
Henrico plans first trail honoring Black Civil War soldiers
Why it matters: It'll be the first in the county to commemorate Black Union troops and their role in American history.
The big picture: The trail, estimated to cost $16 million, will run from the Four Mile Creek Trailhead off the Virginia Capital Trail to Deep Bottom Park.
It'll also follow the United States Colored Troops' march during the Battle of New Market Heights in 1864, which led to 14 Black soldiers receiving the Medal of Honor.
That acknowledgment was rare at a time when Black Americans were still denied full citizenship.
The battle — which the trail is named after — was USCT's "most significant victory in the entire Civil War," Mark Perreault, president of the Richmond Battlefield Association, said in a public information meeting last month.
Zoom in: Features for the New Market Heights trail could include a potential monument to those troops.
And Ryan Levering, the county's capital projects manager, said in last month's meeting that the project addresses some of the top-requested amenities from residents: more trails and access to green space.
What's next: Officials say the design plans won't be finalized until next year, and construction is slated to begin in late 2026 or early 2027, pending federal funding.
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USA Today
16 minutes ago
- USA Today
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New York Post
16 minutes ago
- New York Post
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San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Oakland protestors cheer California's efforts to counter GOP-led redistricting
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As part of his bid to maintain Republicans' slim U.S. House majority in the next elections, Trump is reportedly eyeing new maps in such states as Missouri, Florida and Ohio. Few metro areas protested those efforts in larger numbers Saturday than the Bay Area, where a broad coalition of Democratic organizations organized at least 25 such gatherings everywhere from parks to government buildings to freeway overpasses. A rally even sprouted up in a Tesla showroom at Palo Alto's Stanford Shopping Center. 'It's a real small world, and the repercussions are real and imminent,' said Rick Levine, a retired doctor who lives in Oakland and attended Saturday's rally. 'Texas is not that far away. We can't let what's happening there get any closer.' Perhaps none of the other Bay Area protests could match Oakland's star power, which might have been fitting. Just five days earlier, during a rambling press conference about crime, Trump mentioned this East Bay city of roughly 440,000 residents among the places he might deploy National Guard troops. While listing major urban centers that he accused of having egregious crime problems, he said, 'And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We don't even mention that anymore there.' The off-hand remark gave Lee, who served in Congress during Trump's first administration and was on the House floor during the Jan. 6 attacks, timely material for Saturday's final address. But instead of dwelling on what she called the latest time 'Trump trashed us,' Lee reminded the crowd — much of which was composed of people over 60 — that she's from Texas. Minority Democrats left that state to stall the Legislature from passing Trump's redistricting plan there. Once a minimum number of legislators are present, Texas' new-look districts could still pass. 'As someone who was born in a border town, in the immigrant community of El Paso, Texas, I remember the days when Black and brown people had no political representation,' Lee said. 'But because of the sacrifices and the demands of the people, El Paso has had Latino mayors and now its first Black mayor. … Donald Trump and his MAGA extremist Republicans know what's going on there, and they're trying to stop it.' 'I know Texas well,' she added. 'This is a coordinated, dangerous effort to take power from the people.' Boos emanated from the crowd, which started at several hundred people and grew to around 1,000. The large turnout reinforced why California recently became the first Democratic-led state to insert itself into the redistricting issue. On Thursday, Gov. 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'People like Lateefah, who are kind of in that middle generation, can carry that torch for the party when people like Barbara Lee retire.'