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I Believe I'll Go Back Home: Robert Johnson's Copiah County Roots & Living Legacy (2024)

Location

Copiah County, Jackson, and Oxford, Mississippi

Date

2024

Role

Producer and Cinematographer

Project Type

Short Documentary

In 1931 legendary bluesman Robert Johnson went home in search of his father. Instead, he became one. Johnson's descendants reveal the human being behind the myth and his living legacy as a father, grandfather, and musical inspiration in Copiah County.

Producers
Samantha Davidson Green
Antonio Tarrell

Sound & Drone Operator
Michael Fagans

Release Year
2024

Caravan of Hope

Is a feature-length documentary that tells the powerful story of how a radio station and a small Mississippi town joined forces to save a symbol of Black resilience. Founded in 1887 by formerly enslaved people, Mound Bayou, Mississippi, became one of the most successful all-Black towns in America, a thriving center of business, education, and community pride. But as the Great Migration drew residents away and structural racism deepened economic hardship, the town faced decline. By the mid-20th century, Mound Bayou was on the brink of collapse, its city buildings locked and its charter at risk.

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In an extraordinary act of Black solidarity, the mayor reached out to WDIA, the Memphis-based station known as the first Black-programmed radio station in the United States. What followed was a remarkable movement led not by politicians or celebrities, but by everyday people who refused to let the spirit of Mound Bayou die. WDIA’s radio hosts and listeners across the Mid-South came together to raise money, spread the word, and organize a caravan of cars that traveled 100 miles from Memphis to Mound Bayou to deliver the funds in person. Their collective effort revived the town, reopened its doors, and reaffirmed Mound Bayou’s place as a living symbol of Black resilience and self-determination.

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Through archival footage, photographs, and interviews with community leaders, radio personalities, and historians, Caravan of Hope revisits this pivotal event as a testament to what can happen when ordinary people take extraordinary action. The film situates Mound Bayou’s story within today’s landscape, asking what Black solidarity looks like now and how communities can continue to preserve and sustain their cultural institutions in the face of systemic challenges.

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Donate Today

Support the continued impact of Caravan of Hope by making a tax-deductible donation to Sweet Soil Narratives. Your contribution helps bring this story to more communities, supports future screenings and educational programming, and ensures that the legacy of Mound Bayou and the 1982 WDIA caravan continues to be preserved and shared.

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