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Michigan's first Black-owned cemetery celebrates 100 years, continues to serve community
Michigan's first Black-owned cemetery celebrates 100 years, continues to serve community

CBS News

time29-06-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

Michigan's first Black-owned cemetery celebrates 100 years, continues to serve community

Michigan's first Black-owned cemetery and oldest African American corporation is celebrating 100 years of service to the community. In 1925, a group of African American funeral directors convened to create a cemetery free of racial discrimination. Detroit Memorial Park in Warren is still recognized as a historical and cultural landmark in 2025. "This is an inspiring story of a group of men coming together to solve a challenge of people not having access," said Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II. On Saturday night in Pontiac, Detroit Memorial Park's centennial anniversary was celebrated. "For many years, there was nowhere that Black people could go, and so up until I'd say the 60s, 70s, and 80s, we had so many burials each day because they felt they had to come to us, and now that's opened up, they don't have to come to us, but they still do, said Wilbur Hughes, Detroit Memorial Park CEO and grandson of one of the cemetery's initial investors. Celebrating alongside Detroit Memorial Park is the James H. Cole Home for Funerals of Detroit. The funeral home is the oldest Black-owned business in Michigan, celebrating 100 years in 2019. "From one Black business to another, 100-year-old companies, I mean, you don't see that very often, let alone in Southeast Michigan," said Antonio Green, vice president of the James H. Cole Home for Funerals. In the past few years leading up to the centennial celebration, Detroit Memorial Park has gone through beautification and infrastructure enhancements as well as digitizing records to improve accessibility for families and researchers so that the legacy of this cemetery will never be forgotten. "If you do something for the right reasons, you can build something that lasts," Gilchrist said.

Springfield exhibit to showcase Route 66's unique attractions
Springfield exhibit to showcase Route 66's unique attractions

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Springfield exhibit to showcase Route 66's unique attractions

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — The History Museum on the Square is opening a new temporary exhibit starting on Wednesday, July 2, in Springfield. According to a History Museum on the Square press release, the museum is opening an exhibit called Roadside Gems: Rediscovering Route 66's Cultural Attractions from July 2 to September 14. This is the fourth installment of the five-part Route 66 exhibit series, which is setting up for the national Centennial Celebration in Springfield in 2026, the release says. Artists wanted for Route 66 sculpture project The summer exhibit will include information on where travelers ate, slept and filled up their gas tanks on their drive through the historic highway. Visitors to the exhibit will learn about the Jewell Theater, the rise of the Ozark Jubilee, the hidden caves, public parks and the early days of the Springfield Cardinals. 'We're thrilled to showcase the cultural heartbeat of Springfield along Route 66,' Sean FitzGibbons, executive director of the History Museum on the Square, said in the release. 'Our previous exhibits explored the essentials of a road trip; places to eat, sleep, and fuel up. But Roadside Gems is about the why. It celebrates the quirky, the majestic and everything in between. These are the stops that turned a road trip into an adventure. When people say the journey is just as important as the destination, these cultural gems are what they mean.' The Roadside Gems exhibit is included with regular museum admission starting in July. For more information, visit the museum's website. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Dr. Jeffrey Towbin Announces Retirement from Le Bonheur Children's Hospital
Dr. Jeffrey Towbin Announces Retirement from Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Dr. Jeffrey Towbin Announces Retirement from Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- After 40 years of practice as a pediatric cardiologist, Dr. Jeffrey Towbin will retire from Le Bonheur Children's Hospital and the University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) on June 30, 2025. In addition to being Chief of Pediatric Cardiology, Executive Co-Director of the Heart Institute, and Vice Chair of Pediatrics for Strategy Advancement, Towbin's career has had a clinical focus on cardiomyopathy, heart failure and heart transplantation and a research focus on the genetics responsible for the development and progression of cardiac muscle disease, the causes and progression of arrhythmias and animal models with genetic abnormalities in cardiac muscle disease and arrhythmias. In the past 23 years, Dr. Towbin led three different Divisions of Pediatric Cardiology, including the Heart Center at Texas Children's Hospital/Baylor College of Medicine, the Heart Institute at Cincinnati Children's Hospital and the Heart Institute at Le Bonheur / UT Health Science Center, with each of these programs attaining top three to 10 U.S. News and World Report (USNWR) rankings. Dr. Towbin's leadership has led to the immense growth of Le Bonheur's Heart Institute and its programs, including the recruitment of over 40 top-tier cardiologists, the development of nationally recognized subspecialty programs, a cardiac advanced practice provider program and the creation of a Heart Institute expansion, including creation of a 31-bed Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit (CVICU) and a state-of-the-art Cardiac MRI/Cath Lab suite. During his 10-year tenure at Le Bonheur, he led the Heart Institute to a top 10 ranking by U.S. News & World Report, recognition by the Pediatric Heart Transplant Society as a Vanguard Center of Excellence and recognition by the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Association (HCMA) and Children's Cardiomyopathy Foundation (CCF) as a Recognized Center of Excellence. He was also the first recipient of the Bob and Paula McEniry Endowed Chair of Cardiology at Le Bonheur and was also the recipient of the St. Jude Endowed Chair of Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Research. Dr. Towbin developed the Heart Failure and Heart Transplant Program at Le Bonheur, created the first Molecular Cardiology Laboratories at UT Health Science Center and developed the Cardiovascular Genetics Program at Le Bonheur and the Cardio-Oncology Program at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. Academically, Dr. Towbin had over 600 peer-reviewed publications, the highest impact factors within UT Health Science Center, held many National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants over his career and received many local, national and international awards. The awards include but are not limited to the 2025 American College of Cardiology (ACC) Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2024 Distinguished Heart Hero Award from the American Heart Association (AHA) Centennial Celebration, the 2023 American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery (AAP-SOCCS) Helen B. Taussig Founder's Award, the 2022 Stanford University's List of the World's Top 2% Scientists, the 2017 Distinguished Scientist of the AHA Award, the 2013 AHA Basic Research Prize, the 2007 ACC Distinguished Scientist (Basic Science) Award, the 1993 Young Investigator Award at the AAP-SOCCS and the 1991 Richard D. Rowe Perinatal Cardiology Research Award from the Society for Pediatric Research (SPR). From a teaching and mentoring perspective, Dr. Towbin has mentored more than 40 fellows and faculty members that have become Chiefs of Pediatric Cardiology, Department Chairs of Pediatrics and Deans of Medical Schools. Further, Dr. Towbin has been an invited speaker at countless national and international conferences and many guest professorships. Further, Dr. Towbin is a Fellow of multiple organizations including the American Academy of Pediatrics (FAAP), the American College of Cardiology (FACC), the American Heart Association (AHA), and the Heart Failure Society of America (FHFSA). About Le Bonheur Children'sLe Bonheur Children's, based in Memphis, Tenn., provides expert care for children in more than 45 pediatric subspecialties, encompassing robust community programs, a pediatric research institute and regional outpatient centers in Jackson, Tenn., Tupelo, Miss., and Jonesboro, Ark. Le Bonheur also features a 290-bed hospital in Memphis and a 21-bed satellite hospital within Jackson-Madison County General Hospital in Jackson, Tenn. As the primary pediatric teaching affiliate for the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Le Bonheur trains more than 350 pediatricians and specialists each year. Nationally recognized, Le Bonheur has been named a U.S. News & World Report Best Children's Hospital for 14 consecutive years and is a Magnet-designated facility, the ultimate credential for high-quality patient care and nursing excellence. For more information, please call (901) 287-6030 or visit Connect with us at or on Instagram at lebonheurchildrens. Contact:David View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Le Bonheur Children's Hospital

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