History in Danger
One of the reasons that motivated members of Mount Zion Baptist
Church in Cedar Rapids to found the African American Historical
Museum and Cultural Center of Iowa in 1994 was the concern that
African American history was being lost. One of the examples cited
was that after the death of Cedar Rapids activist Viola Gibson
in 1989, her papers were thrown out as there was no place to put
them. Curator Susan Kuecker was delighted when going through some
books that Gibson's daughter, Juanita Smith, donated to the Museum
in March, 2006 to find a box of Viola Gibson's papers that were
assumed to have been destroyed. Included in this box were many
records from Christ's Sanctified Holy Church where Gibson was
a minister, meeting minutes of many committees that Gibson served
on regarding housing, the elderly, and the Oak Hill-Jackson neighborhood
of Cedar Rapids, and a few photographs of Gibson. These papers
shed light on Gibson's roles in some of these organizations and
committees. These papers have proven to be very helpful in developing
the exhibit "Scrapbook of Memories: African American History
in Linn County, Iowa." They couldn't have turned up at a
better time!
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