Here are their stories, told like never before.
The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Remembrance Project
invites you to learn, share and face the truth about our history, together.
is part of a national movement by the Equal Justice Initiative to tell the truth about racial terror lynchings in America, to understand how this violent history still shapes our lives today, and to help our community move toward reconciliation.
'Haunted by our history'
Listen to Equal Justice Initiative founder Bryan Stevenson on America’s need to recover from the legacy of violence and racial terrorism:
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The stories
New details about how Joe McNeely was allowed to be lynched in 1913 — where Bank of America Stadium is today.
The mystery, nearly a century old, of the 1929 lynching of Willie McDaniel. in the area of today’s Reedy Creek Park.
It’s time to face our past: For too long, we have not faced all that Charlotte, and Mecklenburg, have been.
The Remembrance Project began with bus trips to the lynching memorial, which offered horror — and a challenge.
Listen to spoken word poet Hannah Hasan perform “It Happened Here,” three pieces commissioned by the CMRP.
She discovered that a single photograph reveals the price her family paid when threatened with lynchings.