Virginia mayor plans ballpark on site of slave cemetery

StormX

Banned
RICHMOND, Va. - The mayor of Richmond announced plans Monday to build a minor-league baseball park on the site of a slave market and cemetery, prompting an outcry over what protesters said would be desecration of the area.

Mayor Dwight Jones, a black minister, said the 7,200-seat ballpark would generate badly needed jobs and revenue and include a $30 million memorial. The ballbark is part of a $200 million development in Richmond's Shockoe Bottom neighborhood.

"No one will be left behind," Jones told several hundred supporters who had gathered at the site to hear of the development plans.

The park would be the home of Richmond's Flying Squirrels, an affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. The complex will include 750 apartments and a hotel.

Richmond, the capital of Virginia, was also the seat of government of the Confederacy during the 1861 to 1865 Civil War.

Historians have said that thousands of people were sold into bondage at the slave market that was at the site. The market was the second largest in the United States. The cemetery is believed to be the burial site of Gabriel Prosser, who led an unsuccessful slave rebellion in 1800.

Shockoe Bottom now is a mixture of open lots, abandoned businesses, highways and new development, including rebuilt historic buildings and apartments. The burial ground and slave market have disappeared under later buildings and roads.

Black organizations such as the African Ancestral Chamber oppose the Shockoe Bottom plan, saying the proposal is insensitive and tramples on black history.

http://news.msn.com/us/virginia-mayor-plans-ballpark-on-site-of-slave-cemetery

:rofl2:

Build it and they will come....
 
Watch the video

it shows a museum planned that encapsulates the slave market and grave sites.


it honors the history of the place and allows the humans NOW living a very impressive site
 
Watch the video it shows a museum planned that encapsulates the slave market and grave sites.
it honors the history of the place and allows the humans NOW living a very impressive site

The mayor must be a Democrat. If he was a Republican, you'd be raving....
 
a republican would not have come up with this plan.

A least no republican I know of today would have included a slavery history museum
 
We had a similar controversy in New York City about 25 years ago. When digging the foundation for a new federal court building they found bones and decided it was a slave cemetery.

It was right on the old Five Points grounds, which anyone who saw "Gangs of New York" would know could be anyone's bones. Anyway, construction was delayed for over a year while the bones were carefully removed and a slave museum was built for them.
 
a republican would not have come up with this plan.

A least no republican I know of today would have included a slavery history museum




deliveryService


President George W. Bush signs H.R. 3491, the National Museum of African American History and Culture Act, in the Oval Office Tuesday, December 16, 2003. The act authorizes the creation of a Smithsonian Institution museum dedicated to the legacy of African Americans in America. White House photo by Paul Morse. The attendees are members of the Presidential Commission on the Development of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. From left, they are: Dr. Robert Wright, commission Chairman; Renee Amoore; Vicky Bailey; Andrew McLemore, Jr.; Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C.; Senator Rick Santorum, R-Penn.; Michael Lomax; Congressman John Lewis, D-Ga.; Harold Skramstad, Jr.; Barbara Franco; Robert Wilkins; Senator Sam Brownback, R-Kan.; Cicely Tyson; Lerone Bennett, Jr.; Congressman John Larson, D-Conn.; Eric Sexton; Claudine Brown; Larry Small, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; Currie Ballard.


:rofl2:
 
deliveryService


President George W. Bush signs H.R. 3491, the National Museum of African American History and Culture Act, in the Oval Office Tuesday, December 16, 2003. The act authorizes the creation of a Smithsonian Institution museum dedicated to the legacy of African Americans in America. White House photo by Paul Morse. The attendees are members of the Presidential Commission on the Development of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. From left, they are: Dr. Robert Wright, commission Chairman; Renee Amoore; Vicky Bailey; Andrew McLemore, Jr.; Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C.; Senator Rick Santorum, R-Penn.; Michael Lomax; Congressman John Lewis, D-Ga.; Harold Skramstad, Jr.; Barbara Franco; Robert Wilkins; Senator Sam Brownback, R-Kan.; Cicely Tyson; Lerone Bennett, Jr.; Congressman John Larson, D-Conn.; Eric Sexton; Claudine Brown; Larry Small, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; Currie Ballard.
:rofl2:

Nice try Racist X but you're wrong. A republican didn't come up with the plan for that museum. It was John Lewis (D) from GA.

Furthermore, the Dems and the Ind all voted yea on the act, but nine repubs voted nay.

http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2003/roll636.xml
 
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