Bessie Bradley reads one of the six-foot tall panels at the Forks of the Roads Enslavement Market Traveling Exhibition Tuesday at the Natchez Visitor’s Center. “It’s amazing everyone needs to come and see it,” Bradley said, “That’s all I can say, it is truly, truly amazing.”
Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-CM Boxley talks to the crowd about the exhibit he developed and wrote, “Forks of the Roads Enslavement Markets Traveling Exhibition,” Tuesday during the opening reception at the Natchez Visitors Center.
People walk through the 6ft tall 8 ft wide panels detailing the history of of the Forks of the Road, in an exhibition written and developed byNatchez Historian Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-CM Boxley, "Forks of the Roads Enslavement Markets Traveling Exhibition,” Tuesday during the opening reception at the Natchez Visitors Center.
CJ Dee, walks through the Forks of the Roads Enslavement Market Traveling Exhibition Tuesday during the opening reception at the Natchez Visitor’s Center. Dee is a senior at Alcorn State University studying criminal justice and interning with Natchez National Historical Park at Melrose Estate. “We were talking about this all day at work,” Dee said, “It is the second largest slave trade in America so it’s something we should know about.”
People walk through the 6ft tall 8 ft wide panels detailing the history of of the Forks of the Road, in an exhibition written and developed byNatchez Historian Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-CM Boxley, "Forks of the Roads Enslavement Markets Traveling Exhibition,” Tuesday during the opening reception at the Natchez Visitors Center.