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“IJE” (a Yoruba name, meaning “Long Journey”), is a 9 foot sculpture being created by Vinnie Bagwell for the soon-to-be rehabilitated The Sacred Place of My Ancestors burial ground in Montgomery, NY.
A SHARED BEGINNING
The Sacred Place of My Ancestors Committee was established in 2020 as a community-led initiative dedicated to the preservation, interpretation, and revitalization of a historic African American cemetery located off Route 416 in the Town of Montgomery, New York. The committee was formed under the direction of former Town Supervisor Brian Maher, who created an advisory body to guide this important cultural and historical effort.
The committee is composed community members, including town officials, local historians, educators from the Valley Central School District, representatives of social justice organizations, and community residents from diverse backgrounds. Together, the committee works to ensure that the site is honored as a place of remembrance, education, and community reflection.
As part of its early work, the committee engaged with nationally recognized sculptor Vinnie Bagwell, whose presentation helped inform conversations around memorialization, artistic interpretation, and the long-term vision for the Sacred Place of My Ancestors. The committee continues to collaborate with community partners to preserve the siteโs history while fostering public awareness, dialogue, and stewardship for future generations.


INTRODUCTION
Project
Public art will transform the African burial ground called the “African-American Cemetery,” historically known as the “Colored Cemetery” in the Town of Montgomery into “The Sacred Place of My Ancestors,” a meditative destination for reflection upon the lives of nearly 200 people, mostly believed to be enslaved African youth who were brought over by the earliest settlers of the region from the Rhenish Palatinate in the mid-18th century. It is the second largest in tack burial ground in New York State. (New York City’s African Burial Ground is the largest.)
All the originally marked graves that have been identified have had the stones used to mark them supplemented with small white pipes. Only two have any kind of discernible inscription, one of which dates its occupant’s passing to 1756. An explanatory plaque was dedicated in 1995, and the site was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Vinnie Bagwell is the “Lead Artist.” Her overarching vision is to create a public-art installation that will celebrate the history of enslaved African, freedman, and African Americans in Montgomery (Orange County), New York, honor the souls who were laid to rest at the site, and dignify the memory of enslaved Africans in America.
To facilitate architecture-landscaping design, a preliminary assessment of the burial ground and grave mapping was taken. A Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR) Survey detected and mapped subsurface archaeological features, and patterning. It located artifacts and map features without the risk of damaging them. Among methods uses in archaeological geophysics, it is unique both in its ability to detect some small objects at relatively great depths, and in its ability to distinguish the depth of anomaly sources. The GPR scope of services and budget shall be separate from the conceptual-design budget. Ms. Bagwell will collaborate with the Montgomery Town Supervisor, Brian Maher, to solicit in-kind services.
The Project’s overall space of services will be broken down into three major “Milestones,” and each Micro-Milestone is an integral part of the larger effort.
Milestone I – Conceptual Design (Proposal, Sculpture(s), Architecture-Landscaping Design, Timeline, Civic-Engagement Activity, Public-Relations/Administration
Milestone II – Final Design, Fabrication, Documentation, Administration
Milestone III – Shipping/Installation and Administration
Features

Public Art
Ije a 9′ Bronze Figure with granite pedestal.
Dry-stack stone wall.
Stone moon-gate entrance.

Landscaping
Black Calla Lilie grave markers replacing metal pipe markers.
Raised observation deck.

Meditation/Destination
Stadium-style seating with historical signage
Boardwalk with guard rails
MILESTONE I IS COMPLETE!
We are seeking funding for
Milestone II and III.


LEARN MORE
WHY RESTORATION MATTER?
-The Sacred Place of My Ancestors affirms the existence of African American and Indigenous lives that were historically undocumented, yet foundational to the Town of Montgomery.
-The absence of recorded names does not mean absence from history. Restoration acknowledges lives lived, labor given, and contributions made, even when records are incomplete or missing.
-Many of those buried here were enslaved Africans and African Americans whose work supported the growth of the town, while their stories were excluded from public memory.
-In Indigenous tradition, speaking a personโs name allows them to live on. When names are lost, restoration becomes an act of remembrance, dignity, and care.
-Preservation of this site protects it from erasure, displacement, or misrepresentation, ensuring it remains a place of reflection, learning, and respect.
-Restoration supports education and public understanding by reconnecting place, history, and community responsibility.
-Beyond the cemetery itself, the Sacred Place of My Ancestors Committee is committed to restoring Town of Montgomery records related to Indigenous and African American families, strengthening the historical record for future generations.
-This work is about safeguarding the past while shaping the futureโso that we may become better ancestors ourselves.
ARTIST/SCULPTOR
Vinnie Bagwell
Vinnie Bagwell, lead artist/sculptor, has always been an agent for social, educational, and economic growth through the arts in her community. Thus, she has lead the creation of the “Enslaved Africans’ Rain Garden”-an urban-heritage, public-art project for the City of Yonkers, New York, to commemorate the first enslaved Africans to be manumitted/freed by law in the United States, 64 years before Emancipation Proclamation.


Sacred Place of My Ancestors
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