Care for historic Black cemeteries in Hampton Roads depends on the locality. But city support can make a difference.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Care-for-historic-Black-cemeteries-in-Hampton-Roads-depends-on-the-locality-But-city-support-can-make-a-difference/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Friday, August 5, 2022 • • General
Artistine Lang was president of a neighborhood association on the Peninsula. She put that on the back burner more than a decade ago, she said, and started focusing on caring for Pleasant Shade cemetery with her husband Rev. Darnell Lang.
They did fundraisers and organized volunteer cleanups of park, but it was a daunting task - to clean up and care for 20 acres of overgrown, marshy territory. Over the years, volunteers have come and gone, but the park is still in need of upkeep.
"We are trying, and hopefully things will change," Rev. Lang said. "But as it stands right now, it looks kind of bleak, I must admit."
Virginia has a program that funds maintenance for historic Black cemeteries, allotting $5 per grave. But as a private cemetery, Pleasant Shade doesn't qualify, even though it was the main cemetery for Black people across the Peninsula for decades.
WHRO - Hampton Roads cities need state funding to care for Black cemeteries
Artistine Lang was president of a neighborhood association on the Peninsula. She put that on the back burner more than a decade ago, she said, and started focusing on caring for Pleasant Shade cemetery with her husband Rev. Darnell Lang.
They did fundraisers and organized volunteer cleanups of park, but it was a daunting task - to clean up and care for 20 acres of overgrown, marshy territory. Over the years, volunteers have come and gone, but the park is still in need of upkeep.
"We are trying, and hopefully things will change," Rev. Lang said. "But as it stands right now, it looks kind of bleak, I must admit."
Virginia has a program that funds maintenance for historic Black cemeteries, allotting $5 per grave. But as a private cemetery, Pleasant Shade doesn't qualify, even though it was the main cemetery for Black people across the Peninsula for decades.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/DC-grants-250K-to-preserve-historic-Black-cemeteries-in-Georgetown-and-Benning-Ridge/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Tuesday, February 3, 2026 • • General
WASHINGTON (7News) — Three historic Black cemeteries in Washington, D.C., are getting a financial boost as the city moves to preserve sacred ground and the stories tied to it.
The District announced two grants totaling $250,000 for the care and preservation of cemeteries in Georgetown and Benning Ridge. Two nonprofits, the Woodlawn Cemetery Perpetual Care Association and the Black Georgetown Foundation, will each receive $125,000 to support research, maintenance, and community education efforts during the next fiscal year.
City leaders say the investment is part of a broader push to recognize and protect Black history in the nation's capital, especially places that were historically underfunded.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/The-disgraceful-history-of-erasing-Black-cemeteries-in-the-United-States/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Wednesday, October 22, 2025 • • General
The burying ground looks like an abandoned lot. Holding the remains of upward of 22,000 enslaved and free people of color, the Shockoe Hill African Burying Ground in Richmond, Virginia, established in 1816, sits amid highways and surface roads. Above the expanse of unmarked graves loom a deserted auto shop, a power substation, a massive billboard. The bare ground of the cemetery is strewn with weeds.
/Blog/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/Endangered-African-American-Historic-Sites/The-Unity-Cemetery-Preservation-Fund-is-accepting-applications-for-funding-in-2026/?link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Friday, September 26, 2025 • • General
It is our pleasure to announce that the Unity Cemetery Fund is accepting applications for funding in 2026. The attached PDF includes detailed information about the grant process. Applications will be due February 28th, 2026. The award will be announced in May 2026.
In 2024 the Unity Cemetery Fund was pleased to be able to award funding to Geer Cemetery in North Carolina for needed repairs and infrastructure work, and in 2025 we provided funding to the Descendants of Olivewood in Texas for needed repairs within their cemetery.