The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Hall of Fame damaged during Atlanta protests

- By Paul Newberry

The College Football Hall of Fame is boarded up and assessing damage from a destructiv­e night of protests in downtown Atlanta on May 30.

ATLANTA » The College Football Hall of Fame is boarded up and assessing damage from a destructiv­e night of protests in downtown Atlanta.

The facility’s most valuable trophies and artifacts were moved to a secure facility in case additional trouble breaks out amid nationwide unrest over the death in Minneapoli­s of a handcuffed black man who pleaded to police that he could not breathe.

Kimberly Beaudin, the hall’s chief executive director, said Sunday that the extensive glass facade of the nearly 95,000-square-foot building was shattered Friday night. Rioters also broke into the street-level gift shop, stole merchandis­e and left it “pretty trashed,” she added.

But, other than some broken glass that fell into a large exhibition area shaped like a football field, the interior of the hall was not breached by the protesters.

“All of it can repaired. All of it can be recovered. All of the merchandis­e can be replaced,” Beaudin told The

Associated Press. “We’re very thankful.”

Previously located in South Bend, Indiana, the

Hall of Fame opened a new $68.5 million facility in Atlanta in 2014, taking a prime spot adjacent to the Georgia World Congress Center and right across the street from Centennial Olympic Park.

It is part of a hub of downtown tourist attraction­s that also includes the Georgia Aquarium, the World of Coca-Cola, CNN Center, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and a Ferris wheel.

That area became the epicenter of Atlanta’s protests over the death of George Floyd. Thousands of people jammed the streets, clashing with police and damaging businesses.

The Hall of Fame had been making plans to reopen after shutting down in mid-March because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Beaudin said those plans likely will be pushed back because of the time needed to make repairs.

“We had been working through scenario A and scenario B,” she said. “Now, we have scenario C.”

More protests were staged Saturday in Atlanta, but no additional damage was reported to the Hall of Fame or other businesses around Centennial Olympic Park. The city was under a curfew and a heavy presence of police and National Guard soldiers curtailed a repeat of Friday night’s carnage.

Beaudin and other Hall of Fame officials surveyed the damage Saturday morning and were heartened to be joined by dozens of fellow citizens who turned up with brooms and trash bags to help clean up the debris.

The front of the facility was hastily boarded up and the collection of historic items — including a Heisman Trophy, a national championsh­ip trophy and countless other items documentin­g the history of college football — were removed from the hall.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Georgia National Guard lines up in front of the of the College Football Hall of Fame in the aftermath of a demonstrat­ion against police violence on May 30in Atlanta.
BRYNN ANDERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Georgia National Guard lines up in front of the of the College Football Hall of Fame in the aftermath of a demonstrat­ion against police violence on May 30in Atlanta.

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