North Carolina Home Of Nina Simone Gets Permanent Protection

TRYON, N.C. — The childhood home of iconic musician and civil rights activist Nina Simone will be indefinitely preserved in North Carolina.

The National Trust for Historic Preservationโ€™s African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund, in partnership with World Monuments Fund and Preservation North Carolina, recently secured permanent protection of the singer-songwriterโ€™s childhood home in Tryon, the trust announced in a statement Tuesday.

Advocacy organization Preservation North Carolina was granted a preservation easement for the home. The legal agreement binds all current and future owners to permanently protecting the buildingโ€™s โ€œauthentic character.โ€ The house can be renovated, but it cannot be demolished.

Simone taught herself to play piano in the wooden cottage as a young girl in the 1930s, The National Trust said. Nearly 90 years later, the three-room, 660-square foot (61-square-meter) clapboard house had fallen into disrepair when four Black artists purchased the property in 2017 to ensure its legacy.

A crowdfunding campaign launched last year raised money for a rehabilitation effort that was scheduled to continue this fall.

Simoneโ€™s music, which spanned several genres including jazz and R&B, helped define the civil rights movement. She died in 2003 at the age of 70.