THE LINES WE CROSS: 250 Years of Maryland Forging America”
July 17, 2026 — October 31, 2027
Maryland sits directly below the Mason-Dixon Line, a border state where freedom and slavery once existed side by side. In this landscape of impossible boundaries, Black Marylanders learned to navigate through movement, making, and profound creativity. They crossed literal and symbolic lines to claim their lives, build vibrant communities, and challenge the nation to live up to its highest ideals. The Lines We Cross is a multi-floor, evocative experience at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum that traces how Black Marylanders have pushed boundaries, broken systems, and shaped the social, cultural, and political landscape of America.

A Journey Through Three Floors

TO BREAK: Abolition (Floor 1) – Step into a landscape of resistance. From the literacy of Frederick Douglass to the tactical brilliance of Harriet Tubman, discover how Maryland became a geography of escape and liberation.

TO BUILD: Artisans (Floor 2) – Celebrate the skill and innovation that built our foundations. Witness the power of the hand and the tool in shaping Maryland’s infrastructure.

TO BECOME: Artistic Expression (Floor 3) – Experience the shift from survival to imagination. Explore how lived experience was transformed into art, sound, and vision by icons like Billie Holiday and others.

Our freedom has always been unfinished work. This exhibition is more than a history lesson; it is a baton passed to the present. Join us in exploring the struggle, the creativity, and the courage of the generations that forged America.