Underground Railroad Commemoration Ceremony

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PROGRAM JOIN US TO SHARE THIS MOMENTOUS OCCASION with invited remarks from members of our community and family descendants of Elijah Fish and George Taylor. WELCOME --MUSEUM BOARD CHAIR....................................Marty Logue BIRMINGHAM’S MAYOR…………………………………………….….Therese Longe The RESEARCHERS….George Getschman, Jacquie Patt & Donna Casaceli MICHIGAN FREEDOM TRAIL COMMISSION Reading of Commemoration Letter from Chair, Amanda Campbell BIRMINGHAM SEAHOLM HS BLACK STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT Reading of Remarks of Jordan Snyder-Phillipoff BLOOMFIELD HILLS HS STUDENT ADVOCATE………...Rieley Zelten

SOUTHFIELD REFORM PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH MEMBER (est. 1834)……………………………………………………………….Antonio Troutman, Jr. DESCENDANTS’ REMARKS FAMILY of ELIJAH FISH Letter, Jerry Fish, read by Gregory Fish FAMILY of GEORGE TAYLOR Sheryl Ross Karen Sims Lucretia Jackson Weiss


Brief History :

While researching Birmingham’s Black heritage, museum staff and volunteers discovered documents that firmly established that both Elijah Staunton Fish and George Basil Taylor were associated with Michigan’s Underground Railroad in the years before the American Civil War. Each man’s story tells a different perspective of the struggle for freedom from enslavement; Fish as an abolitionist and Taylor as a freedom seeker who fled bondage in Kentucky, and ultimately settling in Birmingham after being aided by the Underground Railroad network. With the support of the Friends of the Birmingham Museum, the Museum Board, and the Birmingham City Commission, an application was submitted to the National Park Service’s Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program to designate their final resting places at Greenwood Cemetery in the official listing of national sites. On March 29, 2022, the listing was made official, and Greenwood joined over 700 other sites all over the U.S. that have connections to the Underground Railroad, either as those seeking freedom or those helping others achieve it.

WALKING TOUR of Elijah S. Fish and George B. Taylor’s grave sites will follow the ceremony. Greenwood Cemetery is a short walk, approximately one block east of Quarton Lake Park. The Birmingham Museum at 556 W. Maple Road will be open to the public at no charge from 2 – 4 PM the day of the ceremony. Park at Chester Street Deck across Maple from the museum; first 2 hours are free. 1 - George Taylor gravesite 2 - Elijah Fish gravesite

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Ceremony


Mission Statement: The Birmingham Museum will

explore meaningful connections with our past, in order to enrich our community and enhance its character and sustainability. Our mission is to promote understanding of Birmingham's historical and cultural legacy through preservation and interpretation of its ongoing story. The Birmingham Museum is a municipally operated local cultural institution. The Friends of the Birmingham Museum (a.k.a. the Birmingham Historical Society) is a 501c3 non-profit organization and the Museum Board is a city-appointed advisory board.

556 West Maple Road ~ Birmingham, Michigan 48009 ~ 248.530.1928

Birmingham City Commission Therese Longe, Mayor Pierre Boutros, Mayor Pro-Tem Clinton Baller Brad Host

Andrew Haig Elaine McLain Katie Schafer

Birmingham Museum Board Marty Logue, Chair Kristi Barrett Bev Erickson Alexandra Harris Patrick Hughes

Judith Keefer Jay Shell

Jordan Snyder-Phillipoff,

Student Representative

Friends of the Birmingham Museum Board Leslie Mio, President Marty Logue, Treasurer

George Getschman Jay Shell


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