On Saturday, a crowd gathered on the lawn of Putnam County Courthouse for another week of Black Lives Matter rally. However this week, it started with some battery issues in the megaphone that hadn’t been turned off since last week. A trip to Dollar General and a four pack of AAA batteries later, the chants began.
This week, DePauw students joined Greencastle residents and DePauw faculty and staff in chants of “Black Live Matter” and “No Justice, No Peace.” At the protest’s peak, there were about 50 participants, an increase from 20 the previous weekend.
“I love it so much,” said Kayce Kean, the Greencastle Resident who initially organized the rallies. “One, it takes responsibility off me and two, Depauw students are really passionate and really want to be involved.”
The Election Approaches
As the 2020 Presidential election approaches, Joseph Harris, the VP Greencastle’s Chapter of the NAACP, has watched tensions increase at the protests throughout the summer.
However, this tension between more progressive students and the conservative town is not new. The first thing sophomore Evelyn Timmermann saw when she visited DePauw in 2018 was Greencastle. Not just Greencastle, but specifically the auto shop on Franklin Street right off the square. The shop was covered in Trump flags and a bold decal reading “Drain the swamp”
“I’m glad that they are protesting because it shows me not everybody [here] is [a] Trump [supporter],” Timmermann said.
Timmerman spent her summer making calls and attending protests in Holland, MI, her hometown. Fearful that students would quickly be sent home due to COVID-19, Timmermann chose to get her absentee ballot sent to her house. To ensure that her vote counts, her mom will be driving four hours to Greencastle to deliver her ballot so Timmerman can fill it out.
