Friend of East End: Dr. Ryan Smith

https://www.thisanthrolife.org/dead-people-tell-tales-segregated-cemeteries-in-richmond-virginia-w-dr-ryan-smith/

My first semester of graduate school at Brandeis University was Fall 2020. While my expectation was to go up to Waltham, Massachusettes the COVID-19 pandemic had other plans. Starting my joint master’s degree in anthropology and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies in my childhood home made me reconnect with my hometown of Richmond Virginia in a way I have not done since high school. During this time I also started an internship with the podcast This Anthro Life with Adam Gamwell through Brandeis.

With This Anthro Life I learned the ins and outs of podcast production and social media management. We discussed narrative arcs, interviewing skills, and how to figure out your target audience. My final project for the official internship was an interview with Dr. Ryan Smith on his latest book Death and Rebirth in a Southern City: Richmond’s Historic Cemeteries.

Dr. Ryan Smith is a professor of US history, material culture, and historic preservation at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia and a Friend of East End. We met through mutual work with the Friends of East End and at the time of the interview there were multiple issues with Enrichmond blocking the Friends of East End from being able to do their work. Enrichmond wanted the friends, specifically Brian Palmer, to turn over all of their work without getting any credit.

My interview with Dr. Ryan Smith was my first major interview and the first officially public podcast. While it was nerve wrecking thinking about how many people could listen to my podcast it was well received. I currently still run the Instagram for This Anthro Life and make some of the episode art.

Dr. Ryan Smith

Website: https://history.vcu.edu/directory/smith.html

This Anthro Life

Website: https://www.thisanthrolife.org/

Instagram: @ThisAnthroLife

Twitter: @ThisAnthroLife

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thisanthrolife

Friend of East End: Brian Palmer

When I was in high school my family and I started volunteering at East End Cemetery, a historically Black cemetery on the border of Richmond and Henrico County in Virginia. East End Cemetery was founded in 1897 and abandoned in the 1970’s due to bankruptcy. It was not until the summer of 2013 when efforts to restore East End Cemetery, and its neighboring Evergreen Cemetery, began in full force.

The Friends of East End are a group of volunteers who cleaned up the cemetery every weekend and started an oral history project to document the stories of descendants. Brian Palmer is one of the founding members of The Friends of East End along with his wife Erin Hollaway-Palmer. As a photojournalist, he documented the restoration of East End Cemetery over the years and published a book with Erin documenting their work entitled The Afterlife of Jim Crow: East End and Evergreen Cemeteries in Photography. In 2019 he won a Peabody for Reveal radio story “Monumental Lies” with his collaborator Seth Wessler. I interviewed him in spring 2020 for a digital journalism class I was taking at the time.

Brian Palmer is currently a professor of journalism at Columbia University while still working with The Friends of East End with their current restoration project at Woodland Cemetery. He is also a big fan of rootbeer and his dog Teacake.

Brian Palmer:

Website: https://www.brianpalmer.photos/

Instagram: @bxpnyc

Twitter: @bxpnyc

East End Cemetery:

Website: https://eastendcemeteryrva.com/

Instagram: @eastendcemeteryrva

Friends of East End

Website: https://friendsofeastend.com/

Instagram: @friendsofeastend

Hello World!

Hi I’m Sara Schmieder! I’m a project manager at a marketing agency and a Board Member at Large at the Bisexual Resource Center. I graduated from The College of William and Mary with honors in anthropology in 2020, and then in 2022, I graduated with a Master’s Degree in anthropology and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies from Brandeis University. I’ve been online since I was a teenager, and my research centers around digital anthropology. Here are some fun facts about me:

  • I love art and make stained glass windows
  • I grew up in Richmond, Virginia
  • I love fiber arts and spend my free time knitting and crocheting
  • Playing video games and watching movies are my two favorite past times
  • I have a minor in linguistics and took all but one class for it with the same professor
  • In 2019, I performed an original poem about Furbys at a cafe’s open mic night
  • It is very rare to see me without earbuds in my ears and an iced coffee in my hand
  • I have a Substack called Sara and the Silver Screen where I write about movies and other media