John Leonard (from left), Alexa Edwards and Dr. Bill Toulios of Argo High School, sculptor Sonja Henderson,  Congressman Bobby Rush, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, Rev. Wheeler Parker, Dr. Marvel Parker, and Rev. Jimmie Daniels gather at the Emmett Till Center in Summit on October 21. (Photo by Carol McGowan)

John Leonard (from left), Alexa Edwards and Dr. Bill Toulios of Argo High School, sculptor Sonja Henderson, Congressman Bobby Rush, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, Rev. Wheeler Parker, Dr. Marvel Parker, and Rev. Jimmie Daniels gather at the Emmett Till Center in Summit on October 21. (Photo by Carol McGowan)

Interior Secretary Haaland tours site of Emmett Till Memorial

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Interior Secretary Deb Haaland (from left), U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, Rev. Wheeler Parker, sculptor Sonja Henderson, Alexa Edwards, architect Nathan Mellotte, and Argo Supt. William Toulios discuss the site of the upcoming Mamie Till Mobley and Emmett Till Memorial.

By Carol McGowan

Secretary of the Interior, Deb Haaland, visited Summit last Friday to get a first-hand look at the site of the future Mamie Till Mobley and Emmett Till Memorial at Argo High School.

Haaland then met with community leaders and had lunch with Emmett’s cousin, the Rev. Wheeler Parker, at the Emmett Till Center in Summit.

She stopped in Summit after a visit to Chicago, where she hosted a community meeting at Roberts Temple Church of God in Christ.

That meeting was to hear views on how to tell a more complete story of America, including elevating the stories of the Civil Rights Movement that honor the lives of Emmett and Mamie Till.

dvn wheeler parker and deb haaland

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland enjoys a moment with Rev. Wheeler Parker and Marvel Parker.

Roberts Temple Church of God in Christ is where tens of thousands of mourners visited over the course of a four-day visitation and funeral for Emmett in 1955 after he had been murdered in Mississippi while on summer vacation. Rev. Wheeler was with Emmett the night he was abducted and slain.

Emmett’s mother’s decision to have an open casket funeral helped expose Americans to the injustices facing Black people in the United States, and was among the catalysts of the modern Civil Rights Movement.

The purpose of last Friday’s gathering, which included comments by Senator Dick Durbin and U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, was to consider making Roberts Temple a national monument.

Mamie Till Mobley graduated from Argo High School.  She was the first Black student to make the “A” Honor Roll and only the fourth Black student to graduate from the high school.

She died in 2003 at the age of 81.

To honor her life and work, the memorial walkway will sit adjacent to the neighborhood where Mamie and Emmett lived, which is now a historic landmark.

The groundbreaking ceremony for the memorial walkway will be held on Friday, October 28, at 9 a.m. The community is invited to attend.

In addition to the walkway, a bronze sculpture within a landscaped plaza will be erected at the northwest corner of the school at 63rd Street and 74th Avenue.

The target date for its completion and dedication is April of 2023.

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