Freedom House Re-Opens in Alexandria

Freedom House Re-Opens in Alexandria

A moving ceremony to formally open a moving place.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Storytelling: An Interview with Jessica Piscitelli Robinson

Storytelling: An Interview with Jessica Piscitelli Robinson

Learn about the process of storytelling from an expert.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

SeeWorthy: Alexandria Archaeology's Big Finds

SeeWorthy: Alexandria Archaeology's Big Finds

Surprises lay underneath the Alexandria waterfront.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Alexandria Canal: A Bet on TRADE and PROSPERITY

Alexandria Canal: A Bet on TRADE and PROSPERITY

From an aqueduct across the Potomac, 7 miles to Alexandria—but someone had to pay for it all.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Getting Back to In-Person

Getting Back to In-Person

A talk about two of my favorite women….and not on Zoom!

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Black History Month Beginnings

Black History Month Beginnings

Imagining the creativity and scholarship coming out of Carter Woodson’s “home office” on Ninth Street NW in Washington, DC.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

"They Called Us Girls": A Conversation with Author Kathleen Stone

"They Called Us Girls": A Conversation with Author Kathleen Stone

In which Kathleen Stone, author of the forthcoming They Called Us Girls, talks about how she came to the idea for her group biography and how she carried it off.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

A Gravestone Set Right: Julia Wilbur in the Avon, New York, Cemetery

A Gravestone Set Right: Julia Wilbur in the Avon, New York, Cemetery

Julia Wilbur’s final resting spot in Avon, New York, is definitely more restful now.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Harriet Jacobs in New York State

Harriet Jacobs in New York State

Two short articles summarize the roughly two decades that Harriet Jacobs lived in New York State—New York City and Rochester (part 1) and Cornwall (part 2).

Read More

Writing a Book Review of The Last King of America

Writing a Book Review of The Last King of America

With apologies to those who never write in books, how and why I reviewed The Last King in America for Washington Independent Review of Books.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

More on Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial

More on Contrabands and Freedmen Cemetery Memorial

A bit more background about a recent article I published on a civil rights action—in 1864 Alexandria, Virginia.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

The Ghost Fleet of Mallows Bay

The Ghost Fleet of Mallows Bay

Lesson of the Ghost Fleet of Mallows Bay—ships built in a hurry are not a great idea

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Alexandria African American Heritage Park

Alexandria African American Heritage Park

Field trip: Alexandria African American Heritage Park

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Harriet Jacobs and Imogen Willis Eddy: Surprise Discoveries All Around

Harriet Jacobs and Imogen Willis Eddy: Surprise Discoveries All Around

After (or before) you’ve read my article in the Cambridge Day about Harriet Jacobs and Imogen Willis Eddy, here are a few bits that could not make it in the original article.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Napoleon Bonaparte Marshall and William Taylor Burwell Williams: African American Educators and Harvard Graduates (Class of 1897)

Napoleon Bonaparte Marshall and William Taylor Burwell Williams: African American Educators and Harvard Graduates (Class of 1897)

In their own words: Two Black alumni from the Harvard College class of 1897.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Frederick Douglass and the Fifth of July

Frederick Douglass and the Fifth of July

What to the slave is the Fourth of July? asked Frederick Douglass to a Rochester audience. What indeed?

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Anne Lynch's New York City Literary Salon

Anne Lynch's New York City Literary Salon

This woman ran one of the most sought-after literary salons in mid-19th century New York City.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

From the Archive: My Own!

From the Archive: My Own!

For someone who loves reading old letters in archives, getting back letters that I wrote from 1974 to 1996 was….weird.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF

Northeast North Carolina Underground Railroad: Sea, Swamp, Solidarity

Northeast North Carolina Underground Railroad: Sea, Swamp, Solidarity

Consider the challenge of an escape from slavery via the watery depths.

Read More

Augusta Browne, 19th-century American female composer

Augusta Browne, 19th-century American female composer

Have you heard of 19th century composer Augusta Browne? Biographer Bonny Miller sheds some light, and sound, on what Browne achieved amidst a lot of constraints.

Read More
Comment
Print Friendly and PDF