Community Remembrance Project

Community Remembrance Project

Presented By
Carmaletta Williams

In April 1882, following the shooting death of a Kansas City police officer, a local Black man accused of the crime, Levi Harrington, was seized from police custody by a white mob and hanged from a bridge. Similar acts of racial terror and murder took place across in the U.S. from the 1870s through the 1950s, including 60 documented lynchings in Missouri.  

The Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), an organization that advocates for those illegally convicted of crimes and unfairly sentenced, founded the Community Remembrance Project to recognize lynching victims by collecting soil from sites of the killings and erecting historical markers. 

Carmaletta Williams, chief executive officer of the Black Archives of Mid-America, discusses her work with the EJI to memorialize Harrington and other victims of racial violence in Missouri. She talks, too, about how those memorials can promote community healing.

Williams has directed the Black Archives since 2019 and helped curate a permanent exhibition of soil samples from Missouri lynching sites to raise public awareness of the state’s history of racial terror and promote reconciliation.

Watch
Upcoming in this series:
4
May
Built on Bread and Beef: The West Bottoms and Kans...
Central Library |
2:00pm
Watch or Listen to Past Events in this Series:
19
Apr
Quindaro Underground Railroad: A Unique Ethnic Un...
Central Library |
4:00pm
23
Apr
Kansas City Beer: A History of Brewing in the Hear...
Central Library |
2:00pm
12
Aug
Legacy: Spirit of the Black Panthers
Central Library |
2:00pm
23
Feb
Mapping Inequality
Central Library |
2:00pm
Community Remembrance Project

Community Remembrance Project

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