The Commercial Appeal

Historical markers document lynchings

New generation sets out to remember the suffering of African Americans

- Ted Evanoff Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

Lynched by a mob, Wash Henley was a black man all but forgotten to history until he was memorializ­ed Saturday morning in Memphis.

Henley’s death in 1869 was commemorat­ed by the Lynching Sites Project of Memphis with a historical plaque unveiled inside Collins Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church at 678 Washington Ave. Nearly 150 years after the U.S. Army decimated the armed forces of 11 slave-holding states in a brutal civil war that took 600,000 lives, a modern generation has set out to remember the murder and mayhem endured by African Americans for decades after the war ended slavery.

“We are here to tell the truth that has been hidden for too long,” John Ashworth, executive director of the Lynching Sites Project of Memphis, said from the pulpit of Collins Chapel, considered the city’s oldest church founded by African Americans. “We are here because we believe to tell the truth of the shared violence is an important step toward... (creating) a community of reconcilia­tion and respect.”

Reckon with American past

In Memphis and America, grassroots organizers have created museums, erected historical plaques marking lynchings and recounted the mayhem. Just why this emphasis on past tragedies is occurring now, historians say, reflects the broad rise of African Americans over the last half century into the mainstream of American society.

“It’s a reckoning with America’s past,’’ University of Memphis historian Aram Goudsouzia­n said in an interview. “People lived in a society where a form of terrorism existed to keep our own citizens down. If we want to create a genuine democracy, an honest reckoning with our past is an absolute necessity.”

African Americans “have now acquired sufficient political and economic heft in American life to demand greater attention be paid to their history,” said Princeton University historian Allen C. Guelzo.

“What happened in (present-day) Iraq is a direct echo of what happened in Reconstruc­tion, which is to say, that we had no coherent plan in mind for what to do when the shooting stopped,” said Guelzo, author of the 2018 book, “Reconstruc­tion: A Concise History.”

Reconstruc­tion refers to the years following the Civil War, which ended in 1865.

Rather than make sure freed slaves found their way into the larger society, the U.S. government balked. Post-war leaders and white citizens, particular­ly in the old Confederac­y, imposed legal barriers on blacks and were supported in federal courts.

This coincided with recurring bursts of violence against blacks, including an estimated 4,400 mob lynchings without benefit of legal proceeding­s between 1877 and 1950.

“Reconstruc­tion has long meant embarrassm­ent for whites,” Guelzo wrote in an email.

“It has long meant rage for blacks, at such an enormously botched opportunit­y, and they are now in a place in American life where they can demand that attention be paid to it. I don’t think what we’re seeing is a renewed attention to civil rights. What we are seeing is attention to civil rights from a community which now has the power to force attention.”

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was widely seen as an initiative by the U.S. Congress to make up for the failings of Reconstruc­tion in the 19th century. With poverty still widespread today in African-american neighborho­ods throughout the nation, the new focus on lynchings has been described as part of the larger civil rights initiative to stamp out poverty and racism.

College choir sings ‘My Country Tis of Thee’

In Memphis, the solemn procedure inside Collins Chapel was led off by a Boy Scouts of America color guard marching between the sanctuary’s aisles of oak pews and white columns to the pulpit, where the Lemoyneowe­n College choir sang “My Country Tis of Thee” to an audience of about 75 people.

Among the speakers on hand for the event, the Rev. Bethel Harris, pastor of Collins Chapel, and the Rev. Tom Momberg each told the audience in different ways that taking note of the violent past can help unify white and black Americans and act to repel new acts of violence.

Henley’s plaque and another for an anonymous victim of an 1851 lynching in Memphis both were unveiled during the ceremony.

The plaques, which carry white lettering on a green background, eventually will be posted at sites near the lynching spots. Researcher­s estimate 36 lynchings occurred in Memphis and Shelby County, including 7 white people.

Lynching Sites of Memphis plans on installing plaques commemorat­ing them all. The group also bottles soil collected from the lynching site in memory of the victim.

Researcher­s identified victims and the places where they died through court documents, family records, newspaper accounts and informatio­n shared by the the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit organizati­on that last year opened the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama.

The Alabama museum is among the array of new civil rights museums, including museums opened recently at Atlanta; Jackson, Mississipp­i; Charleston, South Carolina; and Washington, where the $750 million Smithsonia­n National Museum of African American History and Culture joins the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis as a leader in describing tribulatio­n and progress in American society. The Memphis museum opened in 1991 to commemorat­e the assassinat­ion in 1968 of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

Gulf between ‘ideals and reality’

Modern efforts to describe the black experience in America contrasts to the late 19th century focus on the old Confederac­y.

Earlier generation­s of white families festooned Memphis and other Southern cities with historical artifacts recalling the exploits of the Confederat­e Army.

Over the last decade, many of those artifacts have been rolled back in the cities of the old Confederac­y, including Memphis, where Confederat­e Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest’s statue of him astride a horse has been taken down. The park once named for him has been renamed Health Sciences Park. A prominent place in the Medical District, the park fronts the classroom buildings of the University of Tennessee Health Sciences Center. Goudsouzia­n, the U of M historian, said he thinks the emphasis on the African American experience­s traces to several recent factors including the 2008 election of President Barrack Obama as the nation’s first black president.

“I think it’s definitely tied to a generation of Americans largely in the Obama years who were moved to racial equality and awakened to the limitation­s of racial inequality, especially in jobs and neighborho­ods,” said Goudsouzia­n, author of the 2014 book, “Down to the Crossroads: Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Meredith March Against Fear.”

“The second factor is the idea of progress in the narrative of the classic liberal idea that things will get better,” Goudsouzia­n said.

“People realized this didn’t seem to be a factor any more and that boiled over in (the 2014 riot in the St. Louis suburb of) Ferguson. It is this gulf between ideals and reality that people are talking about today.”

 ?? TED EVANOFF/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? A historical marker commemorat­ing the lynching of Wash Henley is unveiled at Collins Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church in Memphis on Saturday.
TED EVANOFF/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL A historical marker commemorat­ing the lynching of Wash Henley is unveiled at Collins Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church in Memphis on Saturday.
 ??  ?? Goudsouzia­n
Goudsouzia­n
 ??  ?? Ashworth
Ashworth

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