Price: Free
Phone: 788-6466
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Celebrating the African-American culture of the Jackson Ward neighborhood, with music, marketplace, ethnic food and more.


Second Street was hopping in the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s -- and it hops the first weekend in October every year.
The Second Street Festival celebrates its 20th year this weekend, looking to the past to commemorate the fabled street's swinging heyday, when Jackson Ward was known as The Harlem of the South.
The neighborhood was home to businesses, restaurants, artists and an active nightlife. At its core was Second Street, sometimes known as The Deuce, a business district anchored by the Hippodrome Theatre.
The biggest black acts of the day, restricted by Jim Crow laws from playing in the rest of the city, all came to the Hippodrome: Sarah Vaughan, Nat King Cole, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, Cab Calloway, James Brown and more.
The Second Street Festival has been paying tribute to that heritage every fall since 1989. But over the years, the festival has grown into something more.
"To the African-American community, it's more of a reunion weekend, a chance for people to come home (Full review)
Jackson Ward is one of Richmond's most historic neighborhoods. Bill "Bojangles" Robinson danced there, Duke Ellington played there, and generations of African-Americans worked in what was once called "The Wall Street of Black America" because of its many banks. (Full review)