Goldsboro Museum

Goldsboro Museum Due to Covid-19 all tours must be pre scheduled through our website or send a email to [email protected] are:

1. Cultivate Cultural Tourism
2.

Mission: To enrich the quality of life through the History and Culture of Goldsboro
The Goals of the Goldsboro West Side Community Historical Association, Inc. Elevate Economic Arts Development
3. Provide Solutions to Modern Day Problems thru Humanities
4. Educate Generations of the Extraordinary History of Goldsboro
5. Preserve and Increase Access to the Humanities. Goldsboro: An American story o

f Hope, Freedom, and Independence

A community of African American citizens living west of Sanford, Florida dreamed of having their own incorporated township. Lead by Mr. William Clark, a store owner, carpenter, and community leader eventually those dreams came to fruition. Mr. William Clark was the brother of Joe Clark, one of the founders and incorporators of Eatonville, the first incorporated all black township in the United States. In 1891, Goldsboro became the second all black incorporated township within the United States. During the Goldsboro Township, there lived a community of educated, hard working, and Christian Value led people. In 1911 Goldsboro lost its charter, when Forrest Lake, a powerful Sanford banker and state lawmaker, devised a plan to dissolve the charters of both Sanford and Goldsboro, to create a new charter that would bankrupt Goldsboro and make it a community within Sanford. After the demise of Goldsboro, the town began a downward spiral with abandoned buildings, rising unemployment, and the loss of identity. In 2009, spearheaded by Francis Oliver, a group of leaders created The Goldsboro West Side Community Historical Association, Inc. to celebrate and preserve the history of Goldsboro. Mrs. Oliver collected the town's history including pictures, artifacts, and documents for over 40 years. To acknowledge the town's history on its 100th year anniversary of it's death 1911-2011, The Goldsboro Museum was born. Oliver began using her retirement check, from her 30 years of service as a school teacher to fund the Goldsboro Museum. The community began to donate items they have kept in their families for generations and also contribute financially to the museum. The Goldsboro Museum gave birth the Goldsboro Cultural Arts District, which consists of The Goldsboro Museum, The Francis Oliver Cultural Arts and Goldsboro Welcome Center, The Crooms Academy Museum, The Goldsboro Heritage & Art Garden, The Goldsboro Arts Square, and Page Jackson Cemetery. As a second generation member of Goldsboro, Mrs. Oliver, has passed the torch of history and heritage to the third generation, her niece, Pasha Baker, who manages the daily operations and funding for the Goldsboro West Side Community Historical Association, Inc. The dream that Mr. Clark envisioned for Goldsboro is still alive and the community is on its way back to gaining the Dignity, Distinction, Character, Culture and Respectability that it rightfully deserves.

05/20/2026

Happy Florida Emancipation Day!

On May 20th, 1865, The state of Florida ended Slavery!

General M. McCook, formally announced the Emancipation Proclamation on the steps of the Knott House in Tallahasee, Florida!

Video Credit: Central Florida Emancipation Day 2026 in Deland, Fl.

04/29/2026

Join Us For Central Florida’s Largest Emancipation Day Celebration!

When: May 16, 2026
Time: 12pm
Where: Dr. Noble “Thin Mann” Watts Amphitheater
322 South Clara Ave. Deland, FL 32720

04/27/2026

Join Us, Central Florida’s Largest Emancipation Day Celebration!

When: May 16, 2026
Time: 12pm
Where: Dr. Noble “Thin Mann” Watts Amphitheater
322 South Clara Ave. Deland, FL 32720

04/08/2026

Blessed to call her my Principal, Dr. Connie Collins 🧡🖤

It was a pleasure to share the rich history and heritage of Goldsboro with Teague Middle School.

Always a pleasure to share the rich History and Heritage of Goldsboro with The Seminole County League of Women Voters an...
03/31/2026

Always a pleasure to share the rich History and Heritage of Goldsboro with The Seminole County League of Women Voters and Thank you to the Sanford Herald for the article.

Rev. Jesse’s Jackson Sr. Marching for Justice during Trayvon Martin in Goldsboro.Photo by Associated Press, 2012
02/17/2026

Rev. Jesse’s Jackson Sr. Marching for Justice during Trayvon Martin in Goldsboro.

Photo by Associated Press, 2012

Founder’s Fables by Francis Coleman-OliverIn Goldsboro during the 1940s and 1950s, Halloween was a time of Fear rather t...
10/29/2025

Founder’s Fables by Francis Coleman-Oliver

In Goldsboro during the 1940s and 1950s, Halloween was a time of Fear rather than Fun! African American children never went out at night...and trick-or-treating did not exist.

Halloween was more about survival than celebration.

Happy National Dessert Day Fast Facts!1. Wallace “Wally” Amos was born in Tallahasee, FL2. Singer Marvin Gaye was one of...
10/14/2025

Happy National Dessert Day Fast Facts!

1. Wallace “Wally” Amos was born in Tallahasee, FL
2. Singer Marvin Gaye was one of his original Investors
3. Starbucks, TGI Fridays, and Baskin- Robbins emulated his business model of selling products in Supermarkets!

Happy Indigenous Peoples’ Day! Prior to the 1800’s, The ancestors to The Black Seminoles,  The Florida Maroons populated...
10/14/2025

Happy Indigenous Peoples’ Day! 

Prior to the 1800’s, The ancestors to The Black Seminoles, The Florida Maroons populated the Central Florida region primarily in present day Hillsborough, Alachua, and Marion counties. 

By the 1800s, after the First Seminole War, the Black Seminoles were forced further into Central Florida in present day Lake, Seminole, Osceola and Orange Counties. 

They longed to have their lands in North Florida back… and so they returned to North Florida and the Second Seminole War ensued!

Happy 150th Birthday Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune🎂In the 1920’s, African Americans were banned from most of Florida’s public ...
07/10/2025

Happy 150th Birthday Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune🎂

In the 1920’s, African Americans were banned from most of Florida’s public beaches!

In 1945, Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune and Joseph Crooms, along with other investors bought 2.5 miles of oceanfront land named Mary McLeod Bethune Beach Park - where African Americans could enjoy the beach without any restrictions.

Fun Fact: When Daytona Beach was first founded in 1876 two of its founders, John Tolliver and Thaddeus S. Gooden, were African American!

Address

1211 Historic Goldsboro Boulevard
Sanford, FL
32771

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