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Hillman-Pratt project Downtown could pay homage to Black aviator

Aviator Bessie Coleman stands on the running board of a Ford Model T automobile next to her Curtiss JN-4 Jenny airplane. Coleman is the first Black Native American woman to earn a pilot’s license.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
/
via Jacksonville Daily Record
Aviator Bessie Coleman stands on the running board of a Ford Model T automobile next to her Curtiss JN-4 Jenny airplane. Coleman is the first Black Native American woman to earn a pilot’s license.

When the historic Hillman-Pratt and Walton Funeral Home is reopened next year as Airbnb-style apartments and a restaurant, one room could pay tribute to the first Black Native American woman to earn a pilot’s license.

The Jacksonville City Council voted to approve a $1.25 million forgivable loan package for developer Eric Adler’s estimated $4.98 million restoration and adaptive reuse project at 525 W. Beaver St., on the edge of Downtown’s North Core and LaVilla neighborhood.

READ MORE: Pioneering Black aviator inspires a new age

Adler said his development team is working to discover whether the funeral home, which has roots to the 1900s Black business community in Jacksonville, assisted with Bessie Coleman’s remains after her death in 1926.

Read the rest of this story at the Jacksonville Daily Record, a WJCT News partner.