Nearly 100 years ago, hundreds of white residents of what is now known as St. Paul's Macalester-Groveland neighborhood wielded picket signs and fiery crosses to tell a black couple they weren't welcome in the neighborhood.
Thursday night, in a chilly church near the long-ago home of William and Nellie Francis, a mostly white audience and a new generation of neighbors were considerably more welcoming after watching the couple's story dramatized by the play "Not In Our Neighborhood."
They stood and applauded.
"We want this to spark a discussion about race, about faith, and about racial reconciliation," said Michael Johnson, an elder at CityLife Church, which moved to the former Cleveland Avenue United Methodist Church a little more than two years ago. "We don't do this to promote our church. We want the story to be told."
The little-known story about how William, a prominent black St. Paul attorney, and his wife Nellie, a civil rights and women's suffrage activist, stood up to hate and bigotry from their new white neighbors in late 1924 has been playing in front of sold-out crowds at St. Paul's Landmark Center since it opened Feb. 13. The community theater production has proved so popular that several dates were added to its original schedule. (The remaining performances are sold out.)
Johnson first learned about the couple's tribulations when he read a newspaper story on Martin Luther King Jr. Day last month.
"I was wearing a bathrobe and slippers at the time," he said. "And I got an idea."
The idea: Invite the actors to his church, just four doors east of the former Francis home, to tell their story in the neighborhood where it occurred. He e-mailed playwright and director Eric Wood with an invitation.