Showing posts with label Van D. Turner Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Van D. Turner Jr.. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Turner Partners with Franklin to Restore Life to 'Death' Park

 

Atty. Van D. Turner Jr. turns over management of Health
Sciences Park to well-known personality Telisa Franklin.
(Photo by Wiley Henry)

MEMPHIS, TN – Dead people from the 1870s yellow fever epidemic were reportedly buried in unmarked graves on parkland that once stood a hospital and a memorial to an infamous Confederate general, Atty. Van D. Turner Jr. discovered during his research.

“It's just been quite interesting learning the full history of the park,” said Turner, referring to the former Forrest Park, now Health Sciences Park. 

That parcel of land is in the medical district. Once a memorial to Nathan Bedford Forrest, a slave trader and Ku Klux Klan grand wizard, now brims with new life.

“The park has always been a park of death,” said Turner, president of Memphis Greenspace, Inc., a nonprofit maintaining the park. “Now it’s become a park of life and vibrancy…of new beginnings…and celebrates life.”

“Life and vibrancy” were on display during Father’s Day weekend when the Memphis Juneteenth Festival celebrated “freedom” and “life” on the grounds that Turner once avoided and protested “what it stood for and how painful it was for my father and his generation.”

On Friday, June 24, Turner announced that Memphis Greenspace is partnering with Telisa Franklin Ministries to manage Health Sciences Park. Franklin is a businesswoman, a well-known marketer, and the festival’s president. 

Turner is still president of Memphis Greenspace, which he formed in October 2017 to legally remove the Confederate monuments to Forrest and Jefferson Davis, formerly known as Confederate Park and renamed Fourth Bluff Park. 

“We're happy with this new partnership with her,” said Turner, now contracting with Franklin to promote Health Sciences Park and enrich the green space with various activities throughout the year. 

The treelined park is conducive for all kinds of events and activities. “I think this is really a goldmine for the city,” Turner said. “I think Mrs. Franklin is the right one to carry that vision forward.”

Franklin has accepted the challenge. Now she’s gung-ho about bringing her ideas to fruition. Two callers, she said, have already expressed interest in renting the park. Turner, in his appraisal of Franklin, touted what she’s already done to unite people around an idea.

“That spot of land represented death,” Franklin said. “But in the last two years (during Juneteenth festivities), we were able to see people laugh…hug…people of different races coming together.”

Franklin said the park is for everybody in Memphis and Shelby County. “We're not excluding anyone,” she said. “We're going to create synergy and positive energy in that park.”

The stigma no longer vexes Franklin. However, in past years, she said she’d park her vehicle along the fringes of the park and just sit there. Like Turner, she was protesting, refusing to take a stroll.

The memorial to Forrest would kindle Franklin’s ire, often reminding her of what the Confederate general and slaveowner stood for. Now the equestrian statue of Forrest is gone, along with the remains of Forrest and his wife. 

While it wasn’t widely known, Turner said Forrest was exhumed and buried four times. 

After his death in 1877, Forrest was buried at Historic Elmwood Cemetery, then in Forrest Park. Then he was reburied in an unknown location in the county. Finally, Forrest and his wife were reinterred in Columbia, Tenn. 

“It's been quite the journey,” Turner said, adding, “If the park could only talk, (stories about it would unfold).”

Turner is telling a different story now: death is no longer a sidebar. He is giving Franklin the leeway to create new life in the park with monthly events and activities. 

“From this point going forward, it’s really going to be a story of joy. It’s going to be a story of resilience,” he said.  

Franklin said she’ll work to heal the land and mend hurting hearts. Education is the key, she said. But she won’t dwell on the dead. 

The aura of death will fade eventually, she said, and “life will return to the park.” 

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Juneteenth Festival Moves to Park Where Klan Leader is Buried

Memphis girl group Karma delighted the audience at Memphis
Juneteenth Festival in 2019. This year's festival will be held June 18
and 19 at Health Sciences Park. Gospel sing Earnest Pugh will be the
headliner. (Photo by Wiley Henry)

There is some irony in relocating the Memphis Juneteenth Festival from the historic Robert R. Church Park on “World Famous” Beale Street to Health Sciences Park, where Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest and his wife, Mary Ann Montgomery Forrest, are entombed.

The move is official after Telisa Franklin, Juneteenth’s president, announced April 30 that the festival has partnered with Memphis Greenspace, Inc., the non-profit organization that maintains the park.

The new location is deemed a fitting move for the annual festival in Memphis, Franklin pointed out, which is a national holiday in the United States commemorating the end of slavery for African Americans. 

This year’s festival will be observed June 18 and 19 at Health Sciences Park (formerly Forrest Park) at the intersection of Madison Avenue and South Dunlap Street, near the University of Tennessee Health Science Center.

Earnest Pugh, a gospel singer and native Memphian, will headline the festival. Music is a staple at Juneteenth, along with food vendors, something for children, and an educational component.

“That park has so much significance. It was not what we were then,” Franklin said. “For Black people, Juneteenth means freedom. Now you’ll see Black people and white people working together on the burial ground of a slave owner and trader and Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.”

Forrest lived and died in Memphis Oct. 29, 1877. He was 56.

“…This will be the first year that the day is recognized by the state, county, and the city of Memphis,” Franklin continued. “Although the day is recognized, Black people in America are still fighting for our lives and economic freedom.” 

Van D. Turner Jr., director and president of Memphis Greenspace, Inc. and Shelby County Commissioner representing District 12, said he was happy to help orchestrate Juneteenth’s move to Health Sciences Park

“We need redemption. We need hope. We need a path forward. We need to dig out of poverty. We need to dig out of crime,” he said.

Turner was at the center of controversy in 2017 when Memphis Greenspace purchased the park from the city of Memphis and another Confederate park for $1,000 each. Shortly thereafter, the equestrian statue of Forrest was removed Dec. 20 from its base. 

The move was triggered by a nationwide hullabaloo over the takedown of Confederate monuments and the affront to Black people who believed the monuments were erected to keep the legacy of slavery and white supremacy alive. 

“We are turning the pages of history today,” said Elaine Turner, director of Slave Haven Underground Railroad Museum, a 19th century home that was part of the Underground Railroad. “We are rededicating this park. Juneteenth means freedom.... We are reclaiming our history on this ground.”