• PRINT EDITIONS
  • | CONTACT
  • | TEL: 540.962.2121 | E: hello@virginianreview.com
Monday, February 6, 2023
  • Login
  • Register
SUBSCRIBE
The Virginian Review
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • All
    • Business and Tech
    • Crime
    • Local News
    • National News
    • State News

    VFW Post 1033 To Change Wall Of Valor

    Boys Home Playground Project 2023

    Think You Found A Bear Den? Please Leave It Alone!

    Letter to Editor: 19th Annual Walk of Legacy Committee

    Letter to Editor: 19th Annual Walk of Legacy Committee

    Bath County Sheriff’s Office Weekly News Release for June 19-25, 2022

    Bath County Sheriff’s Office Weekly News Release Jan. 22-28

    Bath County Hospital Recognizes Dunlap Volunteer Fire And Rescue For Life Saving Transport

    Kyle Matt Moore Launches His Campaign For Sheriff Of Alleghany County-Covington

    Echoes of the Past: To Relief Of Americans In War Zone

    VSP Investigating Jan. 30 Fatal Crash In Augusta County

    VSP Investigating Jan. 30 Fatal Crash In Augusta County

    Trending Tags

      • LOCAL NEWS
      • STATE NEWS
      • NATIONAL NEWS
      • Business and Tech
      • CRIME
    • COMMUNITY
    • Obituaries
    • GOVERNMENT
      • All
      • City
      • County
      • State

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Getting Our Fiscal House In Order

      Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

      Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Say What?

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Say What?

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Crisis at the Border, a Lost Agent, and an Administration in Denial

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Crisis at the Border, a Lost Agent, and an Administration in Denial

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: The IRS and Big Tech are Watching You

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: The IRS and Big Tech are Watching You

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Connecting with Constituents, Bringing Their Voices to Washington

      Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Connecting with Constituents, Bringing Their Voices to Washington

      Congressman Griffith's Weekly E-Newsletter 3.24.22

      Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Return to the Basics

      Trending Tags

        • City
        • County
        • State
      • Sports
        • All
        • College Sports
        • High School Sports
        • Local Sports

        Chargers Blast Lumberjacks

        Senior Night Win Is Lady Mounties 13th Victory

        Lady Roadrunners Lose By 30; Persinger Records Double-Double

        Hawks Hold Off Roadrunners

        Cougars Big Road Win Over Chargers; Fall To Raiders

        Mounties Win Second Straight

        Lady Cavaliers Sweep Series Over Lady Mounties

        Second Half Rally Lifts Roadrunners Past Eagles

        Big Red Invitational Results; Mounties Place Sixth

        Trending Tags

          • Local Sports
          • High School Sports
          • College Sports
        • Lifestyle & Culture
        No Result
        View All Result
        • HOME
        • NEWS
          • All
          • Business and Tech
          • Crime
          • Local News
          • National News
          • State News

          VFW Post 1033 To Change Wall Of Valor

          Boys Home Playground Project 2023

          Think You Found A Bear Den? Please Leave It Alone!

          Letter to Editor: 19th Annual Walk of Legacy Committee

          Letter to Editor: 19th Annual Walk of Legacy Committee

          Bath County Sheriff’s Office Weekly News Release for June 19-25, 2022

          Bath County Sheriff’s Office Weekly News Release Jan. 22-28

          Bath County Hospital Recognizes Dunlap Volunteer Fire And Rescue For Life Saving Transport

          Kyle Matt Moore Launches His Campaign For Sheriff Of Alleghany County-Covington

          Echoes of the Past: To Relief Of Americans In War Zone

          VSP Investigating Jan. 30 Fatal Crash In Augusta County

          VSP Investigating Jan. 30 Fatal Crash In Augusta County

          Trending Tags

            • LOCAL NEWS
            • STATE NEWS
            • NATIONAL NEWS
            • Business and Tech
            • CRIME
          • COMMUNITY
          • Obituaries
          • GOVERNMENT
            • All
            • City
            • County
            • State

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Getting Our Fiscal House In Order

            Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

            Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Say What?

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Say What?

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Crisis at the Border, a Lost Agent, and an Administration in Denial

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Crisis at the Border, a Lost Agent, and an Administration in Denial

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: The IRS and Big Tech are Watching You

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: The IRS and Big Tech are Watching You

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Connecting with Constituents, Bringing Their Voices to Washington

            Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Connecting with Constituents, Bringing Their Voices to Washington

            Congressman Griffith's Weekly E-Newsletter 3.24.22

            Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Return to the Basics

            Trending Tags

              • City
              • County
              • State
            • Sports
              • All
              • College Sports
              • High School Sports
              • Local Sports

              Chargers Blast Lumberjacks

              Senior Night Win Is Lady Mounties 13th Victory

              Lady Roadrunners Lose By 30; Persinger Records Double-Double

              Hawks Hold Off Roadrunners

              Cougars Big Road Win Over Chargers; Fall To Raiders

              Mounties Win Second Straight

              Lady Cavaliers Sweep Series Over Lady Mounties

              Second Half Rally Lifts Roadrunners Past Eagles

              Big Red Invitational Results; Mounties Place Sixth

              Trending Tags

                • Local Sports
                • High School Sports
                • College Sports
              • Lifestyle & Culture
              No Result
              View All Result
              The Virginian Review
              No Result
              View All Result
              Home News State News

              Projects examining Richmond’s history win $16M in funding

              SARAH RANKIN by SARAH RANKIN
              December 21, 2022
              in State News
              Reading Time: 5 mins read
              A A
              0
              Projects examining Richmond’s history win $16M in funding

              FILE - Work crews work to remove the statue of confederate general Stonewall Jackson, Wednesday, July 1, 2020, in Richmond, Va. Richmond, Virginia, has secured an $11 million philanthropic donation to build a new interpretive center city officials hope will someday be part of an ambitious, long-envisioned memorial campus honoring the memory of enslaved people. Richmond’s grant is among more than $16 million in total funding The Mellon Foundation is providing to recipients in the former Confederate capital for projects that are “examining, preserving and reimagining” its “rich historical narratives.” (AP Photo/Steve Helber, file)

              2
              SHARES
              14
              VIEWS
              Share on FacebookShare on TwitterEMAIL

              RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The former Confederate capital has secured an $11 million donation to build an interpretive center that city officials hope will someday be part of an ambitious, long-envisioned memorial campus honoring the memory of enslaved people.

              Richmond’s grant is among more than $16 million in total funding The Mellon Foundation is providing to recipients in Virginia’s capital city for projects that are “examining, preserving and reimagining” its “rich historical narratives,” the New York-based nonprofit told The Associated Press ahead of a formal announcement Tuesday.

              Among the other grant recipients are a public art project, a museum and an initiative uplifting the story of a historically Black neighborhood. All are part of a push in Richmond — which recently removed its massive collection of Confederate statuary — to highlight other parts of its history.

              “Richmond has been the site of many stories that have shaped our understanding of who we are as Americans, but public commemoration in Richmond historically has been limited to only a few,” Elizabeth Alexander, president of the Mellon Foundation, said in a statement.

              “Today, the people of this city are lifting up the collective memory of its historic Black communities, unflinchingly addressing the city’s past as the capital of the state with the most enslaved people prior to the Civil War, and participating in the reimagining of the city’s public spaces to better reflect the fullness of its history,” Alexander said.

              City officials said in an interview and in written plans shared with AP that the $11 million grant will fund the creation of an “interpretive center” in 12,300 square feet of space in the first floor of the sleek, glassy trainshed of historic Main Street Station, a landmark visible to motorists cutting through the city on Interstate 95.

              Officials hope the center will be a space to welcome and orient visitors to Shockoe Bottom, one of the oldest neighborhoods in one of America’s oldest cities. The neighborhood was once a hub in the domestic slave trade, though that history is barely visible now.

              Hundreds of thousands of men, women and children were jailed, bought and sold in Richmond, and shipped across the South in the decades preceding the Civil War. For a time, Richmond was second only to New Orleans as a slave-trading center.

              Community activists have long pushed for public site in the neighborhood telling that history and honoring enslaved people, but the initiative has moved forward in fits and starts.

              The preservation of Shockoe Bottom rose to national attention in 2014 when former Mayor Dwight Jones proposed a baseball stadium-centered economic development project in the area that was ultimately scuttled in the face of outrage from community members who said Shockoe Bottom was sacred ground.

              Today, modest remembrances to the neighborhood’s slave-trading past are tucked away in a hard-to-find area adjacent to I-95, a parking lot and rumbling train tracks.

              In 2020, Richmond officials joined by community activists outlined plans for a Shockoe Bottom heritage campus that would include a museum and a park for reflection. The state has chipped in funding and the city has set aside almost $28 million for the project, including the museum planning, which is in its earliest stages, faces flooding-related zoning hurdles and will require significant additional money.

              The interpretive center will offer “a space to educate and immerse audiences in the history of Shockoe and is one of the first steps in bringing the larger Heritage Campus to fruition,” Mayor Levar Stoney said in a statement.

              Officials say the center will provide educational and artistic content about Richmond’s role in the slave trade, and space for visitors to Shockoe Bottom to escape the elements and orient themselves to the neighborhood, which includes other historical sites, including the Virginia Holocaust Museum.

              Among Mellon’s other Richmond grantees is The Valentine Museum, which is dedicated to the city’s history, and plans to use the money in part to “reimagine” the studio of Edward Valentine, a sculptor of Confederate figures.

              The foundation is also backing The JXN Project, an initiative aimed at telling the story of the role Richmond, and especially the historically Black Jackson Ward neighborhood, played in the Black American experience.

              Also receiving support are Reclaiming the Monument, a public art project that captured national attention for its projections on the now-removed base of an enormous Robert E. Lee statue; Untold RVA, an existing project that aims to tell hidden histories; and Cary Forward, which plans a “a multidisciplinary arts space, interpretive center, artist/scholar residency, and archival library.”

              The foundation said its award to Richmond was the first ever grant to a municipal government from its Monuments Project, a $250 million funding commitment launched in 2020 that aims to reimagine history-telling in public spaces.

              In an interview, Alexander said the project had supported initiatives including the Kansas relocation of an approximately 25-ton stone considered sacred to the Kaw Nation, and the Irei project, an effort to build a memorial to people of Japanese ancestry incarcerated in camps during World War II.

              In Richmond, which Alexander said she visited over the summer, the foundation found a city unusually eager to “contend and grapple” with its past.

              “The only way to move forward anyplace is to really look truthfully at our past and to envision a better future that is based on truth-telling and reckoning,” Alexander said.

              The foundation, which was established in 1969 by the children of industrialist, statesman and philanthropist Andrew W. Mellon, bills itself as the nation’s largest supporter of the arts and humanities.

              SARAH RANKIN
              SARAH RANKIN
              Tags: AmericansAttentionBaseballCommunityEducationExperienceFundingHistoryMain StreetOfficialPastPeopleRoseStreetTimeVirginiaWarWorld War IWorld War II
              Previous Post

              Police: Alcohol, speed contributed to fatal bus, truck crash

              Next Post

              Virginia probes hiring of trooper who killed teen’s family

              SARAH RANKIN

              SARAH RANKIN

              Related Posts

              31 New Troopers Join VSP Ranks
              State News

              31 New Troopers Join VSP Ranks

              by Virginian Review Staff
              January 30, 2023
              Virginia Hospitals Recognized For Clinical Excellence In National Assessment By Healthgrades
              State News

              Virginia Hospitals Recognized For Clinical Excellence In National Assessment By Healthgrades

              by Virginian Review Staff
              January 30, 2023
              Virginia Democrats defeat bills limiting abortion access
              State News

              Virginia Democrats defeat bills limiting abortion access

              by SARAH RANKIN
              January 27, 2023
              AG: Ex-parole board chair violated law; too late for charges
              State News

              AG: Ex-parole board chair violated law; too late for charges

              by SARAH RANKIN
              January 27, 2023
              State News

              Individual Income Tax Filing Season Is Underway

              by Virginian Review Staff
              January 27, 2023
              Load More
              Next Post
              Virginia probes hiring of trooper who killed teen’s family

              Virginia probes hiring of trooper who killed teen's family

              Leave a Reply Cancel reply

              Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

              Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Getting Our Fiscal House In Order

              January 30, 2023
              Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

              Agenda Set For Iron Gate Town Council Meeting

              January 25, 2023
              Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

              Congressman Griffith’s Weekly E-Newsletter: Santa Through the Years

              December 27, 2022
              Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

              Sixth District Perspectives with Congressman Ben Cline: Remembering a Public Servant

              December 27, 2022

              Browse by Category

              • No categories

              Browse by Tags

              Alleghany County Bath County Business Clifton Clifton Forge Community County Covington Dear Abby Death Echoes of the Past Education Family Featured Forge Funeral home Hand Health Home Individual Information Law Life Meeting Nation Night Office Official OK Parent Past People Rent Report Road School Street Student Team Time Tree VA Virginia War West
              QR Code
              The Virginian Review

              Serving Covington, Clifton Forge, Alleghany County and Bath County Since 1914.

              Information

              • Privacy Policy
              • Terms & Conditions
              • Careers
              • Contact Us

              © 2022 The Virginian Review | All Rights Reserved. | Powered by Ecent Corporation

              No Result
              View All Result
              • Login
              • __________________
              • Home
              • Editions
              • News
              • Community
              • Obituaries
              • Sports
              • Government
              • Lifestyle & Culture
              • __________________
              • Contact Us
              • Careers
              • Subscribe
              • Terms & Conditions
              • Privacy Policy

              © 2022 The Virginian Review | All Rights Reserved. | Powered by Ecent Corporation

              Welcome Back!

              Sign In with Facebook
              Sign In with Google
              OR

              Login to your account below

              Forgotten Password? Sign Up

              Create New Account!

              Sign Up with Facebook
              Sign Up with Google
              OR

              Fill the forms bellow to register

              All fields are required. Log In

              Retrieve your password

              Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

              Log In

              Subscribe For Full Access

              Flipbooks are available to paid subscribers only. Subscribe now or log in for access.