Updated · Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting · Jul 4
Bryan Stevenson Urges Honest Reckoning at America's 250th Anniversary as 4,000 Lynchings Shape Legacy
Updated
Updated · Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting · Jul 4
Bryan Stevenson Urges Honest Reckoning at America's 250th Anniversary as 4,000 Lynchings Shape Legacy
2 articles · Updated · Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting · Jul 4
Summary
Montgomery activist Bryan Stevenson said America’s 250th anniversary should force an honest accounting of slavery, lynching and racial terror, calling today’s fight over history a defining “narrative struggle.”
Over the past decade, Stevenson’s Equal Justice Initiative has remade Montgomery with markers, a museum and memorial sites after he found 59 Confederate monuments in the city but no public acknowledgment of slavery.
The National Memorial for Peace and Justice documents more than 4,000 racial terror lynchings, which Stevenson said must be understood as a continuation of slavery’s ideology rather than isolated crimes.
Stevenson argued current efforts to soften or erase that history—from school curricula to federal museums under the Trump administration—threaten progress toward repair, reconciliation and restoration.
Framing himself as an “essential American,” he said the next 50 years should build a fuller national story so the country reaches its 300th anniversary with a more truthful understanding of its past.