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February 2010
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CityLink Seattle

Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center Presents “People in Parks: Black Heroes and Heroines”

Join noted Seattle actor Umeme, talented Seattle actress Josie Howell, and others as  Seattle Parks and Recreation celebrates Black History Month with a series of short performances highlighting the lives of African Americans the City has honored by naming parks after them.

Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center will present eight performances in eight parks on February 13 and 27 (please see the schedule below for details). Each event will be approximately 30 minutes in length and Parks officials will be in attendance. These events are free and open to the public, and everyone is invited.   

Performances on Saturday, February 13, 2010: 

2 p.m.: Dr. Blanche Lavizzo Park, 2100 S Jackson St. Dr. Lavizzo was the first African-American woman pediatrician in the state of Washington. She was the founding medical director of the Central Area’s Odessa Brown Children’s Clinic, whose motto is “Quality Care with Dignity.” 

4 p.m.: Edwin T. Pratt Park, 1800 S Main St. Edwin Pratt was a civil rights leader and Seattle Urban League Executive Director who played a pivotal role in the 1960s civil rights movement. He advocated for services to people of  color and low-income people, and worked for the elimination of segregation in Seattle’s public schools. He was killed by a shotgun blast at his Shoreline home in 1969. The crime has never been solved. 

2 p.m.: William Grose Park, 1814 30th Ave. Grose was a pioneer who arrived in Seattle in 1860 after serving in the U.S. Navy. By 1960 he was Seattle’s wealthiest Black resident. 

4 p.m.: Alvin Larkins Park, corner of E Pike St. and 34th Ave. E. Another U.S. Navy man, Larkins was stationed at Sand Point Naval Air Station in 1943 when he became a member of the Navy’s Jive Bombers band. He spent the rest  of his career as a renowned music teacher, youth activist, and member of the Rainy City Jazz Band. 

Performances on Saturday, February 27, 2010: 

2 p.m.: Powell Barnett Park, 352 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way. Barnett was a talented musician, baseball player, and community leader who came to Seattle in 1906. He was the first president of the Leschi Improvement Council. A man of great energy, Barnett believed in improving race relations and building civic unity.  

4 p.m.: Flo Ware Park, corner of S Jackson St. and 28th Ave. S. Florasina Ware was a brilliant education activist and supporter of Head Start and Meals on Wheels. She anchored the King County Economic Opportunity Board in 1960s and raised 20 foster children.

2 p.m.:  Homer Harris Park, 2401 E Howell St. Dr. Harris was a University of Iowa football captain and graduate who wanted to play professional football, but in the 1930s black players were banned from the National Football League. He went on to become Seattle’s “go-to” dermatologist and treated generations of Seattle teens. 

4 p.m.: Prentis I. Frazier Park, 401 24th Ave. E. Frazier was a former enslaved African American who came to Seattle in 1916. In the 1920s he started and published a newspaper for the black community, the Seattle Enterprise, which later became the Northwest Enterprise. He is remembered as a true philanthropist and astute business entrepreneur. 

Please visit our website for more information about Seattle Parks and Recreation: www.seattle.gov/parks

For more information about the events, please call Randy Wiger at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center at 206-684-0775. 

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