History Uncovered: Virtual tour of Richmond, Va., reveals hidden
suffering of Black community
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Liz Vinson, SPLC Staff Writer | Read the full piece here
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Friend,
The project began with a simple question: "What can we
do?"
After the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police on
May 25, 2020, the nation was shocked and protests abounded. During
this time of turmoil, three men in Richmond, Virginia, wanted to
answer the question of how to create social justice change and expose
the suffering Black people in their city had endured since before the
Civil War.
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Within six months, they had found a solution, creating Hidden in Plain
Site
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(HIPS). This multimedia tour, which uses virtual reality and
augmented audiovisual technology, exposes the invisible history and
centuries-long suffering of Black people in Richmond.
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Seeking to uncover Richmond's long-buried secrets about racial
injustice, Dontrese Brown, Dean Browell and David Waltenbaugh scoured
the city to find places like Lumpkin's Jail - the
epicenter of one of the main slave-trading hubs in the U.S -
where enslaved people were held for purchase in the 1800s.
But where the jail once stood, they found only a patch of grass and
overpasses where Interstate 95 is suspended above parking lots. Three
weathered interpretive signs reminding the public of the jail's
presence leave little indication of the pain and sorrow that took
place here.
"It was the most horrific place you could ever imagine,"
Brown said. "This wasn't a place like a jail. This was a
place where slaves were kept until they actually walked to the market
where they were sold or hanged. Under the overpass, if they were
hanged, they were hanged right there, in Richmond's
'Burial Ground for Negroes.'"
The men were shocked to discover that this site had been hidden from
the city. Thousands of vehicles drive over I-95 each day. Pedestrians
walk through the parking lot without ever knowing they are quite
literally passing by a long-forgotten cemetery.
But there was more.
Richmond - a city known for its infamous Monument Avenue, which
once hosted the largest number of Confederate monuments in the country
- had erased other sites that spoke to the Black experience,
including happier ones like Jackson Ward - the Harlem of the
South.
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Through their project, Brown, Browell and Waltenbaugh have virtually
brought history back to life.
READ MORE
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Sincerely,
Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center
The SPLC is a catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond,
working in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy,
strengthen intersectional movements, and advance the human rights of
all people.
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