• Ha! Ha! So those SNOTTY EASTERNERS did OWN nigger SLAVES after all.

    From Black Liar Marxists@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 29 03:35:21 2021
    XPost: alt.frisco, alt.history, alt.politics.equality
    XPost: ba.politics

    Thousands of pages documenting slavery found in attic of Eastern
    Shore house

    “It was important to the community because this will connect the
    dots for people and the younger generation, to let them know how
    things were. To move forward, you have to see what the past was
    like,” said Carolyn Brooks, a community historian with the
    Chesapeake Heartland Project.

    About 2,000 pages dating from the late 1600s to early 1800s were
    found in a plastic trash bag in the attic of a 200-year-old
    house near Chestertown, Maryland, as the owner, Nancy Bordely
    Lane, was cleaning it out this spring. The foundation of the
    house, built in 1803 on property that had remained in the family
    since 1667, was reportedly damaged and the structure was going
    to be demolished. The documents were headed for the garbage, but
    were rescued and delivered to Dixon’s Crumpton Auction in waxed
    seafood boxes, John Chaski, an antique-manuscript expert, told
    the Washington Post.

    Darius Johnson, a Washington College alum, was one of several
    people who saw pictures of the documents up on the auction
    house’s Facebook page. After moving back to Kent County from
    Baltimore, Johnson became part of the Chesapeake Heartland
    project at Washington College, in collaboration with the
    Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and
    Culture and local partners. For him, the documents couldn’t have
    shown up at a better time.

    “This project has started to give me pieces of myself and who I
    am and it's something I couldn't be more grateful for,” said
    Johnson, who also works with a local homeownership initiative
    for low-income residents, many of whom are Black. Among the
    papers was a contract taking over a 50-acre farm originally
    purchased by Solomon Willson, a free mixed-race man, in 1802.

    “Tying in the historical narrative has been critical because I
    want the Black people of Kent County to know that, just a
    generation or two away, our people owned something - and within
    that generation or two, we lost that. It’s not that far out of
    reach, it’s attainable,” he said.

    Lane didn’t know how the collection of documents from several
    different families that were interwoven through marriage ended
    up there or how long it had been there. But while she may not
    have recognized their significance, members of the Black
    community did, banding together with the college to raise funds
    and purchase the entire collection. Washington College alumnus
    and trustee Norris Commodore - the first African American from
    the local community to graduate from the college and after whom
    part of the collection is named - and his wife, Terry, were
    among several Black donors that pitched in to buy the whole
    collection for a price "in five figures."

    “I love it,” Lane told the Washington Post after learning of the
    sale. “History should be acknowledged.”

    https://thehill.com/changing-america/enrichment/arts- culture/561409-thousands-of-pages-documenting-slavery-found-in
     

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