7A mo NEWS^e Ciatlstte $at Tuesday, December 22, 2005 Historic hospital may get second life Continued from page 1A In grooming the idea, Cook hopes the building will accept a role in the current scheme of things like it did years ago when blacks w^« not accept ed into mainstream hospitals. Report: 1898 N.C. not was planned ^AFF REPORTS WILMINGTON - Race riots that led to the overthrow of this city’s government in 1898 was actually an insur rection that white suprana- cdsts had planned for months to strip black residents of their rights, a state commis sion concluded. The violence in Wilmington, which resulted in the deaths of at least 22 black people, ‘Svas part of a statewide effort to put white supremacist Democrats in office and stem the political advances of black citizens,” the 1898 ^^^lmington Riot Commission concludes in a draft report. Afterward, white suprema cists in state office passed laws that disenfranchised blacks until the dvil rights movranCTit and Voting Rights Act of the 1960s. “Essentially it crippled a segment of our population that hasn’t recovered in 107 years,” said Harper Peterson, a commission member and fonner mayor of Wilmington “It’s a nugor ev^t that went unnoticed.” At the time of the violence, black men in North Carolina had been able to vote for some three decades as part of Reconstruction following the Civil War, said Jeffrey Crow, deputy secretary of the state Office of Archives Eind History, which researched the report. The United States abol ished slavery in 1865. But within a year of the insurrection, the General Assembly was controlled by Democrats and had passed the first s^jegation law that ended voting ri^ts to blacks. The General Assembly established the commission in 2000. Its draft report was opened for public comment last we^ Some commission members have su^ested financing his torical exhibitions about the riot and its consequences, portraying it in school history texts and developing econom ic interests in affected areas. In addition, the state should issue some sort of apology for its inaction, said Irving Joyner, vice chairman of the commission and a law professor at North Carolina Central University On the Net: Riot Commission: www.ah Acrstate.ncjis/1898- Pitted your savings from the ups and downs o( inliaiion wiih the new Series [ Bond fnxn the US. Treasury And 1 Bonds art available at most financial institutions. Call 1-80CMUS BOND for more infonnation. 140NUSBOM1 But they knew they could find relief at St. Agnes. Cook said there are still vast needs in the black com- mimity today that the build ing could pday an important role in addressing. “We want to make it some thing to broaden its appeal,” he said. Cook hopes that people will be willing to support the com munity service concept of the project as much as they are willing to invest in the brick and mortar part of the initia tive. He estimates the raio- vation will cost appreodmate- ly $6 million to $8 million. T) add the allied health pre^am services, an additional $3 million to $4 million would be needed. The eight-member board has created a 501(c)3 non profit in order to accept dona tions. “We already have the struc ture to collect money,” Cook said. “We hope to attract more attention fiom philan thropists, and the state and the federal governments.” The group will also apply for federal grants. Alumni of the college and the hospital have been active in the process too. One of those alumni mem bers is Martlia Hudson, 81, of Raleigh. Hudson was the head nurse of pediatrics at St. Agnes. Hudson became a nurse to try to find a cure for her sis ter’s sickness. She said her sister was simply the wrong color at the wrong time to receive better care. Hudson credits St. Agnes for her success as a nurse, which is why she decided to become a member of the board. The sight of the dilapidated building often brings her to tears. “It has a lot of history to it,” she said. “It means a lot to me. The main goal of the hos pital was to make people bet ter and get them back on their feet. People don’t realize what St. Agnes has gone through” was ^74 S-Diwtf Chfist snd CbNmI Woilt Csnter ALL In-Stock Power Tool Combo Kits Oli? gold Dscou^ taiiai ^ ^ MMockfclpIfcliis, Iv vll (y D^ers, and Dishwashers SendaLowe's Gift Card anywhere, visit us online. Lowes.coin /GiftCards last minute gift ideas .December 21-24 *10 rebate oniSka^itTiie laser ie«is via miii Ofevaid now Vnii^ 12/3 Seestoebrdetals. >14* •>10 \ H*.# >14* LawLewIX 20% off at Vadssnan ostfiof! pcMi took and \^Friai9aicnabiSetoiwvayl)|rsl^ 25'Aitonafic^ Measure *8*^ •DwItidttwfetolaizcrtalaidwiM 403247 Iwotf •36ir toOion •ijser pniecis 30 lie fIBKB TS^SMaidandMetiic/lutoSet tWCnulySaw Kri^CompouidMterSaN •ijeSmennarty *12-4101): iBlociti steel ((MS'bevel wiih Laser Glide •TheonghalSIilSae^ *00^2111111111) base 452549