By JW August
It’s called the Black Family Statue. The original statue was installed 52 years ago, the work of local artist Rossi Wade and was created to honor Black family values.

A little more than a half century after the original Black Family Statue took its place in a Mountain View park, its long-awaited replacement was celebrated Saturday, June 13th with an official unveiling.
The community gathering at Neil Pettis Mountain View Park, which doubled as a Juneteenth celebration, capped a decade-long effort to replace the original wood statue that had grown so deteriorated that only a brass plaque and the brick and mortar foundation remained.
The new statue stands in the same place where the original was located, at the edge of the park. It’s “the geographic and emotional heart of the Mountain View Community,” said Cybele Thompson, one of the key players that helped bring the new statue to life.


The new version, made from metal is the creation of welding professor Mike Bradbury, with support from staff and leadership at the San Diego College of Continuing Education.
It will be a “beacon” for residents for years to come, says Bradbury, the artist in residence at the college, where at one time, the original statue’s creator, Rossi Wade, had the same role.
“I kind of fell in love with the process, the project, the family, and everything about what this sculpture represents,” he told those gathered at the celebration. “It’s amazing to see all you folks here, years after this thing’s been gone, and now it’s back.”
Attendees filled the chairs and sidewalks surrounding the artwork, concealed under a large black cloth. The media was out in force as well as elected leaders and their staff who represent the Mountain View area. Music filled the air as all those gathered waited for the program to begin.
Jeffrey Hayes, a long- time resident of the area, was the driving force behind the effort to replace the statue. When he spoke, the crowd cheered, whistled and clapped. He comes across as a humble and caring person. No suit or tie, he wore a T-shirt and a big smile.
“Community is all we got, it’s all of us together. Let’s stick together, and let’s make something together,” he said.

It’s the grandfathers and fathers who can help kids today, he added.
“We are the only people that can talk to them,” he told the au+dience?
“It’s important for us to do, to put things back into balance, because that’s what we don’t have today.”

As a young man, the park, he said, provided him an opportunity to learn from role models, like the man the park is named after, Neal Petties.

OB Rag reporter and community activist Paul Krueger, also played an important role in helping Hayes form a team of supporters including city department head Thompson. Krueger lauded Hayes for his work. It was the team work, though, that would help Hayes break through the city bureaucracy in order to secure the new statue and upgrade the surrounding grounds.
“If we’re in debt today to any one person, it’s Jeffrey,” Krueger said. The role that his effort “plays in the community is really overwhelming to me and to everybody who’s working on this project. It’s a special recognition and sincere appreciation of your extraordinary dedication and advocacy to the Mountain View community.”
The daughters of Rossi Wade also played a significant role in encouraging the city to recognize the importance of the statue. It would be a call from Krueger and Hayes, who had custodial duty of the bronze plaque at the base of their father’s statue, that helped propel the effort forward. Lynn Brown, the younger daughter, said after she got Hayes’ call, “I was full of hope when that contact was finally made to my sister and myself. And then the journey began.”
The effort “did not come easy,” says Wade’s daughter, Carole Boyce. She was discouraged by the slow process, like swimming upstream to convince the city to support their efforts. It was Hayes’ enthusiasm, she said, that kept her and others thinking positively throughout the process.
Saturday’s unveiling meant the day had finally come and she reflected, “My father would be so proud and happy today. Family is and always has been the necessary foundation in life, for nurturing and support, for creating values, for safety, for comfort. My dad’s statues were meant to be a constant visual reminder of that family love.”
When her sister Carole Boyce spoke she described the elements of the Black Family Statue. The child “eager for their future, the woman is the “past, is our present and the future of our future” and “he who is called Black man, is equal to the task, standing strong but gentle enough to hold a child and wisely with a woman at his side…the Black family.”

Supervisor Monica Montgomery Steppe summarized the feelings of many at the unveiling “seeing its recreation today will bring many of us a sense of pride for generations to come. Thank you to our dear Rossi Wade, for your reminder of the Black family as a strong and important unit to our community.”
When the speeches were finished, the cloth was dropped, revealing a tall black metal statute with the elements Carole Boyce had described, reflecting the dignity and unity of the Black family.






Thanks for the excellent report on this important event!
I am happpy to read the good news of the STATUE being returned the park, and of the tremendous efforts of a group of citizens to make it happen.
However, having been a 2nd-grade spelling champion, it really grates on my nerves to see the word “Statute” in bold black letters near the top of the page when I log in to the Rag. Is there some way those in charge of this rag can fix that ?