The Linnentown Justice and Memory Committee

After 60 years, Athens has made steps to share power.
But it is only the beginning.

On June 25, 2020, the Athens-Clarke County Mayor and Commission formally approved funding and established the charge for the Linnentown Justice and Memory Project. The project charges a committee composed of Linnentown residents, historians, economists, and other stakeholders to atone for the removal of the Linnentown neighborhood. The committee is chaired by two Linnentown residents. 

Atonement means redress. It must be communal. And the residents must lead it.

The project will provide a model process for redressing the harms committed against other Athens-area Black residents whose neighborhoods were also removed and destroyed by urban renewal, or whose lives were diminished in quality through the efforts of the Athens-Clarke County Unified Government, or its predecessors, the City of Athens and Clarke County. 

But these are only the first steps. Redress is satisfied when those who have been harmed say so. 

We are not there yet. There is much work to do.

WORK OF THE COMMITTEE

Final approval of the Linnentown Resolution for Recognition and Redress to be sent to the Mayor and Commission for adoption and enactment.

Acknowledgement and apology for wrongs, in the form of a formal proclamation, the installation of an onsite Wall of Recognition, recommendations for a Black History center, education efforts for the public at-large and other means as may be appropriate. 

Material redress for today and tomorrow’s Athenians including but not limited to formal participatory budgeting powers for residents to make recommendations for operational and capital projects for the economic and infrastructural support of Athens Black communities. 

Outreach to former residents and descendants to the greatest extent possible to participate in this work. 

Research and archival work to include a document repository, oral histories, and narrative histories. 

Invitation to other partners, including state and federal government offices, to bolster these efforts.

The Committee

  • Hattie Thomas Whitehead

    Hattie Thomas Whitehead

    First Descendant & Co-Chair

  • Bobby Crook

    Bobby Crook

    First Descendant & Co-Chair

  • Christine Davis Johnson

    First Descendant

  • Freddie Jackson

    Freddie Jackson

    First Descendant

  • Dr. Jennifer Rice

    Researcher & Parliamentarian

  • Mike Hamby

    Commissioner, District 10

  • Kelly Girtz

    Kelly Girtz

    Mayor