logo
Lancaster, Ohio's First Black Business Owner Honored With Statue

Lancaster, Ohio's First Black Business Owner Honored With Statue

Yahoo6 hours ago

Lancaster, Ohio's very first Black business owner, Scipio Smith, is being honored by the city with a statue that was just completed.
According to NBC 4I, the city of Lancaster is celebrating the first Black business owner, Scipio Smith, who achieved the status in the 1800s. The location of the statue is along Main Street, which isn't too far from where the businessman's tinsmith shop was. A former slave, he is memorialized with him holding an open shackle with the day he was emancipated inscribed.
Michael Johnson, a local historian and the marketing director for the Fairfield County Heritage Association, stated that after finding an entry about Smith in a history book, he looked further into the former slave, who was enslaved in Virginia before being brought to Ohio.
'That was his way of showing you can't stop me, even this chain didn't hold me down,' said Johnson. 'You can't get much more of an underdog than being born a slave and losing your leg as a child.'
While finding out more information about Smith, he discovered that four years after he was freed, he founded the AME church, which is now Allen Chapel.
'To know he was right here, to know he was responsible for this church,' said Evan Saunders, Pastor of Allen Chapel. 'You don't even know the lives he's touched, but yet here 2025, we realize he's touching a whole community with that, so his legacy still continues to live on.'
Two years after opening the church, Smith opened his tinsmith shop in Lancaster.
'He was pretty quick to act once he got his freedom. He knew what he wanted,' Johnson said. 'Opened door for other Black business owners.'
After Johnson wrote a story about Smith, wanting to honor him more, he started a fundraiser two years ago that led to the statue being made.
'For me, I think statues are celebrations, they are people we should be looking up to, the ideals they represent, and Scipio, you can't beat his work ethic, his faith, his tenacity, the ability to overcome unbelievable obstacles. You can't beat that story,' Johnson said.
RELATED CONTENT: Ohio Universities Face Backlash: Students Rethink Enrollment Over Contentious DEI Restrictions

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meharry Medical College to expand into Memphis, partners with Mississippi Boulevard church
Meharry Medical College to expand into Memphis, partners with Mississippi Boulevard church

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Meharry Medical College to expand into Memphis, partners with Mississippi Boulevard church

Meharry Medical College is set to expand into Memphis with a new medical training facility. The historically Black, Nashville-based medical school announced the formation of its 'Office of Memphis Programs' at a ribbon-cutting on June 9. The new program will be housed on the planned 23-acre mixed-use campus of Mississippi Boulevard Christian Church in the Medical District and will support students during clinical training. 'I see this as a wonderful opportunity to turn the tide on and bring about better health care outcomes in the city of Memphis,' said Rev. Jason Turner of Mississippi Boulevard church. The expansion is part of Meharry's long-term goal of building a second campus in Memphis, said CEO and president James Hildreth. The college often has to send students to hospitals out of state because major hospitals in Nashville have commitments to training students from other schools. 'One of the things that the branch campus in Memphis will do for us is to allow us to have two major training sites and not have to send our students to so many places,' he said. The new facility will feature classrooms, faculty offices and a student lounge. The quality of education will be the same as at the main campus in Nashville, Hildreth said, but it will lay the foundation for a branch campus and keep medical students in Tennessee. Memphis has one of the highest rates of HIV/AIDS in the country and struggles with obesity and diabetes, Hildreth said. He said Meharry plans to focus on the burden of chronic diseases in the city. 'Memphis is a place where we can have a huge impact,' Hildreth said. In April, Meharry acquired four medical clinics in Memphis. A Meharry alumnus, Dr. Joseph Walker, founded Mississippi Boulevard Christian Church in 1921. He was its first pastor. 'It's serendipitous that their Office of Memphis Programs would be housed in the church that he founded 104 years ago,' Turner said. Jack Armstrong covers breaking news and the environment for The Commercial Appeal. He can be reached at and followed on X @jca2902. This article originally appeared on Memphis Commercial Appeal: Meharry Medical College part of Mississippi Boulevard Memphis expansion

Atlanta Budget a Safeguard Against Potential Trump Cuts, Lawmakers Say
Atlanta Budget a Safeguard Against Potential Trump Cuts, Lawmakers Say

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Atlanta Budget a Safeguard Against Potential Trump Cuts, Lawmakers Say

Atlanta City Council members say proposed cuts to federal aid programs many Black Atlantans count on and concerns about a national recession were on their minds last week when they approved another record-setting fiscal year budget. 'Everyone seems to assume we're going to have a recession,' council member Howard Shook told Capital B Atlanta on Wednesday. 'Things are so unpredictable in [Washington] that it's just hard to say what's going to happen.' Council members said they put more funding in this year's budget because they worry an economic downturn related to President Donald Trump's tariffs on foreign goods will have a domino effect on Atlanta's economy, and as a result will impact the city's tax revenue. They're also concerned about the effects anticipated reductions to federal aid included in Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act will have on city operations. 'The budget is trying to grapple with the potential that some federal money is going to go away,' council President Doug Shipman told Capital B Atlanta on Wednesday. The federal budget bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on May 22 still has to be approved in the U.S. Senate and signed by Trump before becoming law. Major cuts to Medicaid, SNAP and other critical programs many low-income Black Atlantans rely on for medical coverage and for paying their bills are included. More than half of Georgia SNAP benefit recipients were Black in 2020, according to the Georgia Budget & Policy Institute. Roughly 25% of Black Georgians were enrolled in Medicaid in 2023, according to the State Health Access Data Assistance Center. Only about 10% of white Georgians were on Medicaid the same year. In its current form, the Big Beautiful Bill would also cut funding for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's rental assistance programs by more than $26 billion, or roughly 43%. Shipman said those cuts could have a devastating impact on federal funding for affordable housing efforts in Atlanta, which is one reason the City Council voted to increase funding in its next fiscal year budget. 'The city is having to take on more of the burden of the programs that have historically been federal in nature,' Shipman said. 'We're going to try to do our best to continue to support folks [with] rental assistance, affordable housing, [and] new units.' Capital B Atlanta has reached out to Mayor Andre Dickens' office for comment. Shook and other council members voted unanimously in favor of the estimated $3 billion budget for fiscal year 2026, which begins on July 1, despite concerns about running a deficit next year, which includes a general fund budget of about $975.4 million. The city was already projected to have a $33 million deficit for the current fiscal year budget, largely due to lack of attrition and overtime pay for the Atlanta Police Department, according to lawmakers. Dickens' office told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution last week that it has already cut the anticipated deficit in half by limiting hiring for vacant city job openings. Shook said the city's workforce was reduced by about 400 positions to help balance the current fiscal year budget. He said the mayor's office has agreed to periodically report to the council the status of department spending next fiscal year to avoid running a deficit again. Balancing the budget has become an ongoing problem in Atlanta, a city of only about half a million residential taxpayers, that is responsible for providing municipal government services to an estimated 6.3 million metro area residents who work in or commute into the city. 'There's a very widespread recognition that FY26 will have to exist in and compete with a time of really unrivaled [macroeconomic] uncertainty,' Shook said. 'We're not going to wait for quarterly budget reports, as has been the custom.' The post Atlanta Budget a Safeguard Against Potential Trump Cuts, Lawmakers Say appeared first on Capital B News - Atlanta.

Springfield hosts Red Angus Youth Expo for agriculture education
Springfield hosts Red Angus Youth Expo for agriculture education

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Springfield hosts Red Angus Youth Expo for agriculture education

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Staff and vendors are setting up for the Red Angus Youth Expo at the Ozark Empire Fairgrounds, which helps kids learn about agriculture. On Sunday, young adults came to register for the expo. They expect hundreds of people from around the world to show up. 'We have roughly 400 animals entered here with about 200 exhibitors here, or close to that,' said Kelly Smith, director of commercial marketing for Red Angus. The Red Angus Youth Expo not only draws people to Springfield from across multiple states, but also from other countries as well. 'All over the United States, even some from Canada. So we do have some people outside the country that have ventured down here to Springfield to exhibit their animals,' said Smith. Table Rock State Park completes improvements to Campground 2, ribbon cutting this week According to Smith, there's a global demand for American beef products. 'Beef prices right now for the rancher through the markets are really at record highs,' Smith said. 'And the reason for that is because supply and demand is exactly what it is. The demand for our beef products in this country are overwhelming.' Zachary Griffith is the vice president of the Junior Ranching Association. He says the expo teaches young people about the future of agriculture. 'We expect around 270, 275 kids that we see throughout the time. And it's a great experience for these kids to come out,' Griffith said. 'We do educational opportunities, and we learn about different parts and perspectives of agriculture within the beef industry as a whole.' He is concerned, however, about how tariffs will impact their way of life. 'Imports are a big thing with us. I mean, we still import and export beef year-round,' said Griffith. 'I mean, being the number one beef producer in the world, we produce beef for everybody, not just ourselves. So it's our livelihood at line. These tariffs kind of affect just not only us but the other people in the future of agriculture as a whole.' The Red Angus Youth Expo will be in Springfield from June 8-13. A detailed schedule of the events can be found on the Red Angus Youth Expo website. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store