Thursday, June 30, 2022

Published in the Arkansas Review


Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Photo courtesy of Bobby Dennis

Happy to receive my copies of the Arkansas Review (April 2022). This issue features the article that Bobby Dennis and I wrote on the Natchez Museum of African American History & Culture (pages 63-67).

You can view the article here:

 


Friday, June 10, 2022

See Parchman Ordeal in Virtual Reality




Scan the QR code in the bottom right corner and follow the steps that are listed.

#CivilRights #VisitNatchez #BlackHistory #ParchmanOrdeal




Thursday, June 9, 2022

Technology allows for virtual reality experience at Proud to Take a Stand monument

QR code now allows visitors to experience story virtually


Published by The Natchez Democrat at 11:21 am Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Robert Pernell, chairman of the Proud to Take a Stand monument committee, displays the plaque with the QR code at the monument site. (Submitted)


By ROSCOE BARNES
Special to The Natchez Democrat

Note: The online version of this story can be viewed here.

NATCHEZ — Robert Pernell wants visitors to get more out of their visit to the Proud to Take a Stand monument on the corner of Jefferson and North Canal streets.

As the chairman of the Proud to Take a Stand Monument Committee, he wants them to have an experience that is not only informative, but moving, immersive and interactive.
Thanks to a new QR code, his wishes are possible as visitors can now have a virtual reality experience of the civil rights history featured at the site. The experience is made possible using the TimeLooper mobile application, Xplore-AR.

“In virtual terms, the technology transports the viewer to 1965 where they can witness the history for themselves,” said Pernell. “This is storytelling on a new level. Now people can experience the story on site, or they can view it using this virtual reality technology.”
By simply scanning the QR code shown on a small sign posted at the site in February, the visitor is given access to the Xplore-AR app.

Lance Harris, a commissioner and past president of Visit Natchez, who helped bring the experience to life, explained the virtual reality experience is best viewed and optimized with a set of Google Glasses or other viewing devices, such as Oculus.

“Visit Natchez is proud to have engaged with the Proud to Take a Stand Committee to create a compelling and unique experience that provides insight to an important chapter in our community’s history,” Harris said. “This project would not have been possible without the Mississippi Tourism Recovery Fund, enacted as part of the CARES Act. From what I have gathered, everyone is very pleased and excited about this.”

The Proud to Take a Stand monument is a 6-feet tall granite structure that honors the Natchez-Adams County citizens who were wrongfully incarcerated in October 1965 for standing up for basic civil rights and voting rights. It was completed in October 2019.

The monument is engraved with over 500 names, according to Pernell. Many of those listed are names of the young men and women who were forcefully shipped to the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman in October 1965, where they were humiliated, punished, and abused for several days. They became known as survivors of “The Parchman Ordeal.”
Mayor Dan Gibson expressed appreciation for the monument and the new virtual reality feature. “We are so grateful to have this important monument in our city, making sure that such a significant event in our history is properly honored,” he said. “The new TimeLooper feature will now take a visit to this monument to the next level.”

How to see the experience

TimeLooper’s app allows visitors to see the full story of this historic event using a mobile device. Access is gained by scanning the QR code in the bottom right corner of the sign. The scan takes users to Timelooper.com to download the Xplore app. Users may follow the steps below.

1. After the download, select the title “Parchman Ordeal.” A screen will appear with the option to “View it in AR.” Click on this option.

2. Follow the instructions to “Scan your table, floor or backyard.” While scanning and moving your mobile device around, a geographical image (a map) will appear on your screen. At the bottom of the screen, you will see directions to “Tap on the highlighted area to place AR platform.”

3. Next, you will be asked to “Start Xploring” and to “pinch the image to zoom”.

4. You will see a prompt to “Activate content by bumping your device on a pin.” The “pin” will appear as a thin, vertical white line with a circle on top and extending up from the geographical image.

5. Using your finger, simply tap on the pin, and images of the Parchman Ordeal will appear, along with the voice of the narrator telling the story of this critical moment in the civil rights movement.

Roscoe Barnes III is the Cultural Heritage Tourism Manager at Visit Natchez. 
 
 #CivilRights #FreedomTrail #BlackHistory #VisitNatchez






Natchez homesite added to Mississippi Freedom Trail

Published by The Natchez Democrat at 2:00 pm Sunday, June 5, 2022


The Dr. John Banks House, located at 9 St. Catherine St., will be the site of a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker. The house once served as the NAACP Headquarters during the civil rights movement in the 1960s. (Submitted photo)

By Roscoe Barnes III

NATCHEZ —The Dr. John Banks House, which once served as the headquarters for the Natchez NAACP, will be the first site of a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker in Natchez. Approval of the designation by the Mississippi Humanities Council and Visit Mississippi, means the city will now be listed on the state’s Freedom Trail and the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.

News of the historic landmark recognition was announced recently by Dr. Stuart Rockoff, executive director of MHC. In an email dated May 23, he wrote: “I’m pleased to share the news that the Freedom Trail Scholars Committee has approved your application to place a marker at the Banks House in Natchez.”

Plans are underway for a dedication and unveiling ceremony later this year.

Devin Heath, executive director of Visit Natchez, said Natchez’s listing on the Freedom Trail highlights the important role the city played in the civil rights movement. “It is also an opportunity to honor and recognize those who paved the way for us,” he said.
“Seeing Natchez approved for inclusion on the Mississippi Freedom Trail and the U.S. Civil Rights Trail is a dream come true,” said Mayor Dan Gibson. “From day one of our administration, we have longed for this to happen. I am so grateful to Devin Heath and Dr. Roscoe Barnes III at Visit Natchez, and Mr. Robert Pernell, who first dropped this idea on my desk, and our amazing committee for making our dream a reality.”

The Mississippi Freedom Trail is part of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail. It was created in 2011 to honor the people and places that played a major role in the civil rights movement. A total of 25 markers are now posted on the trail, which includes Cleveland, Ruleville, Greenwood, Holly Springs, Clarksdale, and Jackson.

Efforts to have Natchez listed on the Freedom Trail were led by the Natchez Civil Rights Trail Committee. In addition to Heath and Gibson, the volunteer committee members include Roscoe Barnes III, cultural heritage tourism manager for Visit Natchez; Robert Pernell, chairman of the Natchez U.S. Colored Troops Monument Committee; Rev. Clifton Marvel Sr., pastor of Greater Macedonia Baptist Church; Carter Burns, executive director of Historic Natchez Foundation; Kathleen McClain Bond, superintendent of Natchez National Historical Park; Lance S. Harris, director of Grand Village of the Natchez Indians; Joyce Arceneaux-Mathis, president of the Natchez Adams County NAACP Branch; William Terrell, editor and publisher of The Bluff City Post; and James Ware, president of the Natchez Business and Civic League.

Support for the project, which is in Ward 4, also came from Alderwoman Felicia Bridgewater-Irving, and members of Rose Hill Missionary Baptist Church, which owns the property.

In addition to serving as the NAACP Headquarters, the Banks House was the home of NAACP President George Metcalfe. In 1964, during Freedom Summer when a thousand volunteers converged on the state to work with Black Mississippians to register voters and operate Freedom schools, members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) resided at the house.

In January 1965, “night riders” who committed acts of violence at night intent on inspiring terror fired shots through a window of the house. On Aug. 27, 1965, Metcalfe suffered serious injuries when his car was bombed at the Armstrong Tire & Rubber plant by the Ku Klux Klan.

The posting of the Freedom Trail marker in Natchez has a price tag of $9,000. However, it is made possible through a partnership between Visit Mississippi and MHC. The two agencies are using federal funds through the U.S. Economic Development Administration to cover the cost of 20 Freedom Trail markers throughout the state.

“We couldn’t be more excited to work with Visit Mississippi to preserve and promote Mississippi’s vital civil rights history,” said Rockoff in the May 2022 issue of the MHC newsletter. “Our hope is these markers not only attract tourists but also strengthen our communities by helping all Mississippians appreciate our state’s vital civil rights history.”

Roscoe Barnes III is the Cultural Heritage Tourism Manager at Visit Natchez. 

#VisitNatchez #FreedomTrail #BlackHistory #CivilRights


The Natchez Democrat: On the Site

Natchez homesite added to Mississippi Freedom Trail

#FreedomTrail
#VisitNatchez

These images are taken from the print edition of The Natchez Democrat (Sunday, June 5, 2022). Story appears on pages 1A and 6A. The online version of this story can be viewed here.







84th commemoration of Rhythm Night Club fire slated for Saturday, April 27

Monroe Sago is pictured with the historical  marker that tells the story of the Rhythm  Night Club Fire. Monroe and his wife, Betty Monroe, ...