Lockdown Festival 4

Lineup Coming Soon

 

Sponsorships Available!

Watch Lockdown Festival 3

Lockdown Festival 4

Days of Hope – A 4th of July & Juneteenth Celebration

The “Days of Hope” Celebration recognizes the 4th of July and Juneteenth as two remarkable days of new beginnings; not just representations of historic events.   We’re bonding the holidays as a single event as a show of unity, against all of the divisiveness we’re seeing these days, and as a reminder of our collective goal to live in harmony, free from oppression.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

July 4, 2020
11:00 am – 7:00 pm
State Theater of Havre de Grace – Limited number of tickets will be sold!
Also streaming online at:  http://lockdownfestival.org

Ticket sales support the venue and the bands.  All donations and sponsorships will benefit the Hosanna School Museum in Darlington.

Join us for performances of regional acts as they generously contribute their time and talent to our cause!

Hosanna School Museum

The mission of Hosanna School Museum is to collect, preserve, and interpret the history of Harford County, Maryland through the lens of the African American experience within national contexts.

The Hosanna School, is a historic school for African Americans located in Darlington, Harford County, Maryland. It was built in 1867 and is a rectangular two-story, three-bay frame building which rests on an uncoursed rubble-stone foundation. It is one of four structures erected in Harford County in the years immediately following the Civil War for the purpose of educating freed slaves. The school was officially established with funds provided by the Freedmen’s Bureau for construction and teachers salaries. The Harford County School Commissioners took over operation of the School in 1879. It continued to function as a school until 1946 when the school ceased operation.  In 1954, Hurricane Hazel destroyed the second story but left the ground floor intact. The second floor was restored in 2005.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.


Widget not in any sidebars