Harlem’s New Urban Civil Rights Museum Opens November 14
The long-awaited Urban Civil Rights Museum will officially open its doors on Saturday, November 14, 2026, marking a historic milestone as New York City’s first museum dedicated exclusively to the history of the Civil Rights Movement and the Black experience in the Northern United States.
National Urban League President and CEO Marc H. Morial made the announcement during his remarks at the Abolition Commemoration Day Program in Downtown Brooklyn on Monday, July 13.

Speaking in a subsequent interview, Morial said the museum will be housed within the Urban League Empowerment Center, the National Urban League’s new headquarters in Harlem.
“It will be the first ever Civil Rights Museum in history in New York City,” Morial said. “It will chronicle the Black and the Civil Rights experience of the Northern States all the way back to the 1500s coming up to the present.”
The museum will explore pivotal chapters of American history, including the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Migration, and the Abolitionist movement, highlighting the significant role Northern states, and New York in particular, played in the nation’s ongoing struggle for freedom and equality.
According to Morial, the museum represents the culmination of approximately 15 years of planning, fundraising, and operational development.
“This project has been a longtime in the making,” he said, noting that reaching the opening stage reflects years of dedication and collaboration by supporters, historians, and community leaders.
The Urban Civil Rights Museum will be led by Executive Director and Chief Curator Jennifer Scott, who has overseen the development of exhibitions designed to immerse visitors in the stories of Black Americans through a blend of historical artifacts and modern technology.”We’ve worked hard to make great use of a combination of artifacts and multimedia to tell the story without reservation and hesitation and with complete authenticity,” Morial said
Among the museum’s signature features will be a rotating gallery, allowing exhibits to change periodically and present new narratives throughout the year.
“What you see will be the beginning of what will be an exhibition to tell stories about civil rights, the Northern experience and New York,” Morial said.
The opening of the Urban Civil Rights Museum is expected to become a landmark moment for Harlem and New York City, creating a permanent institution dedicated to preserving and sharing the often-overlooked history of the Civil Rights Movement in the North while educating future generations about the continuing pursuit of justice and equality.

