Community and Cultural Enrichment

Continuing Chattanooga's legacy, we pledge to guarantee everyone, regardless of age, race, or background, the chance to explore nature's wonders.

CFC has immeasurably contributed to our city; its Highland Park soccer fields are a perfect example. Located in the Highland Park neighborhood, with its beautiful abundance of immigrant families, the fields offer sanctuary, community and play.

On any given night, there could be more than 50 countries and nationalities represented, with nearly 10 different languages being spoken. Overhead, there are 27 different flags flying. 

Soccer in chattanooga

The Highland Park fields represent the best of Chattanooga. So, too, does the National Archeological District at Moccasin Bend. 

The Bend was home to human inhabitants some 10,000 years ago. It witnessed the stone tools, the birth of agriculture more than 2000 years ago, the arrival of conquistadors and the forced removal of the Cherokees.

Moccasin bend dedication

We must ask ourselves: what if we honored and protected our oldest community? 

What if we gave land back to its original inhabitants? 

What if we renamed parks using Cherokee and Citico vocabulary?

What if we recommitted ourselves to remembering stories too often forgotten?

Moccasin Bend dedication

On the south end of the Walnut St. Bridge, famous for its postcard presence in our downtown renovation, a series of sculptures honors Ed Johnson and the Black attorneys who fought for his life. 

In 1906, a lynch mob took Johnson, a Black man, from his jail cell, after he’d been unfairly arrested, and marched him to the nearby Walnut St. bridge, then shot, hung and killed him for allegedly raping a white woman. 

Ed Johnson newspaper

Johnson was the second Black man lynched on the bridge.

Decades later, as Chattanooga reimagined itself and downtown, the Walnut St. bridge remained a place of horror and racist violence in the memory of many Black Chattanoogans, some of whom vowed never to walk the bridge again.Then, a group of citizens began asking a question: What if we attempted to honor Johnson? What if the whole city knew his name and story? 

"It is rare in these trying times that communities come together to recognize a profound wrong. A wrong that haunts," said Princeton University’s Eddie Glaude at the ceremony.

"Over 100 years later, though it may be, this act to remember Ed Johnson, what happened on that fateful day, helps clear the path for a different way of being together here in Chattanooga."

Ed Johnson installation

Our Community and Cultural Enrichment Partners

Partner Spotlight

We have champions across the city: nonprofits, families, public and private leaders, gutsy, DIY individuals who start working, come hell or high water.

ArtsBuild

ArtsBuild has supported local arts since 1969, with more than $77 million of investment in arts programming, education and organizations.

Read More About Our Efforts

November 21, 2024

Threats and Solutions to Chattanooga’s Community and Cultural Enrichment

Read More

What if we carried the Ed Johnson story close in our hearts and minds, as we move into this contentious political age?

What if we renamed parks using Cherokee and Citico vocabulary?

What if our stories for freedom were fully celebrated and elevated?

What if we continue to build community – courageous community – in ways that create bridges over troubled waters?

What if we considered the best use for future Chattanoogans, seven generations away?

What if we recommitted ourselves to remembering stories too often forgotten?