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The Historic Hampton House is the only Green Book museum in the world dedicated to sharing this unique experience of the segregated era. The restoration and vision are clear and intentional. Our mission is to improve perspectives in race, gender, socio-economic and religious discrimination in America and throughout the world.
- VISIT — The Historic Hampton House
Miami’s Historic Hampton House is located at 4240 NW 27th...
- The Historic Hampton House
GUIDED TOURS: Experience Miami during its civil rights era...
- VISIT — The Historic Hampton House
THE HISTORY. Let’s go back in time to dazzling 1960s Miami. Recall icons like Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr. and the rest of The Rat Pack cavorting around Miami Beach’s glittering nightclubs.
Miami’s Historic Hampton House is located at 4240 NW 27th Ave, Miami, FL 33142 and provides on-site parking in a gated lot directly behind the building. The Historic Hampton House can be accessed from major highways I-95, I-195, and I-395.
GUIDED TOURS: Experience Miami during its civil rights era at the Historic Hampton House. Discover the 50’s interior and mid-century architecture of this iconic Green Book hotel with its rich music and social justice history.
Explore the history of South Florida at the Historic Hampton House Museum and Cultural Center! Located in Miami-Dade County's Brownsville neighborhood, the Miami hotel was one of the few remaining Green Book sites in the 1950s, '60s and early '70s, making it a gathering place for influential figures like Sam Cooke, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole, ...
Explore the historic Hampton House in Liberty City. Let’s go back in time to dazzling 1960s Miami. Recall icons like Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis, Jr. and the rest of The Rat Pack cavorting around Miami Beach’s glittering nightclubs.
Historic hotel from back in the Jim Crow days. lots of memorabilia from the movie “One Night in Miami” and the days when MLK, Malcolm X AND Cassius Clay frequented the hotel. The guides Edwin and LaCrissia do a great job bringing that history to life. It’s for everyone but a must see for Black history.