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History Uncovered: Virtual tour of Richmond, Va., reveals hidden suffering of Black community

The project began with a simple question: 鈥淲hat can we do?鈥

After the at the hands of Minneapolis police on May 25, 2020, the nation was shocked and protests abounded. During this time of turmoil, three men in Richmond, Virginia, wanted to answer the question of how to create social justice change and expose the suffering Black people in their city had endured since before the Civil War.

Within six months, they had found a solution, creating . This multimedia tour, which uses virtual reality and augmented audiovisual technology, exposes the invisible history and centuries-long suffering of Black people in Richmond.

Seeking to uncover Richmond鈥檚 long-buried secrets about racial injustice, Dontrese Brown, Dean Browell and David Waltenbaugh scoured the city to find places like Lumpkin鈥檚 Jail 鈥 the epicenter of one of the main slave-trading hubs in the U.S. 鈥 where enslaved people were held for purchase in the 1800s.

But where the jail once stood, they found only a patch of grass and overpasses where Interstate 95 is suspended above parking lots. Three weathered interpretive signs reminding the public of the jail鈥檚 presence leave little indication of the pain and sorrow that took place here.

鈥淚t was the most horrific place you could ever imagine,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淭his wasn鈥檛 a place like a jail. This was a place where slaves were kept until they actually walked to the market where they were sold or hanged. Under the overpass, if they were hanged, they were hanged right there, in Richmond鈥檚 鈥楤urial Ground for Negroes.鈥欌

The men were shocked to discover that this site had been hidden from the city. Thousands of vehicles drive over I-95 each day. Pedestrians walk through the parking lot without ever knowing they are quite literally passing by a long-forgotten cemetery.

But there was more.

Richmond 鈥 a city known for its infamous Monument Avenue, which once hosted the largest number of Confederate monuments in the country 鈥 had erased other sites that spoke to the Black experience, including happier ones like 鈥 the "Harlem of the South."

Through their project, Brown, Browell and Waltenbaugh have virtually brought history back to life.

Swan Tavern
The Swan Tavern, built in 1781 and demolished in 1904, operated as a hotel and bar before it became home to The Richmond Planet, a weekly Black-owned newspaper founded by formerly enslaved Africans. Image courtesy of Hidden In Plain Site.

With immersive media and by augmenting what these historic sites looked like then compared to now, Waltenbaugh hopes that the Hidden in Plain Site: Richmond tour 鈥 the first of many that HIPS is planning 鈥 will draw empathy from viewers.

鈥淚n an effort to help reveal the truth of systemic racism, we wanted to create an experience that allows individuals to understand it from a perspective other than their own,鈥 Waltenbaugh said.

In February, the 澳彩开奖 (澳彩开奖) stated in an update to its Whose Heritage? report that Virginia had removed 71 Confederate monuments and symbols after Floyd鈥檚 death. Yet many such memorials remain. HIPS highlights the plight of the Black experience in Richmond 鈥 a former capital of the Confederacy 鈥 by showcasing historical sites that the city has allowed to fade into the background.

鈥淓rasing the markers where violence was inflicted upon African Americans prevents us from learning from the past, acknowledging responsibility for their suffering, and creating a path to remedy justice,鈥 said Susan Corke, the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 Intelligence Project director. 鈥淭here is an American legacy of racism and oppression. We perpetuate injustice by papering over the past or by trying to revise history with Confederate monuments that falsely glorify it. HIPS is an important contribution to helping us understand Richmond鈥檚 full history.鈥

The HIPS founders plan to continue their storytelling on a national level, highlighting other communities whose histories have been hidden, including the LGBTQ+ community and Indigenous communities. The next city HIPS plans to tackle is Charleston, South Carolina. Already in the works are a summer feature on the nationally televised PBS travel docuseries The Good Road and a collaboration with Discovery Education.

鈥淲e are extremely humbled,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淲e had no idea we were on the cusp of making tremendous impact not only to the city, but to the state and also the nation. It鈥檚 something to be proud of, and I鈥檝e grown to love David and Dean through this project more than I could鈥檝e imagined. It鈥檚 uniquely imperative to know like-minded individuals who can work together and do something impactful that shakes the core of our nation.鈥

鈥楯ust the beginning鈥

HIPS begins its tour of Richmond at Lumpkin鈥檚 Jail, with a 360-degree view of the former holding facility as it is today: a lone trailer, traffic cones, storage units, the parking lot and an 18-wheeler traveling high above on I-95.

As the tour progresses, HIPS augments the frame, showing viewers an image of the jail as it once was 鈥 鈥渁 place of the utmost cruelty,鈥 says the narrator, voiced by Brown, 48.

Virtually transported to what was the Wall Street of its time, the viewer can hear the sounds of enslaved people screaming and pleading for their lives from inside the jail. Their cries are mixed with cheers from the street. These are the voices of white people who intend to purchase the enslaved people.

The buyers can be heard roaming outside the jail, waiting to make their purchases of human beings while enthusiastically chanting, 鈥淵es! Yes!鈥 as if they were at a circus.

recreation of slave auction site
This image is a virtual re-creation of the auction site once located at "The Devil's Half Acre,鈥 just a stone's throw away from Lumpkin's Slave Jail and the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground. Image courtesy of Hidden in Plain Site.

Through HIPS, viewers get a glimpse of how this site, now otherwise forgotten, once resembled a house of horrors.聽

鈥淲e were standing on this large, grassy land where my ancestors were buried,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淲e wanted to make sure we started the tour where there was the most pain and suffering.鈥

The 鈥楧evil鈥檚 Half-Acre鈥

Just a stone鈥檚 throw away from the jail site, the tour takes you to the 鈥淒evil鈥檚 Half-Acre,鈥 the site of the gallows where participants in were hanged on the and tossed away like trash.

In the spot where packed himself into a shipping crate at Richmond鈥檚 鈥 gambling on a chance at freedom and remaining inside the crate for 27 hours until reaching Philadelphia 鈥 there are now typical, downtown structures you would find in any city.

hotel
From 1904 when it was known as Miller鈥檚, the Eggleston was one of many longtime Black businesses that got Jackson Ward yet another nickname: 鈥淭he Birthplace of Black Capitalism.鈥 Image courtesy of Hidden In Plain Site.

The remnants of a once thriving Black community that was bulldozed when I-95 was built in the 1960s, have been covered up by yet another parking lot, leaving no reminder of what was or could have been.聽聽

鈥淩ichmond has tremendous history in erasing marginalized communities,鈥 Browell said. 鈥淣avy Hill is one of the most obvious examples. In the 1960s, the community boasted schools with integrated teachers, and it was doing well from a progressive barometer.鈥

The tour concludes at the end of Monument Avenue, where a 12-ton statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, riding proudly on his horse, much to the delight of over 100,000 people who were ready to see the city flourish with the development of new real estate that the statue inspired in Richmond.

HIPS then shows the viewer what the statue looks like now, nearly 151 years after聽Lee鈥檚 death. It is covered in technicolor graffiti protesting its existence, with tags demanding its removal.

鈥淲e stay away from Monument Avenue until the last site on purpose,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淭he whole purpose of the project is to tell the story of those things which are hidden in plain sight. We decided to leave the Lee statue for the end of the tour, because it was a statement of the end of our journey. But for some, it鈥檚 just the beginning.鈥

A 鈥榮well of activism鈥櫬

When the men came up with the idea for HIPS, protests and activism were sweeping Richmond. Waltenbaugh, who is also the founder and CEO of聽 said the atmosphere of activism in the wake of Floyd鈥檚 murder led to positive responses about the tour鈥檚 creation.

鈥淩ichmond is not necessarily known as being a progressive city, but amidst the backdrop, people began to get excited about what we were doing,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was the strongest swell of activism in Richmond that I鈥檝e seen. When we were embarking on this project, some of the monuments on Monument Avenue were actively being taken down. Things were changing.鈥

Browell, co-founder of the market research company said the men faced the challenge of making the tour emotionally heavy. But they also had to capture the Lee statue as it is now 鈥 a piece of protest art 鈥 which created a sort of time capsule.

鈥淭ransitioning to its modern example and reaction to the social justice movement shows how a monument of that style can become a different symbol,鈥 said Browell, 44.

鈥楤lack history is human history鈥

Through the tour, HIPS aims to teach viewers about lost historical aspects of Richmond 鈥 about places like Navy Hill and the Thalhimers department store, where 34 university students took part in a lunch sit-in to protest segregation. The context of the Black experience has not been acknowledged by the city, Brown said.

Thalhimers department store
Thalhimers Department Store was one of the biggest and most popular places to shop in 1960s Richmond. It was also the site of the Richmond 34 protest, a peaceful sit-in by 34 Virginia Union University students at the store鈥檚 lunch counter. Image courtesy of Hidden In Plain Site.

鈥淩ichmond must acknowledge its wrongs and injustices to move forward,鈥 said Brown, executive director of the Edge Career Development Program at Randolph-Macon College and co-founder of 鈥淚t鈥檚 important for us to get this out, so that we can move on with conversations. What I want you to do and understand is what we鈥檝e been going through. If that changes how you view the city, at least you understand where we鈥檙e coming from as a culture that truly built this nation.鈥

Waltenbaugh said he hopes the takeaway from the tour is that as a country and as individuals, people begin to move away from an 鈥渦s鈥 versus 鈥渢hem鈥 mentality.

鈥淭hinking that way has driven us apart since the dawn of humanity,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he reality is that we, as humans, have vastly more in common with one another than we do differences. Black history is human history. We should all care about the plight and mistreatment and the marginalization of any one of our human brothers or sisters.鈥

Image at top, from left to right: HIPS founders Dean Browell, Dontrese Brown and David Waltenbaugh.聽Photo courtesy of Courtney Jones.