Publication will feature more than 50 sites that played significant roles in the Natchez movement
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Protestors at Adams County Courthouse during civil rights movement in the 1960s. Photo courtesy of Historic Natchez Foundation |
NATCHEZ, Miss. – The Mississippi Humanities Council recently
awarded $1,450.00 through a minigrant to Natchez Museum of African American
History and Culture for the creation of a map on the civil rights movement in
Natchez.
The map will be a joint project between the museum and
the Natchez Civil Rights Trail Committee, according to Roscoe Barnes III, cultural
heritage tourism manager for Visit Natchez. He said the working title of the
publication is “Map of the Civil Rights Sites in Natchez, Mississippi.”
Barnes, who also chairs the NCRTC, said the map will be
published as a full-color brochure. In addition to photographs, it will include
an annotated list of more than 50 sites that played a significant role in the
Natchez movement, he said. Design and printing will be done by Catherine Murray
of Murray Printing.
“This is another milestone and special gift to the city
of Natchez,” said NCRT member Robert Pernell. “This will allow visitors, as
well as our local citizens, to literally trace the routes of the Natchez
movement and see the sites that made a difference in our history.”
Mayor Dan Gibson said the map will help to tell the full
story of Natchez’s history.
“This is great news for Natchez,” he said. “These grant
funds will help greatly in our efforts to better tell the entire history of
Natchez to include commemorating our African American historic sites. Many thanks
to Dr. Roscoe Barnes III, Visit Natchez, Bobby Dennis, the Natchez Civil Rights
Trail Committee, and NAPAC for making this happen.”
NAPAC stands for Natchez Association for the Preservation
of African American Culture, the agency that operates the African American
museum.
The listed sites were identified by Historic Natchez
Foundation. Local residents, including former civil rights activists and their family
members, also contributed to the project.
Barnes noted the homes of several civil rights leaders
and activists in the movement will be listed, including the homes of NAACP
Treasurer Wharlest Jackson Sr. and NAACP President George Metcalfe. The home of
Nellie Jackson, aka “Mississippi Madam,” will also be included, as will the
homes of Mary Lee Toles, Forrest Johnson, Mayor John Nosser, Marjorie Baroni, Jessie
B. Williams, Alderman Theodore West, and Mamie Lee Green Mazique, among others.
Other noteworthy sites are the government buildings that
played a role in the movement. They consist of the Adams County Courthouse,
Natchez City Hall, and Natchez City Auditorium. Churches, parks, and commercial
buildings will also be shown.
“This map will be a convenient tool and handy resource
for anyone to learn more about the civil rights movement in Natchez,” said Bobby
Dennis, executive director of the museum. “We really appreciate this assistance
from the Mississippi Humanities Council.”
Earlier this year, Natchez was approved to be listed on
the Mississippi Freedom Trail by the Mississippi Humanities Council and Visit
Mississippi. This approved designation, which comes with a historical marker, means
the city will also be listed on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.
Barnes said the map will serve as a supplement to the
Mississippi Freedom Trail marker that is set to be dedicated this year at 9 St.
Catherine St., the site of former NAACP Headquarters, which is commonly known
as the Dr. John Banks House.
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