'No longer forgotten' Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial in Alexandria recognized nationally
Local site added to Civil Rights Network: Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial first location chosen in Virginia
July 8, 2021
By Katherine Hapgood | khapgood@alextimes.com
The work of a citizen-led effort has finally come to fruition as the Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial will be dedicated as a new site to the African American Civil Rights Network on July 24. The memorial will be the first site recognized in Virginia as part of the national network.
The citizen-led crusade for preserving, commemorating and researching of the Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial was led by Lillie Franklea and Louise Massoud, who founded The Friends of Freedmens Cemetery in 1997, after archaeological remote sensing revealed the presence of more than 1,700 graves of contrabands and freed men, women and children in 1996, according to the Friends.
This increased attention to the cemetery was brought by improvements that were supposed to be made to the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, as this remote sensing in 1996 was used prior to drawing up plans for the bridge, Eleanor Breen, the citys archaeologist, said.
While Franklea and Massoud led the charge for proper recognition and dedication for the cemetery, the Alexandria Archaeological Commission, the nations oldest commission of its kind, led the initiative for the memorial to be recognized by the National Park Service as part of its African American Civil Rights Network.
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