project overview
ORANGE MOUND LIBRARY AND GENEALOGY CENTER | Orange Mound
Artist: TBD
Total budget: $100,00 (includes three finalist honoraria of $1,000 each)
Upcoming benchmark/update: Artist Selection
Next committee meeting date: May 2024
BACKGROUND
About Orange Mound and the Orange Mound Library and Genealogy Center:
Orange Mound is a historical neighborhood located in the southeastern part of Memphis. Founded in 1890, Orange Mound was the first neighborhood known to be built for and by former enslaved Black Americans. The space was once a 5,000 acre plantation that E.E. Meacham gained ownership over. Meacham made an unprecedented decision to sell land to Black Americans. Orange Mound is home to the Golden Wildcats of Melrose High School, which has a rich history of academic excellence, Olympians, and numerous professional athletics.
The Melrose Alumni Association, Incorporated supports students at Melrose High School and provides annual scholarship awards to graduating seniors. Awards presented last year totaled $33,000. The Association also serves as a source of information for Melrose alumni, which includes a network of over 1,000 Golden Wildcats across the United States.
The current address for Melrose High School is 2870 Deadrick Ave, Memphis, TN. However, the historic “old” Melrose High School, located nearby at 843 Dallas St, is being renovated and restored to include apartments for senior living, a genealogy center, and a library which is the first of its kind for the neighborhood.
For more information, the selection committee encourages you to visit:
https://melrosehs.com/history-tradition/
https://www.memphisheritage.org/melrose-school/
https://www.pbs.org/video/wkno-specials-community-called-orange-mound/
https://moshmemphis.com/black-history-in-memphis-the-orange-mound-story/
SCOPE OF WORK
SCOPE OF WORK
The selection committee has expressed interest in a large-scale sculpture that:
Represents the lively essence of Orange Mound
Celebrates the neighborhood leaders who have left their mark in Orange Mound and the Melrose community
Engages families
References the architecture of the neighborhood and/or nearby landmarks
Is easy to maintain
Does not interfere with the pedestrian pathway
Includes community input and engagement throughout the design and/or fabrication stages
SELECTION COMMITTEE
Mary Claire Borys- City of Memphis Housing and Community Development: Development Project Manager for Historic Melrose Rehabilitation
Kinah Burks- Kingdom Community Builder: Director, Resident
Felicia Harris- City of Memphis Housing and Community Development: Deputy Director
Tamika Parsons- Sr. Manager for Orange Mound Library
Jevonte Porter- Youth Villages- Assistant Director of Community Relations, Melrose Alum
Darlene Newman- Artist
Chad Stewart- CSA Engineering
Denise Williams Greene- President of Melrose Alumni Association
About Artist:
Coming soon…