The Watershed Project

A Remembrance 

One aspect of the Watershed Project’s mission is to restore to civic memory the stories of people who otherwise could be lost. This involves telling an honest story of slavery in Southwest Virginia and at Emory & Henry College.

During the spring semester, students in one Civic Innovation course and working through the Appalachian Center for Civic Life, combed through the college’s earliest account books to document the presence of persons who labored at Emory & Henry under slavery.

A Remembrance is a preliminary memorial to those persons and their lives. This is the first report of its kind ever undertaken at Emory & Henry College or by students at Emory & Henry.

View All Stories and Resources

Student Voices

Searching through account books, deciphering 19th-century handwriting, reading around smudges and faded ink, discussing and thinking deeply about what they were finding, the documentation effort for  A Remembrance  was transformative for students doing the work.

Roxy Todd of WVTF Radio, a public radio station serving Southwest Virginia, interviewed four students who were part of this project about the ways their work changed them.

To hear the broadcast and read more about the students involved in this documentation effort: A Remembrance 

 

 

WVTF Coverage of Students' Work in A Remembrance

How can I get involved? 

The Watershed Project needs your help. The honest telling of all these stories requires many, many voices.

Please take a moment to offer your ideas and suggestions for topics, questions, stories, places, and people to highlight, as we work together to tell new stories of Southwest Virginia.

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