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Tuesday, 30 November 2010

 

New Board Members Elected


Twenty four directors oversee the council's programs, policies, and finances.  The Governor appoints six directors, and the board elects eighteen.  Five new directors, elected November 19, 2010 alre listed below:

     Paul Custodio Bube
     Professor of Religion
     Lyon College
     Batesville, AR

     Derek Allen Clements
     Coordinator of the Randolph County Archives of Oral History
     Randolph County Heritage Museum
     Pocahontas, AR

     Freeman McKindra, Sr.
     Community Liaison
     College of Public Health
     UAMS
     Little Rock, AR

     Rex Nelson
     Senior V.P. for Government Relations and Public Outreach
     The Communication Group
     Little Rock, AR

     Stan Poole
     Vice President for Academic Affairs
     Ouachita Baptist University
     Arkadelphia, AR 

The new directors will begin serving three-year terms on January 1, 2011.

To nominate a candidate for the board, send a letter of nomination and the candidate's resume to the membership committee in care of the council office at 407 President Clinton Avenue, Suite 201, Little Rock, AR  72201.  The letter should explain the candidate's qualifications, and should indicate that he or she is willing to serve if elected.

 


Tuesday, 25 May 2010

 

Teacher's Guides


Road to Removal - The Cherokees, 1800-1840

Attention schools, libraries, historical societies - and anyone else that received this DVD - please click on the link below to obtain a Teacher's Guide for this program.  Road to Removal explains the Cherokee experience during early Arkansas settlement and follows on with the further pushing of the Cherokees into Indian Territory (Oklahoma) in the late 1820s and 1830s.  This film was produced by Gilles Carter and American Revolutionary Productions, LLC, and the Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation with additional funding provided by The Arkansas Humanities Council, The Oklahoma Humanities Council, and The Cherokee Heritage Center. 

NOTE:  We no longer have any copies of this DVD available.  If we are able to obtain some more we will announce it in this article.


Please select a Teacher's Guide from the list below.


Tuesday, 01 September 2009

 

Preserving local history by Saving the Cemeteries by Jeff Root


A clear day in Waldo is likely to find Earnest Hills and Edna Hopson in Cedar Grove Cemetery, each devoted to saving a piece of history in a town where the future is in doubt. 

With its schools consolidated with those in nearby Magnolia and many of its young people leaving town, Waldo struggles to find a path to a viable future. Its history, too, is in danger.

For Hills and Hopson, that history is wrapped up in Cedar Grove Cemetery, where at least 169 residents completed their chapters in the community's story. Just as competition choked out much of the Waldo business district, the cemetery is in danger of being choked out by the surrounding piney woods. Hills does his part with a lawn mower and trimmer, using his own gas, his own equipment and his own unpaid effort. A retired elementary school principal, Hills can protect the gravesites for now, but he doesn't know who will come forward when his time is done.

Hopson, also a retired educator, is doing everything within her power to create a long-term plan to save the AHC_cemetery.jpgcemetery and mine the local history it has to offer. With assistance from the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Arkansas Archaeological Survey, Hopson's organization, Angels Anonymous Cemetery Association, is restoring and preserving three African-American cemeteries: Cedar Grove in Waldo, Laneburg Cemetery and Cravens Cemetery in Prescott.

Edna Hopson quickly enlisted her husband, Homer, in Angels Anonymous. In addition to Hills, other leaders in the effort soon included Homer's brother, Herman, and his wife, Juanita. Edna, as project director, landed a $1,000 AHC planning grant in 2005 and an AHC major grant for $6,829.55 in 2006.

The immediate work includes compiling cemetery documentation, mapping and photographing the sites, and fencing the known boundaries. Locating boundaries now lost in the woods, repair to individual grave sites, remote sensing to find unmarked graves and the placement of footstones where no headstone is present will follow.

Both Edna and Juanita became motivated when they saw major differences in where loves ones were buried. Juanita lost a son 14 years ago. A veteran, he was buried in a beautiful military cemetery in Riverside, California.

"At that time I was living in California, and I would come home during the summer and go see my grandparents," Juanita said. "Their cemetery wasn't up to par. I would go out there and pull weeds. Then when I moved down here I read about the humanities council . . . we filled out applications to get in there and improve our cemetery.

"Its just a shame we put someone in the ground . . . even though we know their soul is not there, but that's the last place you put their body. Honor that. That's what we're trying to do," Juanita Hopson said.

Edna Hopson, who has started more than one non-profit community organization since her retirement as an elementary teacher, attended an AHC meeting in 2004 to learn more about cemetery preservation. It was led by Jama Best, program officer for AHC, and featured Dr. Ann Early, state archaeologist of the Arkansas Archeological Survey, and Temela Tenpenny-Lewis, who has much experience preserving historic African-American cemeteries. Edna went to work immediately.

"Jama came down and gave us all the information we needed to get started," Edna said. "She did assessments of the cemeteries. She has provided assistance by e-mail. Lavona [Wilson, senior program officer with the AHC] helped also. We had never written a grant before. They were so kind about helping. They put you on the right track. They will give you technical help. When you get stuck on research, you call them and they'll steer you in the right direction.

"I haven't seen an organization like AHC. If you're organized and want to do something, they'll jump in and help you do it. If they can't give you assistance, they can show you where to get it. They educate you."

The Arkansas Archeological Survey also provided significant assistance, from the original presentation the Hopsons heard from Dr. Early to cemetery visits from David Jeane, assistant with the AAS research station at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia.

The Laneburg cemetery is perhaps the most mysterious of the three. Its proper name is unknown. The last is privately owned, but the cemetery originally was associated with a local Baptist church. The association ended when the church moved to Prescott 50 years ago.

At Cravens Cemetery, Angels Anonymous faces the rather daunting challenge of clearing a line of trees and underbrush in order to locate both marked and unmarked graves. On a recent venture into the brush, Edna found markers for people she knew.

"My former neighbors are out there on the edge of the woods," Edna said, "We didn't put a fence up that side because we know there are graves out there. We're going to try to clean it up and get their names on record."

Finding unmarked graves can be achieved through remote sensing, but determining the identities of those who either don't have a headstone or have an unreadable one is quite another challenge. For this reason, the Hopsons are conducting oral histories.

"I was interviewing and videotaping one of the trustees, and he was telling me where people were buried who did not have headstones, so we could get footstones," Edna said, "The oral history will substantiate what we're finding in obituaries. It is first-hand information that allows us to be sure what we're finding is true.

"We're trying to validate what we're doing. When you know you have the truth, then you don't mind sharing it with other people. With oral history, we're getting names and they're showing us places where people are buried. We want to preserve it and share the information with the public."

Sharing the information, whether with genealogical researchers or collectors of local history, includes the final goal for the group - finding the next generation of citizens interested in protecting the cemeteries. Juanita hopes people will see the logic of becoming involved.

"With our younger kids . . . if we can just get them interested in it, we they can keep it up," Juanita said. "We're all going here someday . . . whether it's here or another cemetery, we'll all going. I would like to think that someone out there is taking care of the final resting place for my physical body."

Edna agrees and believes she's finally seeing positive signs.

"The greatest reaction we've seen so far has been in Prescott, because the church where I attend is associated with one of the cemeteries," Edna said. "They've always tried to keep it presentable, but since we've been involved more people have been trying to help. We've had more participation.

"The beauty shop is where I tell a lot of people about this. It's been hard getting started, but if you let it [the cemeteries] go down, they'll never [preserve it]. This is something that is very important. We need this."


Tuesday, 01 September 2009

 

AHC Welcomes New Board Members


The Arkansas Humanities Council board has twenty-four directors, eighteen elected by the board and six appointed by the Governor.

Directors broadly represent the demographics of the state, serve up to two three-year terms, oversee the council's work, and make decisions about grant applications.

Board officers for 2010 are Kris Katrosh, Chair; Dr. Pat Ramsey, Vice Chair; Dr. Lillie Fears, Treasurer; and Bettie Mahony, Secretary.

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Thursday, 05 November 2009

 

Digital Book Club is Big Hit in Jonesboro


Summer might be considered a time of play for many children, but for some youth in Jonesboro, it was a time to read about the new president, the first lady, and other topics in the humanities.  Made possible by an Arkansas Humanities Council Children and Adults Reading Together (C.A.R.T.) grant, the Digital Book Club proved to be quite a draw for more than 40 youth who ranged in age from 2 to 16 years of age.

The club met in the morning at Parker Park Community Center, and in the afternoon at Walker Courts Apartment Complex. 

Volunteers included Ms. Janie May, a retired teacher; Ms. Kittilea Jackson, a graduate student at Arkansas State University; Ms. Donna Kirksey, an administrative assistant at Arkansas State; members of the ASU football team; Dr. Myleea Hill,  project director; and Dr. Lillie Fears, humanities scholar for the projecKittilea Jackson guides young readers.t.

Fears said the book podcasts were quite popular with the children. “At first a couple of the older children wanted to know whether the iPods had music on them.  When I told them that the iPods contained only podcasts of books, they didn’t seem too disappointed.  I think some of them just got a kick out of using an iPod.”

The program focused on newspaper reading during the third week.  The Jonesboro Sun donated newspapers and one of its reporters, Sherry Pruitt, covered the program on the day newspapers were the feature activity.  Pruitt conducted interviews and answered questions about her work as a reporter.

The final day of activities included a book shopping spree.  Children were allowed to purchase books of their choice.  


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