Menu
Register 20 Seats Remaining
The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story
presented by Brian Armstrong
2026-06-22 18:30:00
2026-06-22 19:30:00
America/New_York
The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story
Join author Brian Armstrong for a presentation about his book, The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story of Racial Injustice in New Jersey (The History Press).
Franklin Park Branch - Franklin Park Community Room
Monday, June 22
6:30pm - 7:30pm
Add to Calendar
2026-06-22 18:30:00
2026-06-22 19:30:00
America/New_York
The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story
Join author Brian Armstrong for a presentation about his book, The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story of Racial Injustice in New Jersey (The History Press).
Franklin Park Branch - Franklin Park Community Room
Franklin Park Branch
Franklin Park Community RoomJoin author Brian Armstrong for a presentation about his book, The Franklin Park Tragedy: A Forgotten Story of Racial Injustice in New Jersey (The History Press).
“The Franklin Park Tragedy, A Forgotten Story of Racial Injustice in New Jersey” (The History Press) provides a detailed account of the Franklin Park Tragedy murders of March 1, 1894, when Lucretia Baker and her daughter, Gertrude, were murdered in their home and her husband, Moore Baker, fought off the two African American attackers and killed them. The second part of the tragedy involves the group blame of the African American residents of the area and the expulsion of some of those residents by the Franklin Park vigilante society called the Mutual Endeavor Society. Lynchings, expulsions, and sundown town designations, which are normally associated with southern states during this era, are shown to have been contemplated by Franklin Park, New Jersey residents.
Author Brian Armstrong used surviving historical records, land records, and personal stories to demonstrate how the Great Migration of African American families from the South in the twentieth century, with the help of a new group of white farmers, changed the “sundown town” designation for the Franklin Park area. This community change began with the arrival of the Colemans and other families in the 1920s which was the beginning of the transformation of Franklin Park into the diverse place that it is today. Armstrong will also discuss prominent African American citizens of the Franklin Park area who worked on the farms and in some cases owned land during the 1800s, the role of the media in the racial issues of this era.
This event is co-sponosered by the Meadows Foundation, https://themeadowsfoundation.org/
Registration is required.
Franklin Park Branch
Hours
About the branch
The Franklin Park Branch is located just off Claremont Road on Clover Place right next door to the Franklin Park School.
