Friday marks 117 years since the notorious Atlanta Race Massacre, when white mobs stormed several of the city’s Black neighborhoods, attacking people and destroying businesses and property. Dozens were murdered.
This month, two new victims — 25-year-old Stinson Ferguson and 13-year-old Marshall Carter were identified using Fulton death records. They died Sept. 22, 1906.
To honor their memories and others who still remain missing, WABE and the National Center for Civil and Human Rights will premiere a new co-created documentary that spotlights a period before Atlanta was known as the city “too busy to hate.”
“(Re) Defining History: Uncovering the 1906 Atlanta Race Massacre” will premiere at the Center and then be broadcast on WABE-TV this Sunday, Sept. 24th.
Darrin “DJ” Sims is the director of the Center’s Truth and Transformation Initiative, which addresses people and events in our city that have not been recognized or memorialized.