Winamp Logo
Mapping the African American Past (MAAP) Cover
Mapping the African American Past (MAAP) Profile

Mapping the African American Past (MAAP)

English, Education, 1 season, 109 episodes
About
Mapping the American Past (MAAP) illustrates places and moments that have shaped the long history of African Americans in New York City.
Episode Artwork

Abolitionist Place - description

Willoughby and Duffield Streets In September of 2007, Duffield Street in downtown Brooklyn got a new name.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Abyssinian Baptist Church - description

132 West 138th Street Known for its charismatic leadership and community outreach, the Abyssinian Baptist Church was formed in 1808 by a group of African Americans and Ethiopians who refused to accept the segregated seating in the First Baptist Church of New York City.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Abyssinian Baptist Church - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, on the Abyssinian Baptist Church.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Abyssinian Baptist Church - Robert O'Meally commentary

Robert O'Meally, Zora Neale Hurston Professor of English, Columbia University, on the Abyssinian Baptist Church.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Burial Ground - description

290 Broadway The African Burial Ground is a federally designated historic landmark and archaeological site that was used as a cemetery by free and enslaved people of African descent during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Burial Ground - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses the African Burial Ground.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Burial Ground - Rodney Leon commentary

Rodney Leon, African Burial Ground Memorial architect, discusses the site.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Burial Ground - Dowoti Desir commentary

Dowoti Desir, Executive Director of The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center, discusses the African Burial Ground.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Burial Ground - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses the African Burial Ground.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Free School - description

135-137 Mulberry Street Soon after the Revolution, in 1785, a group of wealthy, powerful white men formed the New York Manumission Society. Although many were slave owners, their mission was to aid the enslaved, and to gradually end slavery in the state.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Grove Theater - description

Mercer Street near Houston On Mercer Street in the fall of 1821, King Lear limped out onto stage and the audience went wild. Lear was black.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Methodist Church moves to Harlem - Cynthia Copland commentary

African Methodist Church moves uptown to Harlem Commentary by Cynthia Copland
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

African Society for Mutual Relief - description

42 Baxter Street As soon as it was legal for black New Yorkers to organize, they did so. In 1808, the African Society for Mutual Relief was founded. (The Society may have met in secret earlier, but there are no records to prove it.)
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Audubon Ballroom - description

3940 Broadway Best known as the place where Malcolm X was assassinated on February 21, 1965, the Audubon Ballroom has long been a center of African American social and political activity.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Audubon Ballroom - Dowoti Desir commentary

Dowoti Desir, Executive Director of The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center, discusses the Audubon Ballroom.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Bedford-Stuyvesant - description

Bedford-Stuyvesant, also known as Bed-Stuy, is home to the largest concentration of blacks in New York City and one of the largest in the country.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Bethel AME Church of Amityville - Lynda Day commentary

Bethel AME Church, Amityville The Bethel AME Church of Amityville was the first black church on Long Island. Daniel Squires and Delaney H. Miller organized the church in 1815, after founding the Sunday school one year earlier.In 1839, Elias and Fanny Hunter offered land on Albany Avenue to the congregation but it would take four more years for the church to call this home.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Bethel AME Church - description

Bethel AME Church, Amityville The Bethel AME Church of Amityville was the first black church on Long Island. Daniel Squires and Delaney H. Miller organized the church in 1815, after founding the Sunday school one year earlier.In 1839, Elias and Fanny Hunter offered land on Albany Avenue to the congregation but it would take four more years for the church to call this home.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Black Brigades - description

10 Church Street Blacks who fought with the British lived in “Negro barracks”. These men fought in units known as the Black Pioneers and the Black Brigade. Most did the hard support work the army needed, but some were armed and fought.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Booker T. Washington House - description

Booker T. Washington House Booker T. Washington was born into slavery in 1856, and labored on the Burroughs tobacco farm in Virginia. Nine years later, he and his family were freed as a result of the Emancipation Proclamation and moved to West Virginia, where he worked in the salt mines while attending school.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Booker T. Washington House - Thelma Jackson-Abidally commentary

Fort Salonga, Huntington, Long Island Between the years 1911 and 1915, Booker T. Washington traveled from Alabama to Fort Salonga for rest and relief from the hottest months of the summer. Located on the north shore of Long Island in the Town of Huntington, Fort Salonga was a peaceful, scenic place for the Washington family to spend their vacations.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Bridge Street AWME Church - description

311 Bridge Street It was October 1865, only months after the last shots of the Civil War were fired. People in Brooklyn opened their newspaper, the Brooklyn Eagle, to learn that "Last evening an immense congregation, fully half consisting of whites, was present at the African M. E. Church in Bridge street."
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Catherine Ferguson - description

51 Warren Street Catherine ("Katy") Ferguson was born in 1779 with almost nothing--not even freedom.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Colored Orphan Asylum - description

Fifth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets If you were black and orphaned in New York in the 1800s, there was nowhere to go but the cruel streets.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Colored Orphan Asylum - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses the Colored Orphan Asylum.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

David Ruggles Home - description

67 Lispenard David Ruggles might have been the most hated activist of his day.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Downing's Oyster House - description

5 Broad Street Before New York was called the Big Apple, it could have been called the Big Oyster.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Duke Ellington - description

110th Street and 5th Avenue. Edward Kennedy Ellington (1899–1974), known as Duke Ellington, changed the sound of popular music in America and around the world.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Duke Ellington - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses Duke Ellington.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Duke Ellington - Robert O'Meally commentary

Robert O'Meally, Zora Neale Hurston Professor of English, Columbia University, discusses Duke Ellington.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Eastville Community - Lynda Day commentary

Eastville, Long Island Eastville, like many early free African American communities on Long Island, was multi-ethnic. African Americans arrived in Sag Harbor seeking employment in the profitable whaling business sometime prior to 1840.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Eastville Community - description

Eastville, Long Island Eastville, like many early free African American communities on Long Island, was multi-ethnic. African Americans arrived in Sag Harbor seeking employment in the profitable whaling business sometime prior to 1840.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Ebbets Field - description

Sullivan Place & McKeever Place, Flatbush, Brooklyn Located in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn, Ebbets Field was constructed in 1913, costing $750,000 to complete. Its home team was the Brooklyn Robins, renamed the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1932 .
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Execution Grounds - description

Foley Square btween Lafayette and Centre Streets The year 1741 started out badly. Poor whites and blacks lived in fear of freezing or starving to death.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Execution Grounds - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses the Execution Grounds.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Five Points - description

Worth Street & Baxter Street Five Points was a neighborhood around the intersection of Worth Street, Baxter Street, and Cross Street, which no longer exists.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Five Points - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Five Points.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Fort Amsterdam - description

One Bowling Green Fort Amsterdam was designed to be a state-of-the-art diamond-shaped fort, built of stone and bristling with cannon.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Fort Amsterdam - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Fort Amsterdam.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Fraunces Tavern - description

54 Pearl Street Around the time of the American Revolution, everyone in New York knew Samuel Fraunces.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Fraunces Tavern - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Fraunces Tavern.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Freetown, Long Island - Allison Manfra McGovern commentary

Freetown, East Hampton, Long Island Freetown is a small, unincorporated hamlet within the Town of East Hampton, located along Three Mile Harbor Road between Jackson Street and Abraham’s Path. Following the passage of the Gradual Emancipation Act of 1799 in New York State, John Lyon Gardiner and other wealthy local slave-owners settled newly freed slaves in Freetown.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Freedom's Journal - description

Freedom's Journal Before 1827, blacks didn't exist in the newspapers, unless they committed a crime. African American weddings, births, deaths, and accomplishments were not to be found in a newspaper anywhere in the United States. But the year 1827 saw big changes. New York finally abolished slavery, and two young black men, John Brown Russwurm and Samuel E. Cornish, founded Freedom's Journal.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Frederick Douglass - description

36 Lispenard Street Dressed as a sailor, Frederick Bailey stepped ashore a free man, but he was not safe until the great abolitionist David Ruggles took him into his home.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Freetown, Long Island - description

Freetown, East Hampton, Long Island Freetown is a small, unincorporated hamlet within the Town of East Hampton, located along Three Mile Harbor Road between Jackson Street and Abraham’s Path. Following the passage of the Gradual Emancipation Act of 1799 in New York State, John Lyon Gardiner and other wealthy local slave-owners settled newly freed slaves in Freetown.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem - description

Harlem has been a black community for over 100 years.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem - Manning Marable commentary

Dr. Manning Marable, Professor of History and Political Science and founding Director of the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University, discusses Harlem.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem - Robert O'Meally commentary

Robert O'Meally, Zora Neale Hurston Professor of English, Columbia University, discusses the Harlem Renaissance.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem Community Art Center - description

290 Lenox Avenue, Manhattan The Harlem Community Art Center was created in November 1938. Its opening was attended by former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who welcomed the community’s new hub for creativity. During its brief life, the Harlem Community Art Center had a tremendous impact. Many of its students became artists who took pride in their culture and community. Paintings created by students at the Center often depicted scenes of Harlem; it was as if the students looked out a window and drew what they saw in the street.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem Children's Zone - description

207 Lenox Ave, Manhattan In the mid 1990s, author and community leader Geoffrey Canada conceived of a new vision for Harlem. After years of hard work with Harlem’s Rheedlen Centers for Children and Families, Canada felt that many children in poor communities were still slipping between the cracks. He decided to create a program that would uplift the entire neighborhood: the Harlem Children’s Zone.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

The Harlem Hellfighters - description

One West 142nd Street On a cold February afternoon in 1919, thousands of people gathered along New York's Fifth Avenue and swayed to music provided by military band leader James Reese.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harlem Hellfighters - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses the 369th Street Armory.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Harriet Tubman - description

143 Nassau Street Harriet Tubman, or “Moses” as some called her, was worth $40,000 to anyone who could capture her and return her south.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Hofstra University - Martin Luther King, Jr., speech

Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Commencement Speech for Hofstra University. On June 13th 1965, Martin Luther King, Jr. was Hofstra University’s honoree and guest speaker. King focused on the need for active participation to end racial inequality, poverty and war.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Hofstra University - description

Hofstra University, Hempstead, Long Island Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke to several Long Island audiences in 1965, but on June 13th his commencement speech at Hofstra University stirred up a wide variety of community sentiments.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Hughson’s Tavern - description

Liberty and Trinity In the spring of 1741, all eyes were on a tavern at the corner of Liberty and Trinity Streets.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Hughson's Tavern - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Hughson's Tavern.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

James McCune Smith Pharmacy - description

93 West Broadway In 1824, the aged Revolutionary War hero General Lafayette returned to America for a tour of the nation he had helped to forge.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

John Street Church - description

John Street Church At the opening of the John Street Methodist Church, the priest addressed "those in the gallery," welcoming the African Americans. The segregated black worshipers could cook the food, clean the homes, and care for the children of the white worshipers, but they could not pray together with them.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

John Street Church - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses the John Street Church.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Joseph Lloyd Manor - Jenna Coplin commentary

Joseph Lloyd Manor Granted to James Lloyd I in 1685, Lloyd Manor encompassed approximately 3,000 acres of land on the north shore of Long Island. The Manor supplied the Boston-based merchant family with cider, cordwood, and clay among other inventory. It wasn't until 1711 that the first Lloyd, Henry, took up residence. That same year Henry Lloyd recorded the birth of a slave named Jupiter Hammon on Lloyd Neck.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Joseph Lloyd Manor - description

Joseph Lloyd Manor Granted to James Lloyd I in 1685, Lloyd Manor encompassed approximately 3,000 acres of land on the north shore of Long Island. The Manor supplied the Boston-based merchant family with cider, cordwood, and clay among other inventory. It wasn't until 1711 that the first Lloyd, Henry, took up residence. That same year Henry Lloyd recorded the birth of a slave named Jupiter Hammon on Lloyd Neck.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Lakeville Community - Lynda Day commentary

Lakeville Manhasset, a hamlet in the Town of North Hempstead, had a fairly large, steadfast African American settlement in the early 19th century. This community was unique due to its size and composition. The population was colonial in origin, comprised of people who were both born into slavery and "born free." By the third quarter of the 18th century, free African Americans had established a community along Valley Road near Lake Success
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Lakeville Community - description

Lakeville, Manhasset, Long Island Manhasset, a hamlet in the Town of North Hempstead, had a fairly large, steadfast African American settlement in the early nineteenth century. By the third quarter of the eighteenth century, free African Americans had established a community along Valley Road near Lake Success that was known variably as Success, Lakeville at Success and Valley Road.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Land of the Blacks - description

Minetta Lane In the hills and swamps that stretched across Manhattan Island one mile north of New Amsterdam, both free and enslaved blacks began to clear the tangle of trees, vines, and shrubs to build their own homes and plant their own gardens.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Langston Hughes - description

20 E 127th St One of the leading voices in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, Langston Hughes focused his writing on the realistic plight of black people.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Conflict with Central Park Development - Cynthia Copland commentary

Conflict with the development of Central Park in upper Manhattan. Commentary by Cynthia Copland
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Langston Hughes - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses Langston Hughes.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Louis Armstrong - description

34-56 107th Street in Queens The world’s most famous jazz musician lived in modest Corona, Queens.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Lewis H Latimer - description

34-41 137th Street in Flushing, Queens Lewis Latimer was born free in 1848; his parents George and Rebecca Latimer made sure of that.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Marcus Garvey - description

1900 Madison Ave. Thought by many blacks to be another Moses, Marcus Garvey rose from humble beginnings in Jamaica, West Indies, to become the number one advocate of the "Back to Africa movement."
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Marcus Garvey - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses Marcus Garvey.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Marcus Garvey - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Marcus Garvey.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Minton's Playhouse - description

118th street at Saint Nicholas Avenue, Manhattan Henry Minton, a tenor saxophonist and the first black delegate to Local 802 of the musicians’ union, opened Minton’s Playhouse in 1938. Located on 118th street at Saint Nicholas Avenue in Harlem, adjacent to the Hotel Cecil, the Playhouse was a frequent temporary residence of musicians passing through New York.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Mother AME Zion Church - description

158 Church Street In the late 1700s, the Methodists of the mostly white John Street Church welcomed Africans and their descendents, and many came to worship there.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

New York City Draft Riots 1863 - description

Gramercy Park With the Emancipation Proclamation, the Civil War began to be more about black freedom.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Origins of Seneca Village - Cynthia Copland commentary

Formation of enclaves origins of Seneca Village, formerly in Central Park. Commentary by Cynthia Copland
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Pierre Toussaint - description

263 Mulberry St In 1996, Pope John Paul II bestowed the title of “Venerable” on Pierre Toussaint. Two years later, Pierre Toussaint Square was named for him.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Ralph Ellison Memorial - description

Riverside Park on 150th Street, Manhattan The Ralph Ellison Memorial at Riverside Park on 150th Street, Manhattan New York is not your typical African American landmark in New York City.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Rikers Island - description

Rikers Island On March 5, 1864, a crowd of over 10,000 New Yorkers watched in awe as 1,000 well-disciplined Union army troops left Rikers Island and marched west to the Hudson River, their dark blue uniforms and crisp white gloves and white leggings glistening in the sunlight.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Rikers Island - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Rikers Island.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Rocky Point - description

Rocky Point Rocky Point is a hamlet located in northern Brookhaven Town. Today, it is a typical suburban settlement characterized by strip malls and shopping areas along North Country Road and residential neighborhoods to the north of this main road. In the 19th century, however, it was a rural, farming community and home to a small settlement of African Americans.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Samuel Ballton - description

Samuel Ballton Samuel Ballton was a well-respected citizen of Greenlawn in the Town of Huntington. It was in 1899 that Ballton was crowned the "Pickle King." His efforts produced an amazing crop of 1.5 million pickles in a single season. Ballton, however, had already led a remarkable life and went on to leave a unique legacy.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Sandy Ground - description

1538 Woodrow Road On February 23, 1828, Captain John Jackson purchased land in a place known as Sandy Ground on what is now Staten Island.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Schomburg Library - description

515 Malcolm X Blvd The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture holds one of the best library collections focused on black history in the world.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Schomberg Library - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses the Shomberg Library.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Seneca Village- description

Central Park near West Drive & 85th Street As a community of free black property owners, Seneca Village was unique in its day.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Seneca Village Community - Cynthia Copland commentary

Seneca Village Community Commentary by Cynthia Copland
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Seneca Village - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Seneca Village.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Shiloh Presbyterian Church - description

409 W. 141st St. The Shiloh Presbyterian Church boasts a long tradition of radical black leadership.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Slave Revolt of 1712 - description

Maiden Place In the early 1700s, New York had one of the largest slave populations of any of England’s colonies.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Sojourner Truth - description

74 Canal Street In 1797, a baby girl named Isabella was born in upstate New York.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

St. Philip's Episcopalian Church - description

31 Centre Street The congregation of St. Philip’s has roots that reach back to 1704.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

St. Philip's Episcopalian Church - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses St. Philip's Episcopalian Church.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Studio Museum in Harlem - description

144 W 125th St From before this nation was formed, Africans and their descendants have contributed enormously to American culture.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Studio Museum in Harlem - Kellie Jones commentary

Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses The Studio Museum in Harlem.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Tappan Brothers - description

122 Pearl Street Lewis and Arthur Tappan were brothers who earned a fortune importing silk from Asia.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Gideon and the Great Dock - description

Pearl St. between Whitehall Street and Broad Street On an August day in 1664, the Dutch ship Gideon reached the Great Dock in New Amsterdam.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Manhattan Company - description

40 Wall Street The Manhattan Company was formed to bring fresh water to New Yorkers. Or at least that was its stated purpose.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Slave Market - description

Wall Street and Water Street In 1711, New York was growing quickly, and the growing needs of the city were often supplied by slave labor.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Theodore Wright House - description

235 W. Broadway One day in the mid-1800s, 28 men, women, and children snuck into New York City.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Tontine Coffeehouse - description

Across from the Meal Market, where enslaved workers could be hired or bought, was the Tontine Coffee House, home of the New York Stock Exchange.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Wall Street - description

One Wall Street A gang of black men labored as long as daylight allowed, digging a three-foot-deep trench from the East River all the way across Manhattan Island to the Hudson River.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Wall Street - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Wall Street.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Weeksville - description

1698 Bergen Street Far from the bustle and racism of Manhattan, on what was then the outskirts of Brooklyn, free blacks built a community called Weeksville.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

Weeksville - Kenneth Jackson commentary

Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Weeksville.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

West Indian Day Parade - description

Eastern Parkway and Utica Avenue, Brooklyn Many slaves brought the tradition of African outdoor ceremonies to the Caribbean. However, once enslaved, they were prohibited from holding public celebrations despite their slaveholders' engagement in street parades like Mardi Gras.The Harlem permit was revoked in 1964 due to a violent riot. Five years later, a committee organized by Trinidadian Carlos Lezama obtained another permit for a parade on Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn. The parade has been held there ever since, beginning at Eastern Parkway and Utica Avenue and ending at Grand Army Plaza.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

William Floyd Estate - Lynda Day commentary

245 Park Drive, Mastic Beach, Long Island William Floyd, the first son of Nicoll and Tabitha Floyd, was born on the south shore of Long Island in 1734. His father purchased the Mastic Beach property in 1724 building the Old Mastic house to serve as the family’s home.
1/21/20080
Episode Artwork

William Floyd Estate - description

245 Park Drive, Mastic Beach, Long Island William Floyd, the first son of Nicoll and Tabitha Floyd, was born on the south shore of Long Island in 1734. His father purchased the Mastic Beach property in 1724 building the Old Mastic house to serve as the family’s home.
1/21/20080