Historic Selma church at heart of Civil Rights Movement gets $1M in renovation funds
Brown Chapel A.M.E Church in Selma will be seeing long-awaited renovations this year, with a tentative reopening date set for March 2026.
The building was constructed and designed in 1908 by A. J. Farley, a formerly enslaved builder and designer. During the civil rights movement, the church served as a meeting place for the foot soldiers on Bloody Sunday before the Selma to Montgomery March, as well as a refuge from the violence that ensued. Despite its historical significance and the fact that its congregation still gathers, the church has been closed for the past three and a half years.
Brent Leggs, the executive director of African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund said that the organization is investing $1 million into the repair and restoration of Brown Chapel A.M.E Church. He said this investment will take the church from "vacancy to restoration," and make it into a "permanent testimony" to the role it played in the civil rights movement.
"Historic places have the power to connect us to our past," Leggs said. "They can impact our lives in the present and even shape our future. …During that period [the early 1960's], civil rights activists organized, protested, and elevated racial injustice from a Southern issue to a pressing national issue. … Alabama's Black churches stood at the center of all of that."
The planned restorative efforts include structural repairs; putting a new roof, kitchen and ADA compliant restrooms in the Fellowship Hall; restoring historic finishes in the sanctuary as well as bolstering the seating and flooring; and refreshing the doors and windows.
U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, a Selma, Alabama native, said that Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church is significant to her, as it was her home church growing up, where she memorized her first speech as a Girl Scout. She also said that the larger history of Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church alone cements it as a cornerstone of American history.
"Today the eyes of the world are upon Selma," Sewell said. "Today is an opportunity not only to remember the history, but to preserve it for future generations, and any commemoration of Bloody Sunday would not be complete without Brown Chapel AME Church. ... The history of Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church is sacred, and I believe it is our duty — all of our duty — as custodians of history, to ensure that it is preserved for future generations."
In addition to The African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund's contribution of $1 million, Leggs said the National Park Service has agreed to match the funds they raise — but only if they make it to $1.5 million. Leggs said that the plans they have made for the renovation are currently under review by the NPS.
"The only thing we're waiting on is a generous American to fill our $500,000 gap," Leggs said.
Brown Chapel A.M.E Church pastor Leodis Strong said there's a good chance that the congregation will be back in the historic church next March.
"If I didn't have a bad hip and two bad knees, I'd do a holy dance right now," Strong told the congregation with a smile.
Sarah Clifton covers business for the Montgomery Advertiser. You can reach her at sclifton@montgome.gannett.com or follow her on X @sarahgclifton.
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This article originally appeared on Montgomery Advertiser: Brown Chapel A.M.E Church in Selma to be restored by next year
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Trump supporters clashing with police and security forces as people try to storm the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. Brent Stirton/GETTY During Lang's stint in prison, he remained active with both religion and politics, spending time as an unofficial pastor "doing Bible studies" and "baptizing people." He said there was "a big black market in prison" with "the prison smuggling in whatever, and so if I could get my hand on a phone, that's a great weapon on information warfare to use." Lang claimed that in one prison, somebody even told him, "They could get me a cat." Newsweek contacted the Department of Justice for comment on Thursday via online inquiry form. January 6 Love Story During his time in prison, Lang first came across his now fiancé Rachel, another January 6 defendant who was convicted before being released on probation. He said: "It's a J6 love story, the greatest love story every written in the January 6 world. So Rachel was a Jan 6er and I was on a Twitter space I was doing from my prison cell and she was listening. This is one of the times, very rare, where I had a cell Brooklyn Federal Prison, Brooklyn, New York. "We met basically through one of my media interviews...I reached out and we started talking, she started becoming one of the people I trusted and like a right hand of mine while I'm in an amazing woman and I couldn't help but love her and ask her to marry." Run for Congress Following Trump's pardon, Lang quickly re-engaged with politics, announcing his Florida Senate bid in March 2025 after Rubio joined Trump's cabinet. Lang painted Senator Moody, Rubio's replacement, as an establishment figure, commenting: "Ashley's an interesting character because she feigns a lot of Trump's policy positions, but at the end of the day, she is a DeSantis loyalist, and on top of that, she has this extremely established background. She's like the polar opposite of an outsider candidate, just like Donald Trump vs Ron DeSantis." Whilst not a Florida native, Lang said he has deep ties to the state, as "both my grandparents growing up lived in Florida, my mom lives in Florida, and I've lived in Florida myself for different spans." Lang added: "Beyond my roots here Florida is ready, Florida is the most MAGA state in the country, the area around Mar-a-Lago in the West Palm beach where I live is like the conservative Hollywood." If elected, Lang is pledging to help advance Trump's "Make America Great Again" (MAGA) agenda. He said: "For me, my calling for running for United States Senate was more I'm going to continue to bear the touch with Donald Trump to mark America's golden age... 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I mean, first of all, you have people that lost their entire livelihoods, and there are real monetary damages that happened. People's careers, homes, cars, marriages – all of them dissolved... "I believe that the Jan 6ers are going to come out of this not even just financially stronger but also in a position to start to make real change. People are going to see us as the vindicated patriots that stood up for the stolen election."