TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Mary Hall Daniels erected her final home in Hilliard, Fla., just the way she liked it. Three bedrooms, two baths, encased in light brown brick with a miniature palm tree out front. There was a metal carport in the back for her sturdy Dodge Intrepid and she tended the yard herself, manning a riding lawn mower until she was 90 years old. The house was hers, and no one could take it from her, writes Victor Luckerson (@vluck89). Not again. She'd built it in a one-stoplight town near Jacksonville at a cost of nearly $100,000. It was a hefty price for a woman who was living off a modest retirement from her job as a nursing assistant and from Social Security payments. But by 2000, Daniels had already paid off the entire bill. Six years earlier, she was awarded $150,000 by the state of Florida because of what had happened to her very first house, in an obscure rural hamlet called Rosewood. In 1923, when Daniels was 3 years old, a white mob burned down the mostly Black enclave after a white woman in a nearby town of Sumner said she had been assaulted by a Black assailant. From the time she was whisked from her bed until she died in 2018 as the last known survivor of the attack, Daniels never again stepped foot in Rosewood. Read more about Rosewood's path to reparations—and what America can learn from it—at the link in bio. Photograph by @rahimfortune for TIME」9月18日 0時31分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 9月18日 00時31分


Mary Hall Daniels erected her final home in Hilliard, Fla., just the way she liked it. Three bedrooms, two baths, encased in light brown brick with a miniature palm tree out front. There was a metal carport in the back for her sturdy Dodge Intrepid and she tended the yard herself, manning a riding lawn mower until she was 90 years old. The house was hers, and no one could take it from her, writes Victor Luckerson (@vluck89). Not again. She'd built it in a one-stoplight town near Jacksonville at a cost of nearly $100,000. It was a hefty price for a woman who was living off a modest retirement from her job as a nursing assistant and from Social Security payments. But by 2000, Daniels had already paid off the entire bill. Six years earlier, she was awarded $150,000 by the state of Florida because of what had happened to her very first house, in an obscure rural hamlet called Rosewood. In 1923, when Daniels was 3 years old, a white mob burned down the mostly Black enclave after a white woman in a nearby town of Sumner said she had been assaulted by a Black assailant. From the time she was whisked from her bed until she died in 2018 as the last known survivor of the attack, Daniels never again stepped foot in Rosewood. Read more about Rosewood's path to reparations—and what America can learn from it—at the link in bio. Photograph by @rahimfortune for TIME


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