Memorial to Enslaved Laborers
Memorial to Enslaved Laborers
"The Memorial to Enslaved Laborers (MEL) at the University of Virginia honors the lives, labor, and perseverance of the approximately 4,000 enslaved men, women and children who built and sustained the daily life of faculty and students at the University. The memorial, the result of a collaborative design process involving UVA students, the Charlottesville community, and descendents of the enslaved, is sited in the valley on the east side of the Lawn, directly east of Jefferson’s famous rotunda. It sits in an area called the Triangle of Grass, part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site, and along University Avenue that connects to downtown Charlottesville.The valleys that frame the entrance into the Academical Village were part of a larger landscape strategy to hide enslaved labor from view. The memorial transforms the historical usage of the landscape as a tool of domination into an open and welcoming gathering place. An abstract granite ring embedded in the terrain, the memorial reveals a circular gathering space for the community, a center for the public conversation that initially catalyzed it."