The Historic Latta Plantation in Huntersville, N.C., recently advertised a Juneteenth event that aimed to tell the stories of âwhite refugees,â Confederate soldiers who were sad about losing the Civil War and freed slaves living âhigh on the hogââall from the perspective of an unemployed slave master.
Then, after people swiftly informed the history museum that this was both brazenly racist and a very stupid idea, the event description was deleted Friday.
Suggested Reading
But the internet doesnât forget, and neither does the Raleigh News & Observer.
The Observer reports:
âOn its website and on social media, the living history museum promoted the $25 ticketed event, called âKingdom Coming,â which was set to take place starting at 7 p.m. next Saturday, on Juneteenth, a holiday that commemorates the emancipation of slaves in the United States. The event has since been cancelled.â
â… The eventâs description, which didnât acknowledge the significance of June 19, started with lines from a mournful slave spiritual some scholars say is aligned with the Underground Railroad: âSwing low, sweet chariot, coming for to carry me home.ââ
âThe event billing is sympathetic to those who owned slaves in the aftermath of emancipation, and inaccurately minimizes an unnamed slaveowner to an âoverseer,â referring to him as âmassa.â The post on Latta Plantationâs site also refers to âfreedmenâ but inexplicably omits that Black people were enslaved in the United States for nearly 250 years. Instead, the museumâs site refers to slaves as âformer bondsmen.â
What kind of Django Unchained, Rachael Kirkconnell, alternative facts white nonsense is this? I feel like we really shouldnât be surprised that an actual plantation that has been transformed into a âliving history museumâ is out here intending to commit racist actsâon Juneteenth of all daysâbut yet, here we are.
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles commented about the situation on Twitter.
âWe should not support any business or organization that does not respect equality, history, and the truth of the African-American peopleâs journey to freedom,â she said. âDespite intent, words matter. And the Historic Latta Plantation should know better.â
WCNC Charlotte reports that Mecklenburg County also denounced the ill-conceived event, saying that county parks and recreation officials didnât know about the event until it appeared on social media. The county said it is now looking at its contract with the plantation regarding future programming.
The town of Huntersville co-signed Mecklenburg Countyâs zero-tolerance stance on programs that donât âembrace equity and diversity.â The town announced Friday that it will hold its annual financial contributions to the plantation until investigations âinto the facts surrounding this eventâ are done.
Neither the Latta Plantation nor the event organizer have issued statements about the debacle as of Saturday morning.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.