Lafayette Community Rembrance Project

Timeline

Lafayette Community Remembrance Project

May 24, 2017: First public presentation by Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project researcher Kyleen Burke on the lynching of Elwood Higginbottom, hosted by April Grayson of the Winter Institute.

September 16, 2017: Based on Kyleen Burke’s research, my colleague Francesca Lovelady and I located two important sites of memory: the general site of the lynching, and the rural cemetery believed to be the site of Elwood Higginbottom’s unmarked grave. We hosted several members of the Higginbottom family in Oxford and showed them sites associated with Elwood Higginbottom and his death, including the two sites identified. This began a deep and ongoing relationship with the Higginbottom family, including Rev. EW Higginbottom, the son who was 4 at the time of his father’s lynching in 1935.

September 2017: Public presentation by Dr. Elizabeth Payne, UM professor of history, on the lynching of LQ Ivy, on the border of Lafayette and Union counties.

November 7, 2017: Open meeting with EJI representatives Kiara Boone and Evan Milligan in Oxford.

December 2017 and January 2018: Public meetings about the memorialization movement.

January thru April 2018: Fundraising for Higginbottom family travel expenses and a GoFundMe after Rev. Higginbottom and his daughter’s family lost their home in a fire.

February 2018: April Grayson presented to a local community gathering hosted by the Chamber of Commerce.

March 2018: Community dialogue circle facilitated by April Grayson, hosted by the Winter Institute.

March 24, 2018: Soil collection ceremony for Elwood Higginbottom, including about a dozen Higginbottom family members. We sent the soil to the collection at EJI’s Legacy Museum in Montgomery.

April 26-27, 2018: We traveled with several members of the Higginbottom family to the Peace & Justice Summit and memorial and museum openings in Montgomery, where they were able to see the jar of soil on display and the memorial with Elwood Higginbottom’s name. May/June 2018: Meetings with local officials and city staff about the project and placement of a marker on city property at “the Three-Way,” a busy location intersection near the site of the lynching.

June-July 2018: We submitted the Elwood Higginbottom marker text to EJI, and they approved language by Dr. Darren Grem.

August 7, 2018: April Grayson and Alonzo Hilliard presented at a public meeting of the Oxford Board of Aldermen, which unanimously approved use of city property at the Three-Way location.

August 28, 2018: General public informational meeting at Tallahatchie-Oxford Missionary Baptist Association (T.O.M.B.) in Oxford, including release of essay contest guidelines for local high school students. We heard from family members of another victim, Lawson Patton, through this meeting.

October 27, 2018: Elwood Higginbottom marker unveiling and dedication ceremony, attended by a multiracial group of 500 people, including about 45 Higginbottom family members.

2019: Planning for an additional county marker and the memorial pillar from EJI.

April 12, 2019: Meeting with two of five Lafayette County Board of Supervisors members regarding support for a new marker about all seven documented victims of lynching on the courthouse lawn in Oxford MS.

September 16, 2019: Presentation to the Board of Supervisors meeting requesting approval of the marker for the courthouse lawn. We received approval by a 4-1 vote, setting in motion the application to the Mississippi Department of Archives and History (MDAH).

Spring 2020: We heard from a family member of lynching victim William Steen, and he joined our steering committee.

July 2020: We received notification of formal approval of the marker by MDAH and reached out to the Board of Supervisors for planning.

November 13, 2020: Soil collection ceremony in memory of lynching victim William McGregory, on the 130th anniversary of the lynching, at Orwood MS.

December 7, 2020: After phone calls indicating the Board of Supervisors would not necessarily support the marker, we presented at the BOS meeting to ask for formal sign off on the MDAH marker. They indicated they would not approve unless we removed one of the names from the marker but were open to another conversation.

December 18, 2020: April Grayson hosted a Zoom call with two of the Supervisors and three Lafayette Community Remembrance Project steering committee members (Lydia Koltai, Alonzo Hilliard, Rev. Duncan Gray), using a circle dialogue approach, and we came to an agreement that they would approve the marker, including the name of the man they originally wanted removed.

January 19, 2021: Presentation to the Board of Supervisors for formal approval, with a vote in favor of 5-0.

March 5, 2021: April Grayson and Delois Higginbottom Wright presented about the project and the Higginbottom family story to a graduate art class at Western Carolina University.

May 8, 2021: Soil collection ceremony in memory of lynching victim William Steen, lynched in 1893, near Paris MS.

September 17, 2021: A small group of our steering committee gathered to formally dedicate the new marker on the Lafayette County courthouse lawn. Video here: https://fb.watch/85WVrEOnQu/ We had originally planned a large, public, outdoor unveiling event for the marker on the courthouse lawn, using safe Covid public health protocols, featuring speakers, music, and descendants of lynching victims. However, with the rise of the Delta variant in our state and the stress on our local healthcare systems, we decided to postpone that from September 25 to early 2022.

February 12, 2022: Soil collection ceremony in memory of lynching victim William Chandler, lynched in 1895, at Abbeville MS.

April 2, 2022: LCRP hosted a large, public, outdoor unveiling event on the Oxford Square for the new marker on the courthouse lawn, featuring speakers, music, and descendants of lynching victims. Later that day, we dedicated a city park bench in memory of Rev. E.W. Higginbottom, son of Elwood Higginbottom.

June 2022: Two community events, including Linen on the Lawn and Juneteenth, in Oxford MS.

Late 2022: We worked with a strategic planning facilitator to undertake a formal strategic planning process.

March 4, 2023: Antiracism and Community-Based Memory Conference, Martin University, Indianapolis IN.

Ongoing: oral history project