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DESCRIPTION:Working Draft ~ Proposed Resolution \nNegro Hill Cemetery\nEl Dorado 
 County, California \n\nWhereas, Negro Hill, California was established in 
 1848, by people of African descent who migrated from the States of 
 Virginia, Massachusetts, Georgia, North Carolina and from many other places 
 yet to be discovered through primary source documentation of governmental 
 archives, private insurance records, ship manifests, genealogy records and 
 oral traditions, and\n\nAnd Whereas, high above the confluence of the North 
 Fork and South Fork of American River, “a peninsula of granite and quartz 
 infused with gold” they created a community destined to become one of the 
 largest towns of the American River Gold Mining District, site of home of 
 the California Gold Rush.  Negro Hill, California bagan as a welcoming 
 community of all races, ethnicities and religions yearning for a greater 
 measure of freedom, and\n\nWhereas, the Civil Usage House, Negro Hill Town 
 Hall, served as a regional center to discuss civic responsibility, 
 community service and racial justice.  Negro Hill Methodist Church and 
 Negro Hill Public School attracted multiethnic members and students that 
 challenged the racial prejudice of the day, and\n\nWhereas, Negro Hill, 
 California was an early home to a young Leland Stanford, Stanford 
 University and a young Charles Crocker, Central Pacific Railroad and home 
 to one of the largest China towns in early California History.  In 1856, 
 the community of Mormon Island suffered a catastrophic fire, and many 
 residents who were terrorized crossed over Shaw Bridge on the South Fork of 
 the American River and were welcomed into the surrounding Negro Hill 
 community, and\n\nWhereas, in 1863, during the U.S. Civil War, the 
 peninsula region of Negro Hill, then part of Placer County, was annexed by 
 El Dorado County through State Legislature under the guideance of then 
 Governor Leland Stanford.  By the end of the California Gold Rush Era the 
 natural flora and fauna of the American River Basin suffered ongoing 
 environmental challenges following commercial gold mining operations.  The 
 Negro Hill Ditch Company helped provide a year round pristine water source, 
 an interconnected conveyance system that successful brought the regional 
 pioneer agriculture communities together; elements of that public works 
 project are still operational today, and  \n\nWhereas, the Flood Control 
 Act of 1944 provided authorization for Folsom Reservoir on the American 
 River to provide for public safety to the regional community.  The planning 
 and construction of Folsom Dam began after the close of World War II with a 
 plethora of national, state and local government agencies supporting small, 
 medium and large private contractors to build Folsom Dam and Reservoir, 
 and\n\nWhereas, many Gold Rush Era cemeteries and individual graves were 
 reinterred at Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery in 1954, including 36 found 
 at Negro Hill Cemetery.  The incorrect foul and racist description replaced 
 the correct name of Negro Hill Cemetery and today the egregious human and 
 civil rights violations continue, and \n\nWhereas, May 2011, the U.S. Army 
 Corps of Engineers accepted responsibility and released volumes of original 
 records from 1951 to 1961 showing the incorrect name this 50th Anniversary 
 of the notarized transfer of title from the Secretary of the Army to the 
 Chair of the County of El Dorado Board of Supervisors, May 1961, 
 and\n\nWhereas, in 1998, El Dorado County Cemetery Commission led by Sue 
 Silver attempted to change the grave markers and was not given authority to 
 do so by the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors.  Chuck Caines and 
 George Chan, Jr. first brought knowledge of the 36 grave markers to the 
 community of African Americans.  The Negro Hill Burial Ground Project was 
 established and has built a national network of "united nations" volunteers 
 and professionals consultants seeking a positive resolution that ensures 
 “Dignity and Respect” for all early California Pioneers and especially 
 those of African descent, today referred to as "Niggers" while preserving 
 authentic history of Negro Hill, California for future generations, and     
 \n\nWhereas, on April 26, 2011, members of the Stockton Black Leadership 
 Council, Stockton NAACP, Church of God in Christ, and Wose Community Church 
 through the Negro Hill Burial Ground Project were denied the opportunity to 
 make a full presentation before the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors 
 yet spoke briefly during “information open forum.”  The Board chair and 
 a majority of the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors members acknowledge 
 no cognition to the very existence of the 36 grave markers that read, 
 Unknown, Moved by Nigger Hill Cemetery by the U.S. Government in 1954, and 
 \n\nWhereas, it is our proposal that the Negro Hill Burial Ground Project 
 and many international sponaors and supporters, this United Nations 
 International Year for People of African Descent, be allowed to provide 36 
 pillowed, highly polished granite grave markers, installed by cemetery 
 industry professionals on or near July 4, 2011 and cooperatively expand our 
 working stakeholder group to erect a suitable monument with agreeable 
 language through mediated consensus process by the U.S. Department of 
 Justice.  Together, we will host an international celebration, lead by our 
 Native Miwok elders as part of our sacred African ceremony for the souls of 
 our ancestors, including full United States Military Honor inviting the 
 Interior Secretary, Education Secretary, Agriculture Secretary, Secretary 
 of the Army and the President of the United States of America, 
 and\n\nWhereas, the Negro Hill Burial Ground Project and our fiscal 
 sponsors will provide all funding and resources necessary toward fulfilling 
 our civic responsibility to help bring forth “Dignity and Respect” for 
 all California Pioneers and especially those of African descent, in a way 
 that can bring closure and begin a new way forward, healing the hurt and 
 injured, at no cost to El Dorado County, the State of California or the 
 United States of America, and\n \nBe it resolved, on this day May 24, 2011 
 the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors to enact this resolution on 
 behalf of the citizens of the Great State of California and the United 
 States of America.\n\n~ Draft III ~ \n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/05/22/18680266.php
SUMMARY:News Conference ~ Proposed Resolution Negro Hill Cemetery ~
LOCATION:News Conference ~ Sunday 2:00 p.m. ~ May 22, 2011\nMalonga Casquelourd 
 Center\n1428 Alice Street\nOakland, CA  94612\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/05/22/18680266.php
DTSTART:20110522T210000Z
DTEND:20110522T220000Z
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