Uncovering the Legacy 87 Adams: Downtown Memphis church will memorialize thousands
Helario Reyna (left) and Tim Huebner raise a rededicated plaque outside of a Calvary Episcopal Church in Downtown Memphis April 7, 2021, after the historical marker noting the location of the Downtown slave market owned by Nathan Bedford Forrest was snapped off at its base and broken sometime during the night July 18, 2020. (Patrick Lantrip/The Daily Memphian file)
From 1855 to 1862, about 3,800 slaves were sold in what is now Calvary Episcopal Church’s parking lot. The church is shedding a light on this history, and it received a major grant for its effort.
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Calvary Episcopal Church Nathan Bedford Forrest Historical Markers Mellon Foundation Subscriber OnlyThank you for being a subscriber to The Daily Memphian. Your support is critical.
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John Klyce
John Klyce is an enterprise reporter with The Daily Memphian who writes a wide range of in-depth features, as well as profiles about local leaders, scientists, musicians, artists, entrepreneurs, and anyone else doing exciting and important work in this city. He previously spent four years with the Memphis Business Journal, where he covered public companies, startups, and innovation, and a fifth year with The Commercial Appeal, where he covered education, and chronicled how gun violence and poverty were affecting Memphis youth and their families. He has also been a fellow with the Institute for Citizens and Scholars. John has a B.A. in journalism from the University of Memphis and an M.F.A. in creative writing from Boston University.
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