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ALACHUA ‒ Two public presentations highlighted the Nov. 28 Alachua City Commission meeting.  A large crowd was on hand to witness the presentation of a remembrance quilt and to recognize elementary students for their art work.

The Alachua County Community Remembrance Quilt Project Committee (ACCRPQC) presented a remembrance quilt to the commission honoring those who lost their lives to lynchings in Newnansville in the years after the Civil War. 

The ACCRPQC collaborated with the City of Alachua Youth Advisory Council to create and sew the quilt in remembrance of the lives lost in Newnansville, a once thriving town situated along Bellamy Road that has now faded into history.  Alachua County Commissioner and former State Representative Charles Chestnut spoke about the work of the Alachua County Community Remembrance Project.

The goal of the Committee is to keep the history of segregation and the lynchings alive for future generations to understand the past. The effort began in January 2020 in partnership with the Equal Justice Initiative from Montgomery, Ala.

Lynching of black Americans in the time of segregation was sadly a common method of intimidating the black population.  Between 1867 and 1926, there were 45 documented lynchings in Alachua County, but the actual figure is probably higher. Of these victims, 15 lynchings occurred in Newbery, but Newnansville was not far behind with 10 known cases.

ACCRPQC Chair Dawn Beachy presented the quilt to the City Commission as members of the quilt committee and Youth Advisory Board held up the quilt, displaying it for the audience to view. It contained 12 squares featuring the names of victims in the Newnansville area.

Across the top of the quilt was a quote, “The right way to right a wrong is to shine the light of truth upon them.” The back of the quilt contained pockets for viewers to put notes in about the victims.

In other business, students from W.W. Irby Elementary who had their artwork featured on display in City Hall as part of the Art in City Hall program were recognized.  Mayor Gib Coerper and Rose Magarino read the names of each student for them to come forward and receive a certificate and show their art work.  After the certificates were presented, the entire City Commission gathered with the students for a group photograph.

The Commission closed the books on the City’s Fiscal Year 2021-22 budget which ended Sept. 30, by amending the General Fund budget to account for unanticipated revenues.  The City’s Finance and Administrative Services Department performs an end of year review of actual receipts and expenditures as part of its end-of-year procedures. The amendment increased the City’s FY 2021-22 budget from $48,738,643 to $48,743,643.

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