Maggie Green- Joslyn -black Patrol- Sc.4- · Original
The Patrol’s charter, preserved in the Joslyn Museum archives (Box 7, Folder “B”), states:
Intertitle 3: “MAGGIE GREEN – This patrol is my right. This notebook holds nine months of records. Who stole grain from the Joslyn warehouse? Who beat his own child? I did not tell the white police. But I will tell the congregation. Leave. Now.” Maggie Green- Joslyn -Black Patrol- sc.4-
Exterior, Logan Avenue Church, night. Rain-slicked mud. A wooden cross has been overturned. Fifteen white men, some in rail worker overalls, others in hoods (pre-dating the Klan’s 1920s revival), shout “Go back to Africa.” The Patrol’s charter, preserved in the Joslyn Museum
Scholars of restorative justice have recently begun citing “the Joslyn method” as a precursor to modern community mediation. Criminal justice professor Dr. Lamont Harrow writes: Who beat his own child
All copies of The Joslyn Experiment were ordered destroyed. Only four photographs and a single strip of nitrate film (2.5 seconds, showing Maggie Green adjusting her armband) survived in a private collection, discovered in 2005. That film strip is now at the University of Nebraska’s “Forgotten Frontlines” digital archive.