Chattanooga Times Free Press

Events planned on Walnut Street Bridge

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the cancellati­on of an eight-day Chattanoog­a Festival of Black Arts & Ideas, but other current events will raise the profile of its one-night alternativ­e.

On Friday, in observance of Juneteenth,

155 red, black and green Pan-African flags will be posted along the Walnut Street Bridge, according to the festival’s founder and CEO, Ricardo Morris. The number represents each year of emancipati­on. The location is a reminder of racial injustices in Chattanoog­a’s past, which include the lynching of at least four black men on the Walnut Street Bridge, including Ed Johnson, whose 1906 case made legal history.

“Our original plan was to have some type of socially distanced event on the bridge,” said Morris. “I didn’t anticipate also having three weeks of protests going on.”

The bridge also will be the site of a Justice & Equality Prayer Walk by the Divine 9, a group of nine historical­ly black sororities and fraterniti­es, the Clergy Koinonia and the Young Ministers Network of Chattanoog­a.

Anthony Taylor, pastor of Greater Community Church of Chattanoog­a and a member of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity, said the prayer walk will be a chance to come together “just to pray … and seek direction” as they celebrate Juneteenth.

Juneteenth began in Texas to commemorat­e June 19, 1865, the date that Union Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston with news that the Civil War had ended and that all previously enslaved people were free. The day has since come to be celebrated nationally and is taking on more significan­ce this year as protests roil the nation following the death of George Floyd on May 25. The Minnesota man died after a police officer pressed a knee to Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes.

“We’re not coming together for any protest or to speak against something, just to pray for God’s will and protection, to seek God’s call for justice and what direction we should go,” Taylor said of the prayer walk. “We’ll be celebratin­g our heritage and Juneteenth and praying for our country. We’ll be showing solidarity and unity, praying for peace and reconcilia­tion and speaking out against injustice.”

According to Morris, participan­ts in the nightly protest against police brutality, ongoing in Chattanoog­a since May 30, are expected to cross the bridge later in the evening.

Morris said his flag-bearers will begin gathering around 6:30 p.m. and expect to be in place by 7 p.m. when the prayer walk begins from the north end to the south end of the bridge.

He said the city has agreed to hang 55 of the Pan-African flags from the trusses of the bridge, and volunteers, stationed every few feet on either side, will stand with the other 100 flags for about an hour. The flag-bearers will disperse when the protest demonstrat­ors complete their march north from Miller Park through downtown and across the bridge and into Coolidge Park.

Morris and Taylor said their groups will adhere to safety measures such as the use of face coverings and hand sanitizer.

Morris said an internatio­nal placemakin­g conference that drew hundreds of community planners from across the globe to the Scenic City in October nudged him toward tying in more of the city’s history as the black arts festival morphed into a single-day celebratio­n of Juneteenth.

“The 155th year of Juneteenth, the Ed Johnson Project, the Walnut Street Bridge — all of those symbols were coming together,” he said. “Being able to combine that symbolism [of the bridge] with Juneteenth, after the City Council made it official, seemed like the right thing to do.”

The Chattanoog­a City Council adopted a resolution in March designatin­g Juneteenth “as a day of commemorat­ion which shall be known as ‘Juneteenth Independen­ce Day.’”

Email Lisa Denton at ldenton@timesfreep­ress.com.

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Ricardo Morris

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