Jasmine B. Stroud
January 30, 2013
AAS 4950 Blog 1
The city of Atlanta possesses many facets, but its rich history remains locked up in the ricks upon which this city was built. Successful African-Americans, such as Alonzo Herndon, tirelessly enhanced Atlanta black communities through business ventures, investments, and entrepreneurship. The dawning of Atlanta Life Insurance Company represented nothing shy of a grandiose relief effort on behalf of the black community. The illegality of current mutual aid funds was the result of the rise of black prominence in early Atlanta.
The tour of Auburn Avenue sparked interest into why the original building was for sale and not undergoing preservation or regulation. After-all it is a standing artifacts and a visual link to the past. The city of Atlanta decades later, post war and in a prolonged period of black normality and contribution, has yet to decide that the sites along Auburn Avenue are worth not only the preservation of their history and documents, but also worth preserving the standing testament of black prosperity within the city. Alonzo Herndon made it his personal mission to not only preserve the black community, but also to enlist the help of others to aid in his cause.
Atlanta has failed to preserve legacy as it stands. By destroying the primary source and appropriating help from others, many blacks became lobbyists in order to maintain their own communities; Therefore, the lack of preservation has led to contemplation of wether or not Atlanta wants to continue to allow the degradation of a historical district-- once home to one of Atlanta and the worlds most prominent and affluent black communities. The lack of interest in preservation of a key historical monument presents a clear agenda. African-American history is perceived as far less important, and unfortunately our twenty-first century scholars are in no way expeditiously researching to uncover the truth of the black community; whether pre-war or post-war.
As Atlanta has become a transportation hub for people all over the world, and a "mecca" for the black elite, I believe it is our prominent leaders and elitist responsibly to preserve this irreplaceable, vanishing history for the generations that are to follow. As other races preserve their past to make way for their futures, black communities have a tendency to invest in the "right now" instead of in the future. Have our ancestors taught us nothing? It is knowledge and understanding of the past that guarantee a bright future, as we are less likely to commit to making the same mistakes our forefathers have made.
Therefore, it is no one's responsibility, but that of the black community to preserve its own history; the lack of knowledge of self-worth is never globally upheld when it is not firstly upheld in its community,
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