Meet this week’s Personality B1
Richmond Free Press
VOL. 30 NO. 36
© 2021 Paradigm Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
www.richmondfreepress.com
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The scoop B2
SEPTEMBER 2-4, 2021
Martinsville Seven pardoned
Gov. Ralph S. Northam uses his power to help right a decades-old wrong in which seven Black men from Martinsville were executed in 1951 without due process Free Press wire, staff report
Photos by Regina H. Boone/Richmond Free Press
Former Richmond Mayor Rudolph McCollum Jr., center, speaks Tuesday at a rally in Capitol Square that turned into a celebration after Gov. Ralph S. Northam announced he had given posthumous pardons to the Martinsville Seven. Holding the banner are Timothy R. Thomas, left, and Craig Watson. Mr. McCollum’s uncle, Booker T. Millner, and great uncle, Francis DeSales Grayson, were among the seven men executed in 1951. Right, a poster contains drawings of the Martinsville Seven who were pardoned posthumously. They are Francis DeSales Grayson, 37; Booker T. Millner, 19, Frank Hairston Jr., 18; Howard Lee Hairston, 18; James Luther Hairston, 20; Joe Henry Hampton, 19; and John Clabon Taylor, 21.
It took 70 years, but the Martinsville Seven have finally been pardoned. On Tuesday, Gov. Ralph S. Northam granted posthumous pardons to the seven Black men who were executed in 1951 for the rape of a 32-year-old white woman. All of them were tried by all-white male juries. Four of the men were executed in Virginia’s electric chair on Feb. 2, 1951. Three days later, the remaining three also were electrocuted. It was the largest group of people executed for a single-victim crime in Virginia’s history. The case attracted pleas for mercy from around the world and in recent years has been denounced as an example of racial disparity in the use of the death penalty. The governor announced the pardons after meeting with about a dozen descendants of the men and their advocates. Cries and sobs could be heard from some of the descendants after his pardon announcement. “Thank you, Jesus. Thank you, Lord,” James Walter Grayson of Baltimore, the 74year-old son of Francis DeSales Grayson, sobbed when Gov. Northam told family members during a meeting on Tuesday that he had granted the pardons. Mr. Grayson said he was 4 when his father was executed. “It means so much to me,” he said of the pardon. “I remember the very day the police came to the door. He embraced each of us and said,
‘I will be back.’ They took him away, but he never came back,” he told the Free Press. The pardon was issued on what would have been Francis DeSales Grayson’s 108th birthday. “History was made today,” Mr. Grayson said. “I knew that God would move today, and He did.” Rudolph McCollum Jr., a former Richmond mayor who is the great-nephew of Francis DeSales Grayson and the nephew of another one of the executed men, Booker T. Please turn to A4
Small signs of recovery starting after Ida’s devastation Free Press wire report
David J. Phillip/Associated Press
Jeremy Hodges walks Monday onto his family’s storage unit in Houma, La., an area that was devastated by Hurricane Ida that struck Sunday with winds over 150 mph.
NEW ORLEANS Lights came back on for a fortunate few, some corner stores opened their doors and crews cleared fallen trees and debris from a growing number of roadways Wednesday — small signs of progress amid the monumental task of repairing the damage inflicted by Hurricane Ida. Still, suffering remained widespread three days after Ida battered Louisiana and parts of Mississippi as the fifth most powerful hurricane to strike the United States. Some low-lying communities remained largely under water. Roughly 1 million homes and businesses still had no electricity, and health officials said more than 600,000 people lacked running water. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he was pleased that power had returned for some people, saying it was “critically important to show progress” after the storm. But he also acknowledged that much more work lay ahead. “I’m very mindful that it’s a start, and only a start,” he told Please turn to A4
Clement Britt
Henry L. Marsh III, Richmond’s first African-American mayor and a former state senator, cuts the ribbon at Saturday’s ceremony dedicating the new Richmond elementary school named in his honor. The school is located at 813 N. 28th St. Flanking Mr. Marsh are his daughter, Nadine Marsh-Carter, left, and Principal Kimberly Cook.
Henry L. Marsh III Elementary School: A building worthy of kings and queens By Jeremy M. Lazarus and Ronald E. Carrington
Henry L. Marsh III grew up across the street from the handsome new elementary school in Church Hill that is named in his honor. Saturday, the man who rose to become Richmond’s first Black mayor, fight for civil rights in courtrooms across Virginia and
serve in the state Senate for two decades was on hand to cut the ribbon to formally open the $42 million building that will educate potential future leaders beginning next Wednesday, Sept. 8. Now 87, Mr. Marsh did not speak at Saturday’s ceremony, but his daughter, former School Board member Nadine Marsh-Carter, Please turn to A4
File photo
Snafu puts warehouse donated to RPS on path for auction By Jeremy M. Lazarus
In a surprise move, City Hall appears to be pushing to sell at auction for unpaid taxes a tobacco factory that was donated to Richmond Public Schools, which plans to convert it into a career and technical education high school, but is now owned by a for-profit entity. In a filing submitted July 26 to Richmond Circuit Court, the city attorney’s office began the process of seeking court permission to put the property up for public auction to recover about $500,000 in taxes that have gone unpaid for the past four years. However, the auction process is on track to be terminated before a sale can happen, officials said this week. The taxes have been an RPS liability ever since the system accepted the donation from a subsidiary of tobacco giant Altria in 2017 of the vacant office-warehouse-stemmery complex at 2301 Maury St. in South Side. The court filing follows the council’s approval of a capital budget plan in which Mayor Levar M. Stoney recommended borrowing up to $100 million to pay for conversion of the factory into a technical high school. RPS also has an agreement with Reynolds Community College to create a joint operation, and the school system is planning within two months to issue a request for proposals for an architectural firm to handle the design work. The property tax snafu began at the time of the donation. To lay the groundwork to secure federal and state historic tax credits that would help finance the projected $60 million to Please turn to A4
Clement Britt
Making a move Denzel Johnson, 14, a student at CodeRVA Regional High School, makes a bold move during the Bright Minds RVA Chess Tournament last Friday at the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia. The pilot program drew area youngsters to classes and competition sponsored by the Bernice E. Travers Foundation. Please see more photos, B2.
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 locations: • Wednesday, Sept. 8, 9 to 11 a.m., Eastern Henrico Recreation Center Pavilion, 1440 N. Laburnum Ave. • Thursday, Sept. 9, 1 to 3 p.m., Hotchkiss Field Community Center, 701 E. Brookland Park Blvd. Appointments are not necessary, but can be made by calling the Richmond and Henrico COVID-19 Hotline at (804) 205-3501 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by registering online at https://bit.ly/RHHDCOVID.
Please turn to A4