FINNRIVER FARM & CIDERY
124 Center Road, Chimacum, WA 98325
MAILING ADDRESS
PO Box 178, Chimacum, WA 98325
Memorial Day weekend marks a seasonal turn in life at the farm and opens the gate for summer at the Cider Garden. For years now, we have appreciated the rising energy of this last weekend in May— how the days get even longer as the sun soars higher through our summer skies. It’s a lively, full weekend for us, with a generous flow of cider, live music, fine food, and life on the land.
However there is another deep layer of meaning to Memorial Day, and in light of the events in the world this week, I have felt compelled to explore where this ‘holiday’ originated and what it might mean for me. Memorial Day (originally known as Decoration Day for the tradition of decorating soldiers’ graves with flowers) is somber and sorrowful for many— a time to acknowledge and commemorate the loss of human life to War, and for families to remember their fallen beloveds. I took some time this week to dig deeper into the history of Memorial Day and learned something new to me and something that feels important to share if you have not heard this story yet.
A Time article, "The Overlooked Black History of Memorial Day," recounts how a Pulitzer Prize winning History professor at Yale, named David Blight, was researching a book on the first Memorial Day when he came across an unsorted archive that revealed another layer to the story. On May 1, 1865 in Charleston, South Carolina, a crowd of 10,000 people, "mostly Black residents", staged a parade around the racetrack, commemorating what was likely the first public Memorial Day to honor fallen Union soldiers who had been imprisoned and died at that location at the end of the Civil War.
"Black pastors delivered sermons and led attendees in prayer and in the singing of spirituals, and there were picnics... This tribute gave birth to an American tradition,” Blight wrote in Race and Reunion: “The war was over, and Memorial Day had been founded by African Americans in a ritual of remembrance and consecration.”” (in ‘Time', BY OLIVIA B. WAXMAN, MAY 22, 2020)
You can read more on this remarkable story here:
One of the Earliest Memorial Day Ceremonies Was Held by Freed African Americans
And here:
The Overlooked Black History of Memorial Day
As we get ready for Memorial Day here on the farm, many of us are also reckoning with the heavy weight of recent and ongoing injustices, tragedies and traumas. My heart is beating with grief for this suffering and I keep reaching for relationships and actions that are, in the words of Mohawk/Kanienkeha:ka Indigenous seed steward Rowen White, "rooted in love”. She writes of the “fierce love” that "protects and nurtures". That’s the love I want to study and practice in my own life.
Headed into Memorial Day, I am considering the power of memory grounded in justice and restored with truth, to help us grieve and to help us heal, on personal and public levels. We hope this land at Finnriver can be a place where folks gather with the spirit of community and the joy of connection, and where we can make space to remember the things we must and grow all of the love we can.
124 Center Road, Chimacum, WA 98325
EMAIL:info@finnriver.com
PHONE:360-339-8478
MAILING ADDRESS
PO Box 178, Chimacum, WA 98325
CHIMACUM CIDER GARDEN HOURS
Sunday: 12-8pm
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed
Wednesday: 12-5pm
Thursday: 12-8pm
Friday: 12-8pm
Saturday:12-8pm
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Finnriver Farm & Cidery