Webinars/Podcasts

Erased but Not Forgotten: Reclaiming North Nashville’s Legacy (Part II)

Mar 30, 2025
Instagram graphic for the webinar titled Erased but not forgotten Reclaiming North Nashvilles Legacy featuring an outstretched hand and a head shot of the presenter Sue St Clair

From the 1800s through the 1950s, North Nashville’s 37208 zip code flourished as a vibrant Black community. Despite systemic segregation and redlining, residents established institutions, including schools, businesses, historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and a lively entertainment scene that attracted renowned Black artists. In the 1960s, federal and local policies resulted in the construction of Interstate 40, which bisected this thriving neighborhood, leading to the demolition of homes and businesses. This disruption transformed a once-prosperous area into one plagued by poverty—a condition from which it has yet to recover. Today, North Nashville faces challenges such as high child poverty rates, food insecurity, and mass incarceration and confronts the additional threat of gentrification, further endangering its rich cultural heritage.

In the face of crises, there must always be hope. This presentation highlights North Nashville’s legacy of resilience in the face of structural racism and explores how community building restores that legacy. This two-part webinar will engage participants in thinking about the power of race unity and justice, community building, and insights from the Bahá’í framework for action.

Note: This is part two of a two-part series. If you missed part 1, you can watch the recording on the web page for part 1.

Contributors

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Sue Ballew St. Clair

Sue Ballew St. Clair has served in different leadership roles during her career, both within the US and internationally. While serving as a national director of psychiatric nurse practitioners, she was awarded the Outstanding Professional Award in 2010. Although Sue is currently partially retired, she serves on the board of Partners in Racial Justice, an organization focused on creating ways and means of bringing all people together in the pursuit of racial justice, healing, and unity with a focus on reaching Black, Indigenous peoples, and youth. She serves on the board of Copper to Gold, a Bahá’í-inspired, non-profit organization dedicated to achieving race amity by providing safe space for individuals of the white, dominant culture to recognize and transform attitudes and behaviors harmful to Black and Indigenous people and other People of Color. Sue is also on the advisory board for the Children’s Theater Company (CTC) and serves to facilitate CTC’s Parent Café in Jackson, TN. In addition, she serves on the Bahá’í National Race Working Group that is striving to develop a Ruhi branch course on Racism for Americans. She creates a monthly 'Spirit of Blackness' program specifically for Black people, which is one of the programs promoted by Partners in Racial Justice. Finally, Sue serves on the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of Nashville in Nashville, Tennessee. Sue has been a Bahá’í since she discovered the Faith at 19 years old and has served the Bahá’í Faith in several different capacities, both on the Homefront and as an international pioneer. Her service is always focused on engagement with individuals, faith-based groups, and community organizations to work together for the “betterment of the world through pure and goodly deeds.” Racial justice and healing are at the center of her work to contribute to spiritually just and loving communities.

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