Welcome to Gone, But Not Forgotten

Downtown Jackson's largest green space,
invites you to explore the stories of our historic residence.

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Professor W.H. Lanier
Weekly Highlights Nick Walters Weekly Highlights Nick Walters

Professor W.H. Lanier

William Henry Lanier was among the most consequential African American educators in Mississippi during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Born enslaved in Alabama around 1851, Lanier rose to become a college president, long-serving supervisor of Black public schools in Jackson, and the namesake of the city’s first four-year Black high school. His career reflects both the possibilities and the tensions that shaped Black educational leadership in the post–Civil War South.

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AUNT NANCY HILL
Weekly Highlights Linda Thompson Robertson Weekly Highlights Linda Thompson Robertson

AUNT NANCY HILL

It has been said that the brilliant inventor Thomas Edison (1847-1931) dreamed of developing a “spirit phone” that could record the voices of the dead.  I wish there were such a device…

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Welcome to Gone But Not Forgotten
Board News Nick Walters Board News Nick Walters

Welcome to Gone But Not Forgotten

Greenwood Cemetery is one of Mississippi’s most important historic landscapes and one of Jackson’s most overlooked archives. Established by act of the Mississippi Legislature on January 1, 1823, Greenwood was…

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