Survivors, descendents return to Rosewood seeking healing
By DIRK LAMMERS, Associated Press
January 2, 2004
ROSEWOOD — It's been 81 years since Robie Allenetta Robinson Mortin set foot here, but little is left of the town in which she grew up.
On Jan. 1, 1923, a lynch mob descended onto the predominantly black township and hanged her uncle, Samuel Carter. Mortin's father whisked the 8-year-old girl and her sister onto a train that carried many residents to safety as a mob burned Rosewood to the ground.
"We could see the flames from Chiefland," about 25 miles away, recalls Mortin, 89. "Why? Why burn down the houses? The children should have had some place to come home."
Mortin returned Thursday to gather with more than 100 people at the site of the massacre for a "peace and healing" ceremony, organized by Rosewood descendent Lizzie Jenkins.
Jenkins, president of the Archer-based Real Rosewood Foundation, says it's the first time survivors and descendants have marked an anniversary together.
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