As defined by Merriam Webster a monument is "A lasting evidence, reminder, or example of someone or something notable or great." and I think a monument should be exactly that, a reminder. With that said the fountain on Court Street is neither a reminder nor something notably great. Its a coverup for the busy and bustling slave trade center that used to be there. Instead of having a bland uninteresting fountain there could be a monument to something that truly moved the society farther forward. Having a monument to the Freedom Riders would be of something notably great as well as a reminder to what they did for the Civil Rights Movement. That monument should also represent the people who participated in that something notably great, and it should mean something to everyone, it has to have its purpose but also resonate with the viewer.
As I've learned from the Freedom Riders Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, The Freedom Riders were a group of people who's goal was to get the supreme courts attention so they would crack down on the southern negligence of the outlaw on segregated travel. They were trying to get to New Orleans from Washington D.C. by bus as to get the Supreme Court's attention. Not only did they do it, but they were brutalized by mobs and their buses were broken and battered and they kept going. When the buses reached Anniston, Alabama there was even a firebomb thrown into the bus while someone held the door closed (Stanford University Article) The mob attacks on the freedom riders was violent and chaotic. When the buses reached the bus stop where the museum is today, the riders were beaten nearly to death (Freedom Riders Museum). After the mob attacks, the riders kept going. As more and more reports of more riders came in, the government finally gave in. Attorney General Kennedy petitions the ICC (Interstate Commerce Commission) to enforce that all people must be able to ride as equals. As the museum states the Freedom Riders' movement it was a "symbolic resistance to the end of segregation" and as MLK himself put the whole movement as "A psychological turning point in our whole struggle."(Freedom Riders Museum)
| Court Street Fountain (Tripadvisor) |
| Smithsonian Mag picture of the burning bus |
| EJI Memorial for Peace and Justice birdseye view |
Sources:
Smithsonian Mag; The Freedom Riders, Then and Now
Stanford Freedom Riders Article
Freedom Riders Museum History
Merriam Webster Definition
EJI Memorial
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