Videos produced by Multimedia Editor Serafina Frederick / Photos by Henry Frederick /
Video highlights include"We Shall Overcome," by the NSB Middle School Stingrays Marching Band, sisters Samaria and Constance Darrisaw singing, and Jimmy Harrell giving the keynote speech, all in commemoration of the Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday. Below, Pastor Lorenzo Laws hosts the MLK festivities at Old Fort Park.
NEW SMYRNA BEACH -- Some 200 strong led by Allen Chapel AME Church pastor Lorenzo Laws marched, prayed and sang -- all in respect to the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during the national holiday.
The NSB celebration comes in at No. 58 in Headline Surfer's countdown of the top 100 local stories of 2012.
A bright sunny Monday morning was the setting for a peaceful march -- more so a parade from the Westside of New Smyrna Beach and across the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Bridge to downtown and Old Fort Park where blacks and whites who lived through segregation came together, along with future generations of adults from the many young to commemorate the life and death of the civil rights leader.
A sea of citizens -- young and old alike -- gather in downtown New Smyrna Beach to celebrate the MLK holiday.
There was a poignant moment when two sisters -- Samaria and Constance Darrisaw stood together and sang, "How Great thou Art."
At one point in the song, the kid sister forgot her line and the crowd picked it up in unison, with the big sister taking over on her verse and the two were in harmony again.
Led by pastor Laws, others who addressed the assembly were Lester Mitchell of the local NAACP, Veris Robinson, former City Commissioner Oretha Bell and Pastor Pete Carter with the keynote address delivered by Jimmy Harrell.
He recalled the first march he was involved in and how he feared retribution in a formerly segregated city while marching down Canal Street, but it turned out peaceful.
"Did Martin Luther King die in vain?," asked Harrell, who runs the African-American Museum in the Westside with his wife, Mary. "No he didn't. His dream is still alive -- still alive folks."
Photo for Headline Surfer by Angela Carter / Some 200 people cross the Dr. Marin Luther King Jr. Bridge over U.S. 1 from the West Side to downtown New Smyrna Beach on Monday in honor of the MLK holiday.
About 200 people took part in the mid-morning march from the West Side, across the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Bridge over U.S. 1 and into the downtown. They settled at Old Fort Park for song, prayer and inspirational speeches.
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