Richmond Free Press March 31-April 2, 2022 edition

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Who won? B2

Richmond Free Press © 2022 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.

VOL. 31 NO. 14

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA

www.richmondfreepress.com

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Meet this week’s Personality B3

MARCH 31-APRIL 2, 2022

Signs of the times University of Richmond campus buildings honoring slaveholders and segregationists are getting new names after years of pushing Board of Trustees to make changes By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Six buildings on the University of Richmond’s campus are being cleansed of the names of slaveholders and champions of segregation, including a building named in honor of the university’s founding president, the Rev. Robert Ryland. “What a great day,” enthused Christopher Wiggins, a 2003 UR graduate and freelance journalist who has advocated for the name changes at the predominantly white private school. “It is beyond time that the University of Richmond takes this step forward toward healing the scars of its past.” The university’s Board of Trustees, which last year balked at removing two controversial names, voted unanimously last Saturday to immediately change the buildings’ names. The dramatic action went largely unnoticed until Monday, when the university’s new president, Dr. Kevin F. Hallock, issued a letter to the campus community as workers began removing or covering the names of the now tarnished honorees on six buildings, most of whom were instrumental in the school’s development.

Topping the list of changes is Ryland Hall, an academic building on the National Register of Historic Places named for Rev. Ryland, a slaveholder who rented the people he purchased to the school and collected money for their labor. He was president of the school beginning in 1841. He also served as pastor of First African Baptist Church when state law required white pastors of Black churches. One wing of the building is named for Rev. Ryland and the other wing for his nephew, Charles H. Ryland, who served as trustee, treasurer and librarian of the college from 1873 to 1914. The building now will be called the Humanities Building. A dormitory named for the late Richmond newspaper editor, Confederate apologist and segregation crusader Douglas Southall Freeman, a longtime UR trustee and rector of the board, is now Residence Hall No. 3. Mr. Freeman, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian of the Confederacy and its military leaders, spread his belief in racial segregation and the bogus science of racial purity or eugenics Please turn to A4

Biden signs historic Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act Free Press wire, staff report

Laura Knouse

Crews at the University of Richmond waste no time in covering the names of slaveholders and segregationists on campus buildings following approval last week of the UR Board of Trustees. Here, ladders were raised to cover the name of Puryear Hall, an academic building named for Bennet Puryear, a slave-owning UR chemistry teacher and faculty leader. The building’s new name is Fountain Hall.

Marker recognizing city’s liberation by Union troops near Civil War’s end damaged in East End By George Copeland Jr.

An accident or act of intentional vandalism? Officials with the state Department of Historic Resources are unsure of the cause, but told the Richmond Free Press on Wednesday that the historical marker recognizing the Union Army’s liberation of Richmond from Confederate control on April 3, 1865, leading to the end of the Civil War had been knocked down recently and “damaged beyond repair.” The marker still has not been replaced days before the 157th anniversary of the event and a celebration marking when and where the Union troops, led by African-American units, entered the city. “There’s no question we’re going ahead with the program on Sunday,” said Phil Wilayto of the Virginia Defenders for Freedom, Justice and Equality. “It’s the site that’s important, not the marker.” The Virginia Defenders, along with the Sacred Ground Historical Reclamation Project, organized the anniversary celebration Please turn to A4

Sandra Sellars/Richmond Free Press

Hand in hands Year-old Deilani Bland-Murph holds on to the hands of her mother, Tyshell Bland, right, and that of a Richmond SPCA volunteer at last Saturday’s 20th Annual Dog Jog and 5k to benefit the pets in the care of the local SPCA. People and their pets came from all over the region to participate in the event held at the SPCA, 2519 Hermitage Road near The Diamond. The day was packed with games and activities for people of all ages. Deilani’s mom and the volunteer helped her on the “Little Paws” Fund Run for the youngest of all. The day kicked off with a 5K run/walk for people, followed by a leisurely mile-long Dog Jog for people and their dogs.

In a ceremony in the White House Rose Garden, President Biden sat at a small desk and put his signature on the Emmett Till Anti-Lynching Act that now makes lynching punishable by up to 30 years in prison. “Lynching was pure terror to enforce the lie that not everyone belongs in America, not everyone is created equal. Terror to systemically undermine hardfought civil rights,” President Biden said to the audience of civil rights leaders, Congressional Black Caucus members and other elected officials and guests. The new law is named for Emmett Till, the Black 14-year-old from Chicago who in 1955 was visiting relatives in Money, Miss., when he was accused of whistling at a white woman. He was kidnapped, beaten and shot in the head. A large metal fan was tied to his neck with barbed wire and his body was thrown into the Tallahatchie River. His mother, Mamie Till, insisted on an open casket at his funeral to show the brutality he suffered. Photos published in JET magazine at the time propelled the story about the teen’s death to national attention, galvanizing public outcry that helped spark the Civil Rights Movement.

Associated Press

It was more than 120 years in the making, but President Biden on Tuesday signed into law the first federal legislation to make lynching a hate crime, addressing a history of racist killings in the United States.

Two white men, Roy Bryant and his half-brother J.W. Milam, were charged with the teen’s murder, but were acquitted by an all-white male jury. The two later told a reporter that they kidnapped and killed the teen. At Tuesday’s ceremony, President Biden was joined by the Rev. Wheeler

Parker Jr. of Chicago, a cousin of Emmett Till who was with him in the grocery store when Emmett allegedly whistled at Carolyn Bryant. Rev. Parker also is the last living witness to Emmett’s abduction at gunpoint from his great-uncle’s home

Training program for released convicts faces shutdown By Jeremy M. Lazarus

Rodney Brown had just served a six-year sentence in prison in 2018 when he found his way to the nonprofit Adult Alternative Program at 4929 Chamberlayne Ave. in the city’s North Side. The Richmond native said the 90-day re-entry program that contractor Kenneth Williams created proved “life changing” for him. Describing himself as aimless and jobless when he arrived, Mr. Brown said the program helped him give him focus; taught him life skills; enabled him to gain basic training in HVAC, the acronym for heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems; and linked him to his first full-time job ever. Four years later, the 36-yearold said he is still working full time, owns a car, pays his rent and is preparing to get married in September. “Before I got into the pro-

gram, I could not imagine that happening for me,” Mr. Brown said. That’s the kind of success story Mr. Williams envisioned when he started the program for former male and female inmates in Richmond Public Schools’ vacant REAL School building at Chamberlayne and Azalea avenues on the border with Henrico County. A former convict himself, Mr. Williams, 73, said he got a second chance by learn-

ing building trades and then starting his own construction business. He said he started the program to give others the same opportunity – a prospect that gained momentum after RPS authorized him to use the building in 2016, about two years after the REAL School moved out. He said he finally got the first floor of the building in shape with help from a variety Please turn to A4

Free COVID-19 testing, vaccines Free community testing for COVID-19 continues. The Richmond and Henrico County health districts are offering testing at the following location: • Wednesday, April 6, 4 to 6 p.m.—Southwood Pool House, Southwood Parkway and Clarkson Road. Walk-up testing is provided, though appointments may be set by calling (804) 205-3501 or going to www.rchd.com. Call the Richmond and Henrico COVID-19 Hotline at (804) 205-3501 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday for more information on testing sites, or go online at vax.rchd.com. The Virginia Department of Health also has a list of COVID19 testing locations around the state at www.vdh.virginia.gov/

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VSU hoping to get mileage, exposure on NASCAR circuit By Fred Jeter

With some strong backing from Virginia State University, Rajah Caruth is revved up and ready to hit the gas. The 20-year-old sophomore at Winston-Salem State University will be competing Saturday, April 2, in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at Richmond Raceway. It will be the first NASCAR race for Caruth, a native of Washington D.C. He will be driving the No. 44 car bearing the VSU logo and orange and blue colors as he speeds around the track in the Toyota Care 250. He is being sponsored by Please turn to A4


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