New El Paso museum highlights Illinois’ first Black voter

A new El Paso museum, looking to honor and remember the first Black voter in Illinois, hopes to add a little to the top of people’s minds.

By WMBD TV

EL PASO – Normally, when you go to a barber shop, you ask them to take some hair off the top.

Now, a new El Paso museum, looking to honor and remember the first Black voter in Illinois, hopes to add a little to the top of people’s minds.

Michael Melick, the board president for Project XV Museum, and a teacher at El Paso Gridley High School, stopped by WMBD This Morning to explain the meaning and importance of the Project XV Museum, and this week’s special event.

Project XV refers to the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which is the one that gave all people the right to vote, regardless of their race. The museum sits on the spot where the barber shop of David Strother once was.

That’s important, says Melick, because Strother “was the first black voter after the 15th Amendment” went into effect. His first vote was for the El Paso municipal election in 1870.

The museum’s name is a play on the Amendment’s number, 15. But the Project XV Museum goes even further. It even delves into ways that area indigenous people picked leaders.

On Jan. 30, the museum will host award winning author Derrick Barnes for a special presentation on one of his books, “Crown an Ode to The Fresh Cut,” which takes a look at the Black-owned barber shops and how they affect young boys getting their first cuts.

So, for a little off the top, stop by a barber shop, but for a little ON the top (of your mind), stop by the Project XV Museum in El Paso.

WMBD can be reached at [email protected].

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