"Scenic Roots" offers conversations that matter in the heart of Chattanooga and the Tennessee Valley.From the mountains to the river, our conversations are rooted deep within every corner of our community - reflecting who we are, who we were and who we can become.We engage with the news that affects our community, behind and beyond the headlines. We build bridges that span from creators and innovators to storytellers and the outdoors. We focus on our challenges as many communities in one - as we celebrate what inspires us. We resonate with countless voices - in words and spaces, sounds and songs.We are "Scenic Roots."Ray Bassett hosts and produces "Scenic Roots" at WUTC.

The Next Chapter For The Scottsboro Boys Museum

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More than a decade after it opened in a former church, the Scottsboro Boys Museum and Cultural Center in Alabama will be renovated this month.

The museum remembers nine Black teenagers - four of them from Chattanooga - who were falsely accused of raping two white women while traveling through Jackson County, Alabama by train in 1931.

The defendants were held in Scottsboro during a series of three trials. Eight of the nine youths were wrongfully convicted - and sentenced to death by all-white, all-male juries.

Twice, the United States Supreme Court heard arguments in the case, leading to landmark civil rights rulings on the right to counsel and nondiscrimination in juror rolls.

Sheila Washington is the museum’s founder, director and tour guide.

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Ray is the host and producer of Scenic Roots, Mondays - Thursdays at 3 PM on WUTC.