Especially on a rainy Sunday afternoon - lol!
"Say Her Name: Susie King Taylor" was a Savannah Black Heritage Festival event, held over at Savannah State University, in a place I knew well: the Kennedy Building, home of so many plays and musicals from Collective FACE in its prime.
The drawing card for me was the screening of the documentary, "The Making Of Taylor Square", about the transition of Calhoun Square into this new one that served two goals: the first named for a woman and the first named for an African American.
The woman was Susie King Taylor, who had been 13 years old when she found herself serving as a nurse for the Union Army in South Carolina.
That was in 1861, when the American Civil War caused her mom to send her and her siblings to that state to stay safe.
Taylor could read, write, and count, so she made sure to teach that to others over there, both children and adults.
She served in the position of nurse and teacher for three years, but never received any financial benefits from those jobs.
Five years ago, a grass-roots movement began to gain recognition for her.
The woman who started that movement, Patt Gunn, was a tour guide who always shared Taylor's story on her tours.That's her, second from the left, beside the college student asking the questions during the post-film Q&A.
The documentary's director, Caroline Josey Karoki, is on the far right.
I didn't catch the names of the other two women, but they were part of the group that was instrumental in getting the square renamed.
Some folks may think all the squares downtown have the same names given to them by James Oglethorpe when he laid them out, but that's incorrect.
For instance, Telfair Square, home of two museums I love, was originally called St. James Square.
Upper New Square was renamed Oglethorpe Square in honor of our city's founder.
Then there are squares lost to road construction - like Liberty Square and Elbert Square - and new squares added in the 21st century, like Yamacraw Square and Washington Square, where a park and a garden once stood..
In other words, Taylor Square follows a long history of changes with our walkable green spaces downtown, squares that have long welcomed peoples from other lands to our fair seaport.
I know the folks involved with this five-year project hope others will follow the blueprint for change which is modeled quite well in the documentary.
Who knows what structure, or road, or park, may be renamed in the future?



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