Beranda Perang African American Military Heritage Day honored in Roxbury – The Bay State...

African American Military Heritage Day honored in Roxbury – The Bay State Banner

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African American Military Heritage Day honored in Roxbury – The Bay State Banner

Participants pledge allegiance to the flag as 54th Regiment reenactors present the colors at the African American Military Heritage Day event. PHOTO: John Wilcox/Mayor's Office

The Veterans and Friends of Gourdin Memorial Park gathered in Nubian Square on May 16 for the 21st annual African American Military Heritage Day with the direct and powerful theme of “We Were There.â€

Those three words carried the weight of centuries, speaking not only to military service, but also to recognition long delayed.

Celebrants gather for “We Were There: African American Military Heritage Day†at Edward O. Gourdin African American Veterans Memorial Park. PHOTO: JOHN WILCOX/MAYOR'S OFFICE

Cohosted by Roxbury Cultural District, Roxbury Main Streets, Concerned Black Men of Massachusetts and Everyone 250, the gathering honored African Americans present at every stage of the American military story: the Revolution, Civil War, World Wars I and II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Attendees completed a brief parade before being addressed by speakers, including Imari Parris Jeffries, CEO of Embrace Boston and an Iraq War veteran, at Gourdin Memorial Park. Formerly Dudley Park, the space has transformed from a pass-through plaza into one of Boston's most important public memorials.

The park honors Brigadier General Edward O. Gourdin, whose life embodied the theme “We Were There.†Raised in Cambridge and ultimately settling as an adult in Roxbury, Gourdin became the first Black judge appointed to Roxbury District Court and the first Black justice appointed to the Massachusetts Superior Court. He was also the first man in history to break 25 feet in the long jump and won a silver medal for the United States at the 1924 Paris Olympics.

Statue of General Edward O. Gourdin. Gourdin was the first Black judge appointed to the Roxbury District Court. PHOTO: JOHN WILCOX/MAYOR'S OFFICE

Gourdin represented a generation of African Americans who achieved greatness while navigating a society that often denied their humanity, patriotism and equal citizenship. That larger story is written throughout the park.

The memorial includes a life-size bronze statue of Gourdin by the late Boston artist Fern Cunningham-Terry, accompanied by 10 bronze reliefs sculpted by Karen Eutemey, which depict African American participation in 10 military conflicts.

The memorial tells a story that is national and deeply local. Roxbury becomes a place where military history, civil rights history, public art and community memory intersect.

“Seeing this all come together reminds me that it was worth it,†said Rachelle Brown, whose father, Ralph, served under Gourdin. With her mother, Thelma, the Browns have led the effort to create and steward Gourdin Park over two decades.

The park does not solely celebrate military victory. It also acknowledges contradiction: that African Americans fought for freedoms abroad while often being denied full freedom at home. Black veterans returned from wars only to encounter segregation, discrimination, limited housing opportunities, exclusion from institutions and unequal treatment under the law.

PHOTO: John Wilcox/Mayor's Office

Often, Black military contributions were withheld from monuments, textbooks and public memory. That reality is in part why Gourdin Memorial Park, and its stewards, continue working: to transform public space into public memory and to shape civic identity. The area communicates whose sacrifices matter, whose stories deserve permanence and whose contributions are considered part of the American narrative.

Organizers behind the memorial have long emphasized education as central to the mission. The vision saw the installation of statues and plaques as a beginning, a foundation for a living civic space where future generations could learn hidden history and understand that it is not abstract but personal. It lives in neighborhoods, families, churches, schools and parks.

In Roxbury, residents can walk through Gourdin Memorial Park and encounter not only the memory of military service, but the memory of aspiration, struggle, sacrifice and civic contribution.

When communities are erased from public memory, denied recognition or excluded from civic narratives, it affects identity, belonging, aspiration and the ability of future generations to see themselves as fully part of the American story.

Gourdin Memorial Park pushes against erasure by centering Black visibility and dignity. In that sense, African American Military Heritage Day was not only about honoring veterans of the past. It was also about strengthening the emotional and civic foundations for the future.

African American Military Heritage Day, Brigadier General Edward O. Gourdin, Gourdin Memorial Park