Black Lives Matter Ride Showcases a Different Arlington History
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Black Lives Matter Ride Showcases a Different Arlington History

Across Arlington, residents are working to relearn history.

Danielle Day and Kevin Joy of Arlington said it was important to come out for the Movement and see Arlington’s history from a different perspective.

Danielle Day and Kevin Joy of Arlington said it was important to come out for the Movement and see Arlington’s history from a different perspective. Photo by Eden Brown/The Connection

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Symone Walker spoke about taking steps to improve education in Arlington (she is running for the school board) and making sure schools are equitable no matter where you live.

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Del. Alonso Lopez talked about his role as Majority Whip in Richmond, and progressive legislation that passed this year like making neck holds illegal and demilitarizing the police.

Jim Moore was looking out his shop window on Saturday, Sept. 26, to catch the Black Lives Matter Ride that was supposed to come by his shop in Hall’s Hill. The 14-mile ride was to look at Arlington’s history from a different perspective: the Black history perspective. Many Arlingtonians don’t know how segregated Arlington was. Or how neighborhoods that are increasingly gentrified, like Hall’s Hill, were enclaves of formerly enslaved people who managed to build houses and lives — and fire stations — despite White Arlington blocking them from well-paying jobs, schools, and even the sewer system.

Arlington for Justice, promoting a more equitable system of justice in Arlington, sponsored the ride with partners Moms Demand Action, Black Parents of Arlington, Virginia Coalition for Transforming Policing, We of Action (WofA), APS Reform and others.

The ride began at Drew Elementary School (3500 23rd St. S.) and ended at 5 p.m. in front of the county courthouse (1425 N. Courthouse Road), with speeches and refreshments. It featured important sites like Penrose and Freedman’s Village, the Cherrydale Drug Fair counter and Stratford High School, two places anti-segregationists fought for integration, and the segregation wall in Hall’s Hill which separated White neighborhoods from Black ones.

The purpose of the ride was to call attention to racial injustice and the need for criminal justice reform in Arlington.