed enslaved people to safely communicate messages of hope, freedom, and specific plans for escape to one another under the watchful gaze of their captors. For example, the song stood for Swing=run, Low=hide, etc etc -Quilts were a form of communicating by the secret patterns in the quilt pictures that were a guide to get to Canada. One could hang the quilt for a whole week. The first picture was of a mucket wrench which meant get your tools ready&to brake the shackles. Get ready mentally as well&learn the songs&the routes&signs of nature. Wagon wheel is a symbol of a free spirit and it turns north towards Canada. Cleveland Ohio had lake eerie that crosses over into Canada . Once you cross into Canada, You will be free but you will never see your family again.

    Ken O.

    As I was researching for some tours, I ran across this one and it sounded very interesting and educational. The tour is partially done through audio and by a tour guide. The tour included walking through this little house which is actually a history museum. I had learned so much from slave trading to starting a new life in the North. Plan to spend about 90 minutes at this museum. I would highly recommend this tour.

    Glen J.

    Just took an awesome tour of the historic #burkleestate, now called #slavehaven, in #memphis. The home was built in 1849 and was lived in by descendents of John Burke until 1978 when John Burkle's granddaughter passed away. Due to the nature of the #undergroundrailroad there is little hard evidence to support it, but many local historians and local lore suggest this home was used to help hide and support runaway slaves to escape to freedom. John Burkle was a very wealthy landowner and businessman working as a baker and owner of the local stockyards. With the Mississippi River only a couple blocks away as an escape route, and atypical features built into the home it's very apparent this was used as a refuge for runaway slaves. The home was built two feet off the ground to provide an ample crawl space. There's a trap door in the floor of the home that opens into the crawl space. Underneath what used to be a back porch, there is a brick cellar with round holes were built into the walls which open into the crawl space under the home. Also, there's a small hidden staircase in the cellar that has since been walled off which would have led out behind the house. The magnolia trees pictured were the very first magnolia trees ever planted in Memphis, and as an evergreen, were used as a key for runaway slaves to find the home for safety. The home is filled with loads of #history, #antiques, memorabilia, quilts with encoded messages used by slaves to communicate, real slave shackles and chains, and articles and newspaper ads local to the area about the buying and selling of slaves, and the general history of #slavery. This is a fantastic #museum and the guided tour was very informative and made the experience worth it. Definitely a must-see in Memphis, stop by to help support this museum to further educate people to remember the the bad parts of our country's history and the strength and courage of those who overcame it, and to ensure we all do our part to ensure we don't repeat it.

    Martie G.

    Wow! Learned volumes. Great guides. So thankful we did this! It's only an hour tour but it's packed full of info!

    If theses walls could talk the history lesson would be amazing.
    Celeta S.

    I was looking forward to this Museum and it did not disappoint. No pictures or videos inside and that's bittersweet. I wish I could share all the things I learned but I'm glad I was able to focus on the tour and my experience can encourage others to visit. This was a great tour. I learned things I had never heard before. I love a small but deep Museum and this checked all the boxes. Great lesson, nostalgic and powerful. I highly recommend this tour. Some parts were heavy but the stories were so intriguing you can take it all in and discuss it over lunch afterwards.

    Parking
    Kevin W.

    Slave Haven is a cool little site that houses an Underground Railroad outpost. Crazy to think this house in the deep south help slaves hide. Amazing story. No start times. You walk in and start. Friendly staff. Free private parking lot. There is a main house and a few outhouses. Very touristy site to see.

    Main house/tour
    Dayna A.

    Great place to learn some history - the kind you don't read about in school. Excellent selection of hard- to- find books, personal accounts, interviews of slaves and little known facts. Nothing fancy, and tours are on the hour, so you may have to wait. For the size of attraction, it was well done, if a bit pricey. We considered it a contribution for a good cause. This generation needs to remember these things, so we don't repeat the mistakes of our firefath

    My aunt, me and my cousin outside the Slave Haven, 10.8.20

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    3 years ago

    It was a truly interesting tour, if your visiting Memphis and have free time. I definitely recommend checking it out

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    Wealth of knowledge present and shared in the building. A must visit for all Americans and history buffs.

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    Ask the Community - Slave Haven Underground Railroad

    What age is age appropriate for this museum?

    Hmm I honestly would say any age. We had a 7 year old in our group.

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    Review Highlights - Slave Haven Underground Railroad

    We got to learn, see, and experience some aspects of some of the aspects of slavery and the Underground Railroad.

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    Sun Studio - Our guide in the recording studio

    Sun Studio

    4.6(627 reviews)
    1.8 miDowntown

    I'm so excited I was finally able to scratch a visit to Sun Studios off of my Memphis to-do list…read more For music history lovers it's one of the most iconic places to make a pilgrimage to stand where some of the greats stood as they recorded hit songs that have remained relevant more than 80 years later. You can't reserve tours online and are available on a first come first serve basis and take place at the half hour mark. I arrived at about 12:15 and despite the 12:30 tour being removed as available for the tour board the employee at the front kindly let me slide into the 12:30 tour group. It's a small building but A LOT of history and memorabilia are packed into the building . The guided tour begins on the second floor where there is a small single room with musuem exhibits and items from the early days of Sun Records. After spending time here you'll be taken back downstairs to spend time in the actual recording studio. In total the tour lasted about 45 minutes and you were able to linger at the end without feeling rushed to take photos with THE microphone and soak in the energy of the space. If you're any kind of music lover you can't miss this building where so much pop culture and music history was made.

    This place is sorta small but it packs a punch. It has some unique memorabilia and good photo ops…read moreand a whole lotta history. Our guide was very funny and knowledgeable (and he's a musician to boot!). We did the tour and the upstairs part has a recreation of the Dewey O DJ booth which is very cool. There is even a "smash" hit record on the floor in the booth! Inside museum cases are some original equipment and posters, etc. of some of the greats signed by Sun Studio. The downstairs recording studio (still in use daily) is timeless with an original microphone and the piano that the greats once played while recording. . We got to pose with the microphone and see lots of real equipment actually used by the likes of Elvis, Sam Perkins, Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, etc. And of course, some of the original recording equipment used by founder Sam Phillips. The gift shop and small bar up front are a great touch both before and after the tours. Don't miss this legendary place.

    Photos
    Sun Studio - Wife on the original mike

    Wife on the original mike

    Sun Studio - Famous sign of Elvis's previous employer

    Famous sign of Elvis's previous employer

    Sun Studio - Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Elvis and Johnny Cash all at the piano in a jam session.

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    Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Elvis and Johnny Cash all at the piano in a jam session.

    Slave Haven Underground Railroad - museums - Updated June 2026

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