On Wednesday, Feb. 26, Greensboro’s International Civil Rights Center and Museum got a very special guest taking a tour of the facility – brand new North Carolina Governor Josh Stein.

Stein was a guest of Chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners Skip Alston, a co-founder of the museum, on the tour of the famous site in downtown Greensboro where four now legendary black NC A&T students sat down at the all-white lunch counter at F.W. Woolworth’s and refused to leave – thus setting off a chain reaction of protest sit-ins across the South.

Last week, Stein hosted Alston at the Governor’s Mansion in Raleigh so it was only fitting that Alston return the favor and have Stein take a tour of the museum.  On Tuesday, Feb. 18, the governor hosted Alston in the state’s capital where Stein held an event to celebrate 40 prominent African-American entrepreneurs around the state who were also leaders in, and had had a widespread positive influence on, their various communities.

Alston said he does not believe Stein had ever visited the museum before.

While Stein may not have toured it previously, the museum has had some very high-profile visitors over the years.

However, President Donald Trump isn’t one of them.

In  2016, then presidential candidate Trump requested to visit the museum in downtown Greensboro and make a speech there but that never materialized.

The Civil Rights Center and Museum denied Trump the visit. Museum officials stated publicly that Trump’s staff was “aggressive and rude” to museum staff and also stated at the time that Trump made unreasonable “special requests” such as a need for the museum to close to the public for at least five hours.

One reliable source said the Trump campaign offered the museum $10,000 at that time for the use of the facility; however, the museum leaders still didn’t want the then Republican presidential nominee to visit and make a speech from the historic site.

The International Civil Rights Center and Museum in downtown Greensboro saw a special guest in July of 2024, when nationally known civil rights advocate Al Sharpton – a good friend of Alston –  was in Greensboro for an event at the Koury Convention Center, and, after Sharpton said he wanted to check out the museum, Alston was eager to accommodate him.

The two men, who are both well known for their efforts over the years in the long struggle for civil rights for black Americans, have been friends for over 30 years, and Sharpton has been honored by the city’s civil rights museum in the past.

Though Sharpton had seen the museum before, he’d never been on a tour of it; and, while in town, the civil rights leader and television personality – along with his two daughters – got to see the museum and the exhibits inside.

Sharpton was even allowed to sit at the famous lunch counter where the 1960 National Sit-in Movement began after four black North Carolina A&T University students took a seat at the whites-only counter and refused to move.

“We don’t usually let people sit in the lunch counter seats, but since he has been honored by the museum, we made an exception,” Alston said back then.

 With the help of a museum guide, Alston gave Sharpton and his daughters a private tour.

One of the most eventful tours of the museum came in 2021 when then Vice President Kamala Harris agreed to shift her tight schedule while in Greensboro and drop by for a visit.

 At that time four years ago, Harris was speaking in Greensboro and she decided to make time to tour the museum after Alston convinced her to change her plans and add the museum as a stop.  Her security detail probably didn’t like the VP’s last-minute change in plans, but Alston sure did.

Like Sharpton, Harris got to sit in the seat while she was visiting Greensboro in early 2021. There’s a highly publicized picture of Harris, wearing a pandemic mask, sitting at the lunch counter during that visit.

Civil rights maverick Rosa Parks also got to sit in a seat at the counter when she toured the museum years ago. That visit took place before the museum officially opened.

At the museum, there’s a replica of the bus seat Parks was sitting on when she famously refused to move to the back of the bus to make room for white people.

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