E
ach year the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center hosts a free community Juneteenth festival as a celebration of African American freedom and achievement. This year’s event takes place today from 12 noon until 6pm.
Juneteenth is the oldest national commemoration of its kind, dating back to 1865.
Among the musicians scheduled to perform at this year’s free Juneteenth celebration are GRAMMY-nominated recording artist Shanice, Sir the Baptist and special host Larry Dodson of the Bar Kays.
The event will be emceed and co-hosted by Keef Glason of Power 92 FM. Local performers will include 2017 Arkansas Times Musicians Showcase winner Dazz & Brie, ZaeHD, Chris James and Ron Mac, Big Piph and Tomorrow Maybe, Big John Miller Band, Gold and Glitz, Dunbar Middle School Choir and Mabelvale Drum Line.
In addition, other activities will be happening throughout the day, including vendors, food trucks, living history characters and film screenings. A screening of the documentary “Dreamland” will air at 1 p.m. and “Soul Food Junkies” will air at 3 p.m.
A kids zone will feature face painting, a video game truck, laser tag, rock climbing wall, water tinkering station and more!
Visitors are also invited to learn more about Arkansas history through the African American lens while exploring MTCC’s exhibits, including the new display, “Don’t Touch My Crown,” which opened June 14 and examines the role of hair in how African Americans define themselves and are defined by others, from the late 19th century to the present.
Seating at the performance stage is limited; attendees are invited to bring their own chairs and blankets.
MTCC is located at 501 W. Ninth St, Little Rock, AR 72201. For more information, please call (501) 683-3593 or email info@mosaictemplarscenter.com.
MTCC is an agency of the Department of Arkansas Heritage.
On May 27, 1955, on the stage of Robinson Auditorium, the Dunbar High School senior class graduated. This academic year marked not only the 25th anniversary of Dunbar’s opening, but it was the last year that the school building would offer junior high through junior college classes.
A reader pointed out that the April 26, 2018, New York Times had an obituary for Gertrude Hadley Jeannette. This native Arkansan (and inductee into the Arkansas Black Hall of Fame) died at the age of 103. Throughout her life she was a trailblazer in the arts but also was a trailblazer in other fields because of her race and her gender.
Annie Mable McDaniel Abrams is a retired educator by trade and civic activist by avocation. She is included in this list because she is also a historian. As a writer and preservationist, she has worked to document history and ensure historical properties and neighborhoods will long remain in Little Rock.
Charlotte Andrews Stephens was the first African American teacher in the Little Rock School District. Between 1910 and 1912, when an elementary school for African Americans was named after her, she became the first woman to have a public building in Little Rock named after her. For nearly fifty years, Stephens Elementary (which is now in its third building) would be the only LRSD building named after a woman.
Jefferson Thomas was a track athlete at all-black Dunbar Junior High School in Little Rock when he volunteered to integrate all-white Central High School as a sophomore in 1957. A few days before he entered the school, he celebrated his fifteenth birthday, having been born on September 19, 1942.
Sue Cowan Williams was an educator who fought for fair treatment.