Join the celebration Tuesday, October 3, 9:30 am on
Montford Avenue at Cullowhee Street. Parking
is available at the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church, 227 Cumberland Avenue, and
refreshments will be served there
afterwards.
The historic Montford neighborhood
(exit 4C off I-240) is sharing its history with visitors and residents alike
through five interpretive panels mounted on bus shelters along Montford Avenue.
The first one gives a brief history of the neighborhood and is located in front
of the Asheville Chamber Visitor Center. The next four are mounted on two bus
shelters at the corners of Montford Avenue and Cullowhee Street. They are a
collaboration between the City of Asheville and the Montford Neighborhood
Association (MNA), a nonprofit whose mission is to improve the Montford
neighborhood.
What better
way to honor lost homes, past residents, bygone scenes and African American
heritage than displaying four history panels on bus shelters where passersby
can glimpse neighborhood history? These displays celebrate the diversity
of the neighborhood, its prosperous times and its struggles with poverty,
demolition and fires.
Creating a
“Montford history museum without walls” was a community building project: MNA
Board member Sue Russell spearheaded the idea; Michael McDonough designed the
structures; the Historic Resources Commission of Asheville and Buncombe
approved the design; Tina Council fabricated the metal; Ross Terry created the
panels’ graphics; and Sharon Fahrer gathered the information and wrote the
content. The City Department of Transportation laid the groundwork and
approved the installation of the panels on the bus shelters. Photographs were
provided by Pack Library’s North Carolina Room and the D.H. Ramsey Library
Special Collections at UNC Asheville. Additional input and information came
from community members Daphne Young, Lenora Robinson and Roy Harris, among
others.
“The larger
hope is that other neighborhoods will copy this idea and showcase their own
history, including an archive in Pack Library’s North Carolina Collection,”
says Fahrer. “Everyone can be involved in gathering pictures and stories.”
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