Anson Street African Burial Memorial Credit: CP photos by Herb Frazier

Years in the making, the highly-anticipated Anson Street African Burial Memorial is a new fountain that represents centuries of Charleston history.

The Dec. 14 debut of the ambitious, million-dollar project by Charleston Gaillard Center gathered community leaders and members in the hundreds for an opening and dedication. First announced in 2019, the project in recent months had faced delays due to a change of its location on Gaillard property that affected city approvals.

The memorial fountain commemorates the site of the reinterment of 36 enslaved Africans and African Americans originally buried nearby in the 1700s.  Their remains were discovered in 2013 during the renovation of the Charleston Gaillard Center. In 2019, they were reinterred in a vault on the center’s grounds near Anson Street. 

Now, the fountain’s sculptural work, created by North Carolina-based artist Stephen L. Hayes Jr., features a bowl-shaped basin  shaped from the soil in which the interred were found and blended with earth from 36 African burial sites throughout Charleston. Its rim is encircled by three dozen pairs of bronze hands cast from Charleston residents. Raised in a collective upward embrace, each pair holds a single stream of water.

much-anticipated-gaillard-memorial-fountain-celebrates-history Credit: CP Photo by Herb Frazier

Dedication stories

The hourlong dedication program, for which television journalist Carolyn Murray served as emcee, included a ceremonial libation, or water pouring; a poem by former Charleston poet laureate Marcus Amaker; and music by the Gullah Collective. A dais displayed jars of soil from the 36 burial grounds throughout Charleston. 

Among the speakers were U.S. Sen. Tim Scott, artist Stephen Hayes, former Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg, current Charleston Mayor William Cogswell, Charleston Gaillard Center President and CEO Lissa Frenkel as well as Anson Street African Burial Memorial project leaders Brenda Lauderback and Nigel Redden and team members La’Sheia Oubre’ and Joanna Gilmore. 

“I think of those 36 hands coming apart and asking ‘Why God, why God?’,  the silence of thousands of African slaves buried throughout this city seeming to have been silenced in their times,” Scott said. “Today, this memorial, the fountain, represents the living legacy and the answer to that prayer.”

A letter from South Carolina’s U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, delivered by Quadri Bell, echoed these aspirations.

“Beginning with the inception of this project to now the opening of the memorial, we are embracing this part of our history revealing the forgotten souls and transforming a story of injustice into a narrative of justice and homage,” the letter said.

Tecklenburg paid homage to the late Dr. Ade Ofunniyin, who initiated the project with his work at the now disbanded Gullah Society, recalling that its founder was known to say “the bones are rattling and speaking truths, telling stories that need to finally be told, finally be known.”

Casting community

Artist Stephen Hayes Jr. at the dedication. Credit: CP Photo by Herb Frazier

At the ceremony, a sense of community was evident, both in the work of art itself and in how the project resonated with its diverse stakeholders.

For Hayes, it was integral to his artistic process, which involved casting the hands of community members representing the 36 interred.

“What brought me the most joy is being able to work with the community, being in the community–able to be with the people who live here and who have a stake in this project,” he told the Charleston City Paper, noting also that it included future generations who would engage with the work.

Redden, the former general director of Spoleto Festival USA who returned to Charleston for the dedication, told Charleston City Paper that he was elated by the group of people representing such a wide breadth, and by what the work itself will bring to understanding this story.

“When I looked at the boundary at the basin, there are streaks below it and I thought they were tears. I don’t know whether anyone else will think that, and everyone will create their own story and will understand this in different ways, which is the value of artists. You understand it differently and you understand it personally.”

“Not everyone will understand what these hands represent, but they will create their own stories,” he said. 

Anson Street African Burial Memorial Credit: CP Photos by Herb Frazier

Standing on a story

The ceremony follows news last week that pressure from state and federal officials to eliminate policies and programs advancing diversity, equity and inclusion was set to impact initiatives of the city of Charleston as well. 

The Women and Minority Business Enterprise office was due to be revised to the Small Business Enterprise, which will take place, and the Human Affairs and Racial Conciliation Commission to the Human Affairs Commission was to be revised to the Human Affairs Commission before its members voted to disband the commission in response.  

At the dedication, the tone was collective warmth, even as the temperature at the hourlong outdoor ceremony palpably dropped with an advancing overnight freeze.

Reading his poem for the occasion, Amaker imparted,  “We can honor 36 pulses that were silently vibrating under the surface for centuries and touch hands with ancestors through the invisible veil of time. With each day that passes, Charleston whispers, you are standing on a story.”

The College of Charleston has received recent criticism over its plans to build a dormitory on an 18th-century burial ground on Coming Street and the missteps it has made in how it shared those plans with the Charleston community.

The college’s president Andrew Hsu attended the opening and dedication of the Anson Street memorial. He said he came to observe how the Anson Street African Burial Ground Project organized the event and the efforts to create the memorial. “We want to emulate this,” he said. “That is why I am here.” 

Hus said he was impressed with the “partnerships and collaborations” that made the memorial a reality. “So many organizations were involved in this success,” he said. 

Herb Frazier contributed to this story.


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