Austin Peay students explore African American history in South Carolina
By: Khatir Stewart July 14, 2025

Austin Peay State University students visit the International African American Museum to learn about Black history in America. | Photo contributed by Eboné Amos
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. - A group of Austin Peay State University students, led by Associate Professor Eboné Amos, recently traveled to South Carolina to explore the region's African American history firsthand, immersing themselves in the cultural and historical significance of cities like Charleston.
The group visited sites such as the International African American Museum, McLeod Plantation, and Mitchellville, which was home to the first self-governing community of freed slaves during the Civil War.
“It’s one thing to read about [slavery], and it’s one thing to go on the Internet and have people argue whether it even existed,” Amos said. “It’s another thing to be standing on the land that is still preserved from that time. Seeing the records, hearing the stories.”
Amos said one of the main lessons she hoped her students would take away from the trip was a deeper sense of empathy, even without having personally experienced the events they learned about.
“The part of the trip that really stuck with me was the McLeod Plantation,” said student Jaylien Moothery. “It was really emotional to be there and hear the true testimonies and stories of so many people who actually suffered.”
APSU students deepen their understanding of African American heritage through exhibitions featuring artists like David Antonio Cruz and Joshua Parks. | Photo contributed by Eboné Amos
Keyon St. Firmin, another student on the trip, said the bond the group formed along the way helped them connect and better understand the history of the region.
“It really felt like when you’re away with your cousins,” St. Firmin said. “We all looked after each other. We laughed together, we sang together, we cried together.”
Students like Moothery and St. Firmin were among the first to participate in Austin Peay’s new study away programming, which aims to expand access and exposure to diverse cultures, histories, and their ongoing significance.
“What made this special is that it was study away and not abroad, so the affordability was good,” Amos said. “We were able to secure funding to make it even more affordable for [students].”
The Office of Institutional Culture contributed approximately $10,000 to the program, with additional funding from a Student Academic Success Initiative (SASI) grant.
Thanks to their support, Amos and her students were able to make the trip to Charleston and shared a strong commitment to preserving and learning from African American history, emphasizing its crucial role in the ongoing fight for equality.
Austin Peay State University students visit Folly Beach, South Carolina, during a study away trip offered this summer. | Photo contributed by Eboné Amos
“It’s wildly important because there’s a reason why [people are] trying to erase this history,” Amos said. “It’s not pretty, but it shouldn’t mean that we can’t learn from it and do better.”
Moothery said historical experiences like slavery have often been ignored or overlooked, but that it is important to honor and remember the people who lived through them.
“These enslaved people, they probably thought nobody cared about them, what they were doing the next day, what they’re going to eat, how they’re going to survive,” Moothery said. “But I cared, and other people cared too.”
For more information about study abroad and study away opportunities at APSU, visit the Global Education Office's webpage or call 931-221-6851.