Each Wednesday afternoon throughout the year, free produce is available at Carter Jones Park.
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The proposal includes capping a four-block section of I-95, and adding green space, new buildings and opportunities to celebrate, arts, culture and history.
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A local historian and a University of Richmond professor want Chesterfield County to better honor the enslaved men and children who worked and died in the mines.
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The 12 petals in the design represent the people who died during the shooting. The four petals in the middle represent the four people injured, and a white center circle is for a police officer who was shot.
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Last month, over 200 scouts descended on the Albright Scout Reservation in Chesterfield County to learn a skill known as orienteering in order to complete a badge requirement. But you don’t need to be a scout to learn this valuable skill.
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On a crisp late Saturday night in early April, a group of about 50 people are gathering at a partially deserted school in Goochland County. But they aren’t here for a lecture or to study. Instead, they’re investigating to see if the county’s one time, only school for Black students is haunted.The eager group will have help from the host of the T.V. show “Ghost Hunters,” and from a special paranormal investigation team. And as Ian Stewart from VPM News reports, some unexplained sounds and images will join the adventure too.
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After nearly 400 years, Virginia’s Rappahannock Indian tribe is again in possession of much of its ancestral home. The tribe is believed to have inhabited Fones Cliffs for thousands of years before English colonization of Virginia.
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Late last month, members of the Mattaponi Indian Tribe held elections for a new chief and tribal council. The incumbent government, however, says the election was illegitimate. Ultimately, Gov. Glenn Youngkin's administration will determine who the state will recognize.
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The Pump House, located in Richmond’s Byrd Park District, is a shuttered, dilapidated municipal building constructed in the 1880s. Its sole purpose was to move about 12 million gallons of drinking water per day from the James River and Kanawha Canal up to the reservoir at Bird Park.
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With thousands of roadways in Virginia, there’s bound to be a few that have sections that are confusing even to the seasoned driver. Here’s the tale of one such area.
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The Olympic games start Friday, July 23 in Tokyo, Japan. One athlete to keep an eye on is rugby player and Richmond-born Cheta Emba. Emba grew up playing basketball and soccer at Maggie L. Walker Governor's School and continued with soccer at Harvard. She discovered rugby while cross-training and fell in love with the sport. She’s now one of the leading players on the U.S. Women’s Olympic Team.
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As the confederate statues in Richmond come down, another conversation is taking place about public art and what should happen to the spaces where the monuments once stood.
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Crews worked for hours to remove the massive statue of Stonewall Jackson on Richmond’s Monument Avenue Wednesday. The surprise move defied a City Council vote earlier in the day. Craig Carper takes us through the rapidly evolving and historic day.
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The nationwide protests against police brutality and systemic racism have brought millions into the streets. In many places - including Richmond - police attacked peaceful protesters. But as Pam Hervey reports for VPM, the continued clamor for change is making an impact.
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In the 1918 influenza pandemic, Richmond's black doctors and nurses faced a crisis exacerbated by racism. But they also saw an opportunity to prove their talents to a white establishment that had rejected them.
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Northumberland County public schools may be shut down, but their efforts are ensuring their students remain fed and supported.
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After nine deaths and nearly 60 confirmed COVID-19 cases at Canterbury Rehabilitation & Healthcare Center as of Tuesday night, the Henrico-based facility has stepped up safety procedures. But some families say they’re not getting enough information about their loved ones.
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What’s it like being a parent, teacher, service industry worker or artist as we respond to the coronavirus? VPM has asked people in the community to record audio diaries of their experiences. Lucretia Anderson is a mom, English teacher, actor, writer and life coach in Richmond.
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What’s it like being a parent, teacher, service industry worker or artist as we respond to the coronavirus? VPM has asked people in the community to record audio diaries of their experiences. Today, we start with 35-year-old single mom and community college professor Melissa Ansley Brooks.
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The rebuilt George Mason Elementary school will reopen in fall 2020 as Henry L. Marsh Elementary, named after a civil rights lawyer who attended the school as a child and became Richmond's first African-American mayor in the '70s.
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The recent discovery of racist graffiti at the University of Richmond has sparked larger conversations on how to talk about hatred and bias on college campuses. Students and professors are talking about safety and diversity.