The Friends of Historic Meridian will host a speaker series at the Village Chapel (5151 Marsh Road) on Thursday, February 22 beginning at 3:00 pm.
Following the Emancipation Proclamation, the United States military formed the United States Colored Troops. Even as black soldiers fought and died, their citizenship status remained uncertain. Racist policies limited opportunities for black soldiers to become line officers and paid them lower wages than white soldiers.
Join Maurice Imhoff, who will cover the story of the 1st Michigan Colored Regiment, otherwise known as the 102nd United States Colored Troops; discussing its early authorization to present-time remembrance.
Maurice Imhoff is a Michigan historian with a focus on Michigan’s African American Civil War Regiment, the 1st Michigan Colored Infantry. In 2020, he co-founded the Jackson County Michigan Historical Society along with local historians such as Linda Hass. Imhoff earned an internship position at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History where he worked alongside the Curator of the Division of Cultural and Community Life as well as the Division of Political and Military History. Notably, he is the youngest person to ever be accepted into this program.
For more information, contact the Meridian Historical Village at 517.347.7300.