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Story of Race Car Driving Pioneer Charlie “Speed King” Wiggins to be Told in Feature Film Biopic “Eraced”

Story of Race Car Driving Pioneer Charlie “Speed King” Wiggins to be Told in Feature Film Biopic “Eraced”

According to deadline.com, the story of Charles “Charlie” Wiggins, the most famous African American race car driver of the 1920s and 1930s, will be told in the feature film Eraced. Producing partners on the film will include racing brands Firestone and IndyCar.

Eraced will chronicle the victories and struggles of the once-legendary-now-little-known Charlie “Speed King” Wiggins, who worked his way from shoeshine to mechanic to star racer despite the brutal inequities of segregation and Jim Crow laws. After being barred repeatedly from whites-only racing events, Wiggins took the parallel Colored Speedway Association by storm and won the prestigious annual Gold and Glory Sweep-stakes four times between 1926 and 1935. When he suffered a career-ending injury in 1936, Wiggins had to deal with exorbitant medical bills and died almost penniless.

Original post from GoodBlackNews

Read More Here: https://goodblacknews.org/2021/07/13/story-of-race-car-driving-pioneer-charlie-speed-king-wiggins-to-be-told-in-feature-film-biopic-eraced/

Black History Sites will receive $3 Million in grants

Black History Sites will receive $3 Million in grants

A fund formed in response to the deadly racial violence four years ago in Charlottesville, Virginia, said Thursday it will award $3 million in grants to more than three dozen groups and sites nationwide to help preserve landmarks linked to Black history.

Recipients of money from the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund include a consortium of civil rights sites and Black churches in Alabama; work to establish an African American heritage trail in Colorado; and preservation of the church where Emmett Till’s funeral was held in Chicago after his lynching in Mississippi in 1955.

Other grants announced Thursday include money to hire a director for Save Harlem Now!, a historic preservation effort in New York; repairs to the African American Museum and Library in Oakland, California; and research on enslaved people at Hacienda La Esperanza in Puerto Rico.

Original post from Jay Reeves/Associated Press News

Read More here: https://apnews.com/article/race-and-ethnicity-1ee444bb3b26356831573e199f2e6463

Local Louisiana Native becomes the first African American to win National Spelling Bee

Local Louisiana Native becomes the first African American to win National Spelling Bee

The National Spelling Bee came to a conclusion Thursday night with Zaila Avant-garde, who is a 14-year-old from Harvey, Louisiana, taking home the top prize. 

Avant-garde won the championship in 18 rounds, defeating 10 other finalists, according to Yahoo News. 

“It felt like really good to become a winner simply because of the fact that I’ve been like working on it for like two years and then to finally have it like the best possible outcome was really good,” Avant-garde told “Good Morning America.” 

Avant-garde became the first African American contestant to win after 93 editions of the spelling competition, according to CNN. 

There has only been one other Black winner — Jody-Anne Maxwell, who was from Jamaica. She won in 1998, according to The New York Times. 

Read More: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/this-louisiana-teen-became-the-first-african-american-contestant-to-win-the-national-spelling-bee/ar-AALYrxp?ocid=msedgntp  

 

Original post from Herb Scribner/MSN-Deseret News 

New Mardi Gras Shipwreck Exhibit Announced to Open Spring 2022

New Mardi Gras Shipwreck Exhibit Announced to Open Spring 2022

The Louisiana Division of Archaeology and the Capitol Park Museum announce the opening of a new exhibit – The Mardi Gras Shipwreck. In 2007, a team of archaeologists and researchers mapped, recovered, and analyzed more than 1,000 artifacts from an underwater archaeological site in the Gulf of Mexico. While the artifacts and research indicate the ship sank in the early 1800s, the name of the ship and its crewmembers remain unknown. It’s referred to as the Mardi Gras Shipwreck for the pipeline where it was found in 2002 by Okeanos Gas Gathering Company while surveying the floor of the gulf about 35 miles off the coast in 4,000 feet of water. 

The Mardi Gras Shipwreck exhibit features recovered artifacts that remained underwater for over 200 years and represents over a decade of collaborative research and conservation. Visit the exhibit to learn more about what researchers pieced together from the remains of this mysterious shipwreck! 

The exhibit opens at the Capitol Park Museum in Baton Rouge on Thursday, June 17, with extended hours that evening from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The exhibit will remain up into spring 2022. 

 

Read more here: https://www.crt.state.la.us/news?NewsID=436  

Original report from Barry Landry/Louisiana Feed Your Soul 

LSU tears down New Orleans school building despite taxpayer-funded renovation

LSU tears down New Orleans school building despite taxpayer-funded renovation

Original report from JC Canicosa/LA Illuminator

Despite objections from preservationist groups, LSU has moved ahead with demolishing McDonogh No. 11, a 142-year-old New Orleans elementary school that has undergone millions of dollars of publicly-funded renovation and moving.

The LSU Health Science Center, which bought the building to make room for the University Medical Center, will build a clinic where McDonogh 11 currently stands. 

The Old McDonogh 11 building, photo taken June 2020

Edwin Murray, vice chancellor of the LSU Health Science Center, said in a phone interview last year McDonogh 11 was actually approved for demolition in 2010. Since then, the building has been moved three times by the state because preservationists wanted the building saved. The LSU Health Science Center had no desire to tear down the building, Murray said.

Ernie Ballard, a spokesperson for LSU, said the university “offered it to a number of preservationist groups but no one ultimately stepped up to do something with it.”

Danielle Del Sol, executive director of the Preservation Resource Center, said developers “desperately wanted to save” McDonogh 11, but the costs of moving and renovating the building were too much.

Read more: https://lailluminator.com/2021/06/23/new-orleans-school-building-mcdonogh-11-torn-down-despite-millions-spent-on-renovations/

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New Mural Shines Light on the Story of Juneteenth

New Mural Shines Light on the Story of Juneteenth

On June 19, 1865—a full two years after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation—Union General Gordon Granger issued General Order No. 3 in Galveston, Texas.

In the years that followed, Black communities, first in Texas and then across the United States, gathered to mark the day that became commonly known as Juneteenth. While knowledge of Juneteenth has evolved and grown, it has become the focus of the Juneteenth Legacy Project (JLP) to further elevate the history of June 19th as a central moment in United States history, while also supporting activist and educator Opal Lee’s campaign to make Juneteenth a federal holiday.

In 2021, the JLP is marking this day with the unveiling of a 5000-square-foot public art mural that overlooks the site where Granger issued General Order No. 3. The intent behind this installation—called Absolute Equality—is to reconsider the role of monuments and memorials in telling pivotal moments in American history, while emphasizing, as JLP co-chair and National Trust Advisor Sam Collins says in the Galveston Daily News, that “Absolute equality is not about equal results but about creating a society that supports all to become their very best selves to benefit a collective community.”

To read more visit: https://savingplaces.org/stories/absolute-equality-mural-reimagines-public-spaces-and-the-story-of-juneteenth#.YMJRr5NufFp

Source: National Trust for Historic Preservation, Priya Chhaya Reporting