In 1874, the Greenwood Cemetery was founded as the first Black commercial burial ground for the St. Louis area’s growing Black population after the Civil War.
At least 50,000 people were buried in Greenwood, including at least a half dozen relatives of Raphael Morris.
The Greenwood Cemetery Preservation Association, a group of local volunteers and historians, has cleared out about half the cemetery and located several documents to identify those buried.
So far, they’ve found some form of record for at least 35,000 people.
“When we first started in 1999, we had nothing. Today, you could give me a name and I can go to the... records and say, ‘Yes, this person is there,’” says a historian with the group.
“For some of these souls, the only record of their existence may be Greenwood Cemetery records.”
In Georgia, Friends of Pierce Chapel African American Cemetery have spent nearly three years cleaning out the cemetery and identifying people buried there.
The group has also been lobbying an electric company and a cable provider to remove power and cable lines they installed.
In Durham, NC, a local group has partnered with a monument company, Eagle Scouts, and community orgs to restore Geer Cemetery, where 1,600+ Black people are buried.
The group has worked to clear the land, hold tours for the public, and learn all it can about those buried at Geer
In Richmond, Virginia, preservationists have urged city and state leaders to cancel plans to build a railway through the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground in Richmond, whose 31 acres are marred by billboards, an abandoned gas station, railroad tracks and part of Interstate 64.
Read more from @CiCiAdams_ about the movement to preserve and restore Black cemeteries across the country: nbcnews.to/3GI1g30
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Across the country, immunocompromised people, the disabled, and the elderly are watching as states relinquish a requirement that compelled all members of the community to protect themselves and each other. #NBCNewsThreads (1/8) nbcnews.com/health/health-…
One concern for many is that ending mask mandates is just another step toward leaving the disabled, immunocompromised and elderly behind as the country tries to move past the pandemic. (2/8)
Advocates for the disabled and immunocompromised in states that recently lifted their mandates or did away with them long ago say that it’s driven members of their communities to be even more alone and disconnected from society. (3/8) nbcnews.com/health/health-…
@carolelee@ckubeNBC While administration officials say the U.S. and its allies are more closely aligned now than even just weeks ago, Biden has riffed during private meetings about some of his counterparts, according to people who have heard him use the descriptions in closed-door sessions.
@carolelee@ckubeNBC German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is no Angela Merkel, Biden has said, according to the sources. He’s described British PM Boris Johnson’s demeanor as blustery, they said. And French President Emmanuel Macron, Biden has said, wants to be Charles de Gaulle, the sources said.
SPECIAL REPORT: Hundreds of books have been pulled from Texas libraries for review, sometimes over the objections of school librarians, several of whom told @NBCNews they face mounting pressure to pre-emptively pull books that might draw complaints.
Records requests to nearly 100 school districts in Texas revealed 75 formal requests by parents or community members to ban books from libraries during the first four months of this school year.
For comparison, one challenge was filed during the same time period a year earlier.
All but a few of the formal library challenges sent to Texas school districts targeted books dealing with racism or sexuality, with the majority of them featuring LGBTQ characters and explicit descriptions of sex.
Although Russia has denied its planning to attack the former Soviet state, Putin has issued several security demands that have been dismissed by the West, resulting in a diplomatic stalemate. (2/8)
The current standoff centers on Putin’s demands for security guarantees for Russia that would include a stop to NATO’s expansion eastward, a formal veto to stop Ukraine from ever joining the military alliance, and roll backs of NATO's military deployments in the region. (3/8)
New York City could see between 2 inches and 20 inches of snow this weekend. nbcnews.to/3IwdJbA
There's still high uncertainty in the forecast Wednesday, due to disagreement among forecast models showing two scenarios: A storm that stays offshore enough to bring a few inches of snow to the I-95 corridor or a storm that tracks close enough to produce a crippling snowstorm.
The pieces will start to come together Friday, with a fast-moving storm system moving through the mid-Atlantic and Northeast.
Meanwhile, another disturbance will move across the southern tier, eventually becoming a coastal low off the Carolina coast.
Arizona Republicans have put forth two dozen bills this month that would significantly change the state's electoral processes after the GOP's review of millions of ballots affirmed President Biden's victory and turned up no proof of fraud. nbcnews.to/3rNsCzy
Proposals introduced would add an additional layer to the state's voter ID requirement, such as fingerprints, and stipulate the hand counting of all ballots by default.
Other legislation would require that paper ballots be printed with holograms and watermarks.
Republican legislators argue that the proposals, part an ongoing surge of GOP-led election changes enacted or under consideration across the country, are necessary to enhance election security and prevent fraud.