Courtesy of the Gainesville Sun

The small town of Rosewood was forever changed one night in 1923.

My ancestry goes a long way back in both Levy County and Alachua County. For the past 15 years I have worked unceasingly to document and present our shared history of Rosewood.

“You must keep the ‘leg’ in our legacy,” instructed my once enslaved great grandmother, Lizzie Polly, the family’s matriarch and “once upon a time” storyteller who migrated to Archer in 1839 from Jackson, Mississippi, at age 13.

Born into a family of transgenerational historians and storytellers, it was my destiny to become a fifth generation storyteller and historian. My mother named me Lizzie Polly (Robinson) after my great grandmother. I am a direct descendant of Rosewood, the predominantly black Levy County township that was destroyed in a week-long rampage of racial violence in 1923. I was first initiated into the story of Rosewood in 1943, at age 5. As a youngster, I took Rosewood memories to bed with me each night and to school with me each day. I would carry them with me to work, college and church. I was groomed to keep our history accurate and relevant.

My parents, Ura and Theresa Robinson, taught their children that “knowledge is power” and that education is essential. My mother, keeper of our oral history, told me that an aspect of my life’s mission was to research and share the true history of the Rosewood massacre; to be a voice for justice for the survivors and descendants, both black and white. I was to serve as a bridge for healing racial wounds in our culture.

She told me: “When you tell Rosewood’s story, remain open-minded and don’t allow your personal feelings to take control over truth, making certain Mahulda (her sister) has her place in Rosewood’s history.” She perceived that I would meet and embrace white Rosewood descendants as well, taking history to the next level.

On New Years Day, 1923, Rosewood would be forever changed by racism. My aunt, the Rosewood school teacher, and other survivors say a white woman living in nearby Sumner falsely accused my uncle, a Rosewood resident, of attacking her. A mob came to the small town, burning homes, looting property, and killing five black members of the community. However, had it not been for the white unsung heroes (who will be honored at our upcoming awards dinner on Saturday), the Rosewood citizens would not have survived.

Many miles I have traveled in search of the truth, facing bigotry and intimidation tactics intended to thwart the accurate investigation and documentation of this thread in our national heritage.

I received the NAACP Pioneer Award in honor of my ancestors. I worked for the erection of a state historic marker in Rosewood, which was begun by Gov. Lawton Chiles and completed by Gov. Jeb Bush.

“This marker will ensure that Rosewood is remembered and that when the voice of the last survivor is stilled, we will all bear witness to what happened here and learn the lessons of its legacy,” said Gov. Bush.

In 2005 we held the first annual Rosewood Awards Dinner in memory of all Rosewood survivors and descendants. The Second Annual Rosewood Awards Dinner will be held on March 11 at the Paramount Plaza Hotels and Suites, 2900 SW 13th St., in Gainesville. For information about the event, e-mail me at lizzieprj@aol.com. or call (352) 495-2197.

Ronald Blocker, superintendent of the Orange County School System and a Rosewood descendant, will be our keynote speaker. Dr. James M. Davidson and doctoral student Edward Tennant, of the University of Florida Department of Anthropology, are assisting in the process of remembering Rosewood through archival research and a potential archaeological investigation of the former town site.

At the March 11 dinner they will make a presentation of their findings. At the request of my 91-year-old uncle, my next goal is to build a Brown Connection Center on a stunning 29-acre Archer property that we own jointly - the homestead of the Rosewood schoolteacher. The center will honor the memory of innocent men, women and children who suffered or died in the Rosewood massacre.

During Black History Month this year, I escorted students from Jordan Glen School, Job Corp, SIATech, and Mt. Pleasant United Methodist Church to Rosewood. I shared the Rosewood story with students at the PACE school for girls, Oak Hall High School and Santa Fe Community College.

Students from Job Corp were so intrigued with the all-white Shiloh Cemetery in Sumner, where Rosewood Store Merchant John Wright is buried, they volunteered to adopt his gravesite and put a state-of-the-art headstone in place.

My parents, especially my mother, strongly influenced me never to vent anger when telling the Rosewood story. For unless we remember, our children will not understand. When we preserve Rosewood’s history, we preserve America’s history.

Lizzie R. Jenkins is President of The Real Rosewood Foundation, Inc., in Archer. She can be contacted at lizzieprj@aol.com. or at 352-495-2197.

Courtesy of the Gainesville Sun
by Cleveland Tinker
Special to THE GUARDIAN

It was an evening with Rosewood families and friends and recognition of unsung heroes at the Real Rosewood Foundation Inc.’s second annual awards dinner held Saturday in Gainesville.

The theme was remembering the legacy of Rosewood, and organizers said that preserving Rosewood’s history was akin to preserving America’s history.

“It is very important to get the truth out about the Rosewood incident because I want people to know the truth,” said Lizzie R. Jenkins, executive director of the Real Rosewood Foundation Inc., which is based in Archer.

Jenkins said it is important to recognize the unsung heroes of Rosewood that helped many black residents escape from the small Levy County town in 1923, when a white woman falsely accused a black man of raping her. As a result of the accusation, James Taylor, the husband of the alleged victim, formed a mob that terrorized the black community, killing five blacks.

“Had it not been for the unsung heroes of Rosewood in 1923, my family members and other Rosewood citizens would have perished or died,” said Jenkins. “It is one way in and one way out of Rosewood. Sheriff (Robert) Walker worked 96 hours straight without sleep, begging people to help him get black people out of Rosewood safely.”

Phoebe Walker Hughes is the niece of the late Levy County sheriff, and she was presented with an Unsung Heroes Award in her uncle’s honor.

Hughes said she found out about Jenkins’ foundation from her daughter, who had seen a movie about Rosewood. They knew their uncle had been a sheriff in the town, and searched the Internet to find out about the movie. Their search led them to Jenkins.

Jenkins said Hughes’ daughter, Lee Yarborough, wrote her and apologized if her family had harmed anybody during the riot.

“I wrote her back and told her that her uncle saved a lot of lives,” said Jenkins, who would eventually begin corresponding with Hughes. “My reason for embracing the white Rosewood descendants is because my foundation is inclusive.”

Other awards given out was the William C. Bryce Unsung Heroes Award presented to his great-granddaughter, Margaret Kruse. The John Bryce Unsung Heroes Award was presented to his great-great-grandniece, Allison Piliod. The Bryces helped Walker protect blacks, according to Jenkins.

The Sarah Carrier Humanitarian Award was presented to Alachua Vice-Mayor Bonnie Burgess “for her tireless work in support and belief in her hometown of Alachua, the same as Sarah Carrier supported and believed in her hometown of Rosewood…”

“It is awesome. I am truly honored to have been chosen for this award,” said Burgess, a candidate for the state House of Representatives seat being vacated by Ed Jennings Jr. “When Liz called me and told me the board had chosen me, I thought it was a prank call.”

The Aaron Carrier Humanitarian Award was presented to John M. Jenkins, Liz Jenkins’ husband, “for supporting her tireless efforts to tell the Rosewood story…”

The Sylvester Carrier Humanitarian Award was presented to Charles Goston “for embracing and respecting the image of his community…”

The Ola Mae Hines Humanitarian Award went to Andrew Hines, “corresponding to his mother’s patience, guidance and strength to survive…”

The Ernest M. Blocker Pioneer Award was presented to his son Ronald Blocker, the event’s guest speaker. Blocker, a Rosewood descendant, is superintendent of the Orange County Public Schools.

Proceeds from the banquet will help fund the creation of the Rosewood Museum, which will be located in Archer.