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Published: May 26, 2012 07:00 PM
Modified: May 26, 2012 10:13 AM

Service to honor black Civil War soldiers
 
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Memorial Day Events

Durham

9:30 a.m. – Memorial service hosted by American Legion Post 7 at Maplewood Cemetery, at the corner of Kent Street and Morehead Avenue.

Chapel Hill

8 a.m. – Morning Colors memorial service at Chapel Hill Memorial Cemetery (between Fordham Boulevard/U.S. 15-501 and Legion Road) hosted by the local Veterans of Foreign Wars C.V. Cummings Chapel Hill Post 9100 with Chapel Hill Boy Scout Troop 835 providing a bugler for taps

10 a.m. – Open House at American Legion Post 6, 1714 Legion Road

11 a.m. – Memorial service featuring guest speaker WWII veteran Col. Robert Bauman

12:15 – Hot dogs and cool drinks

12:30 – Village band performs


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The Pauli Murray Project will hold its annual Memorial Day ceremony at Maplewood Cemetery from 10 a.m. to noon Monday, May 28.

Free and open to the public, the event will honor two African American Civil War veterans, Robert G. and Richard B. Fitzgerald and the 112 African Americans buried in the Historic Fitzgerald Family Cemetery.

The cemetery is located at the corner of Kent Street and Morehead Avenue. Free parking is available one block south courtesy of First Calvary Baptist Church.

The ceremony will include a presentation of the colors by the Hillside High School Junior ROTC Honor Guard, an offering of libations by Victor Maafo, remarks from members of the Fitzgerald family and a reading of the names of the departed. This event was started by Fitzgerald family members in 1995 as a way of calling attention to their family burial site and to support their efforts to persuade the City of Durham to annex it to the adjacent Maplewood Cemetery. It has grown into a wonderful way for us to honor our local veterans and learn more about Durham’s history, says Barbara Lau, director of the Pauli Murray Project .

Robert Fitzgerald was Pauli Murray’s grandfather and a prominent educator and brick maker who came to Durham after the Civil War to teach newly freed African Americans. His brother Richard followed, and they started their brick making business together.

Robert was not able to continue due to an injury suffered during his service on behalf of the Union Army, but Richard’s business flourished. His bricks were in the construction of Erwin Cotton Mill and many local tobacco warehouses. Richard Fitzgerald was one of the founders and first president of Mechanics and Farmers Bank. Both brothers were Union soldiers in the Civil War.

After the ceremony, guests will tour over to the Robert Fitzgerald/Pauli Murray House, located at 906 Carroll St. There, spoken word artist Kimberly McCrae will perform at the reception.

The event is co-sponsored by the Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute, Preservation Durham, the Fitzgerald/Murray family and Habitat for Humanity of Durham. Free parking is available courtesy of First Calvary Baptist Church on Kent Street just south of Morehead Avenue.

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