Finding the Cornerstone: The Wallace A. Rayfield Story

Gadsden native’s documentary “Finding the Cornerstone: The Wallace A. Rayfield Story” airs on Alabama Public Television

“Finding the Cornerstone: The Wallace A. Rayfield Story” will air on Alabama

Public Television on Monday, Jan. 15, at 9 p.m. CT.

What do a dilapidated barn in Bessemer, Alabama, a piano-tuning insurance agent and America’s second classically-trained African American architect have in common? Finding the Cornerstone: The Wallace A. Rayfield Story, answers that question as it delves into the life and enduring work of Wallace A. Rayfield, an African American architect based in Birmingham from the 1910s throughout an era of economic growth and construction boom until the Great Depression forced an untimely end to his career.

The documentary is directed by Dwight Cammeron, an award-winning filmmaker and Gadsden native.

“When I think about Wallace Rayfield’s legacy, I think… the phrase, ‘hiding in plain sight,’ comes to mind,” said Dr. Kari Frederickson, professor at The University of Alabama.

Friendship Missionary Baptist Church,
234 North 6th Street Gadsden, Alabama

While a successful architect of commercial structures and homes, Rayfield’s specialty was church design. He designed hundreds of black-congregation churches for locales across the South, the greater United States, and as far away as Africa. Friendship Missionary Baptist Church, located at 234 North 6th Street in Gadsden, numbers among Rayfield’s designs. Many of the Southern churches enjoy an enduring legacy as hubs of organized activity during the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s. Among the most renowned is the 16th Street Baptist Church, now designated a National Park Service site of historical significance.

“God must have chosen me for this, for whatever purpose,” said Allen R. Durough, unsuspecting historian.

For many decades, the only historical reminders of Rayfield’s success have been the buildings themselves. However, a modern-day controversy surrounds an unanticipated find of hundreds of architectural plates containing Rayfield’s original designs. This has sparked a larger question among historians and scholars, “Who deserves to be the keeper of the history of a person… of a group… and of a people?”

For more information, contact Dwight Cammeron at dcammeron@gmail.com. For a link to the promo, see https://vimeo.com/897251516.

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