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The Dark Underbelly of Jefferson Davis's Camels
How the U.S. Army's antebellum camel experimentation paved the way for the illicit trafficking of enslaved Africans.
by
Michael E. Woods
via
Muster
on
November 21, 2017
The Fallacy of 1619
Rethinking the history of Africans in early America.
by
Michael Guasco
via
Black Perspectives
on
September 4, 2017
Police Dogs and Anti-Black Violence
Police brutality has been a hot topic in contemporary society, but when did this all really start and where did dogs get involved?
by
Tyler D. Parry
via
Black Perspectives
on
July 31, 2017
Why Haiti Should be at the Centre of the Age of Revolution
Haiti, not the US or France, was where the assertion of human rights reached its climax in the Age of Revolution.
by
Laurent Dubois
via
Aeon
on
November 7, 2016
Igbo Landing Mass Suicide
In 1803 one of the largest mass suicides of enslaved people took place when Igbo captives from what is now Nigeria were taken to the Georgia coast.
by
Samuel Momodu
via
BlackPast
on
October 25, 2016
Strummin’ on the Old Banjo
How an African instrument got a racist reinvention.
by
Ben Marks
via
Collectors Weekly
on
October 4, 2016
Camille A. Brown: A Visual History of Social Dance in 25 Moves
Why do we dance? African-American social dances started as a way for enslaved Africans to keep cultural traditions alive and retain a sense of inner freedom.
by
Camille A. Brown
via
TED
on
June 1, 2016
Slavery and Freedom
Eric Foner, Walter Johnson, Thavolia Glymph, and Annette Gordon-Reed discuss trends in the study of slavery and emancipation.
by
Eric Foner
,
Thavolia Glymph
,
Annette Gordon-Reed
,
Walter Johnson
via
YouTube
on
May 20, 2016
America's Other Original Sin
Europeans didn’t just displace Native Americans — they enslaved them, on a scale historians are only beginning to fathom.
by
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
January 18, 2016
partner
The Forced Migration of Enslaved People
An interactive set of maps and narratives of the forced migration of approximately 850,000 enslaved people from 1810-1860.
by
Ed Ayers
,
Robert K. Nelson
,
Justin Madron
,
Nathaniel Ayers
via
American Panorama
on
December 1, 2015
This Haunting Animation Maps the Journeys of 15,790 Slave Ships in Two Minutes
315 years. 20,528 voyages. Millions of lives.
by
Jamelle Bouie
,
Andrew Kahn
via
Slate
on
June 25, 2015
So You Think You Know the Banjo?
If you think that the banjo can teach us nothing about American history, Southern culture and modern race relations, then you certainly don't know the banjo.
by
Jenna Strucko
via
The Bitter Southerner
on
January 20, 2015
Body Snatchers of Old New York
In the 1780s, medical schools used cadavers stolen from the cemeteries of slaves.
by
Bess Lovejoy
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
October 13, 2013
Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade
Nine maps of the transatlantic slave trade between 1500 and 1900.
by
David Eltis
,
David Richardson
via
The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database
on
November 18, 2010
Slave Voyages
This digital memorial raises questions about the largest slave trades in history and offers access to the documentation available to answer them.
via
Emory Libraries And Information Technology
on
December 15, 2008
The Slave Trade and the Jews
Jews have long been feared as the power behind inexplicable evils. Responsibility for the African slave trade has recently been added to this list of crimes.
by
David Brion Davis
via
New York Review of Books
on
December 22, 1994
The Story of Denmark Vesey
Against the backdrop of another conflict over slavery in 1861, Thomas Wentworth Higginson wrote an in-depth narrative of Denmark Vesey's planned slave revolt in Charleston, SC.
by
Thomas Wentworth Higginson
via
The Atlantic
on
June 1, 1861
partner
Should a Colombian Buy a Banjo?
How preparation for a big purchase turned into an adventure through history.
by
Santiago Flórez
via
HNN
on
April 16, 2024
Overlooking the Past
Land acknowledgments amount to the hollow incantations of hollow people.
by
David Eisenberg
via
Law & Liberty
on
April 15, 2024
Cowboy Carter and the Black Roots of Country Music
Beyoncé is following in the footsteps of many Black musicians before her.
by
The Birthplace of Country Music Museum
via
Teen Vogue
on
March 29, 2024
This New York City Map Is Full of Dutch Secrets
When Broadway was a broad way and Wall Street was a wall.
by
April White
via
Atlas Obscura
on
March 19, 2024
Red Beans and Rice: A Journey from Africa to Haiti to New Orleans
“It was an affirmation of our city,” says New Orleanian food historian Lolis Eric Elie.
by
Joseph Lamour
via
TODAY.com
on
February 29, 2024
A Brief History of the United States' Accents and Dialects
Migration patterns, cultural ties, geographic regions and class differences all shape speaking patterns.
by
Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton
via
Smithsonian
on
January 17, 2024
They Were Deported to Build a U.S. Naval Base. Now They Want Reparations.
50 years after native inhabitants of the Chagos Islands were forced out to make room for a military base, a Chagossian leader came to D.C. seeking reparations.
by
DeNeen L. Brown
via
Washington Post
on
October 8, 2023
Why I Haven’t Embraced the Terms “Forced Labor Camp” and “Enslaved Labor Camp” in My Work on Slavery
“Forced labor” conflates different forms of labor throughout history and minimizes the uniquely brutal conditions of chattel slavery.
by
Nick Sacco
via
Exploring the Past
on
June 2, 2023
partner
“Of the East India Breed …”
The first South Asians in British North America.
by
Brinda Charry
via
HNN
on
May 7, 2023
The Great American Poet Who Was Named After a Slave Ship
A new biography of Phillis Wheatley places her in her era and shows the ways she used poetry to criticize the existence of slavery.
by
Tiya Miles
via
The Atlantic
on
April 22, 2023
White Gold from Black Hands: The Gullah Geechee Fight for a Legacy after Slavery
Descendants of the west Africans who picked the cotton that made Manchester rich are struggling to keep their distinct culture alive.
by
DeNeen L. Brown
via
The Guardian
on
March 30, 2023
The Hidden Treasures of Pirate Democracy
In his final book, David Graeber looks at an experiment in radical democracy and piratical justice in Madagascar.
by
Marcus Rediker
via
The Nation
on
March 21, 2023
The First Fossil Finders in North America Were Enslaved and Indigenous People
Decades before paleontology’s formal establishment, Black and Native Americans discovered—and correctly identified—millennia-old fossils.
by
Christian Elliott
via
Smithsonian
on
February 22, 2023
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