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Adam H. Domby

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  • Beyond Romantic Advertisements: Ancestry.com, Genealogy, and White Supremacy

    On Ancestry's dangerous move to make it harder to discern which white families owned slaves.
    by Adam H. Domby via Black Perspectives on May 10, 2019
  • Defenders Of Confederate Monuments Keep Trying To Erase History

    Claims that the Confederacy didn't fight to uphold slavery are disputed by Confederate generals themselves.
    by Adam H. Domby via HuffPost on September 15, 2017

Related Excerpts

Viewing 1–4 of 4
A Black family in Savannah, GA.

The “Families’ Cause” in the Post-Civil War Era

While focusing on refuting the Lost Cause narrative, many historians forget to memorialize Black Americans in the post Civil War period.
by Holly A. Pinheiro Jr. via Black Perspectives on March 24, 2021
Confederate soldiers on horses on a golf course

What’s in a Name? For Some Clubs in the South, Uneasy Ties to the Confederacy.

Golf clubs named after Confederate generals are attracting new scrutiny.
by Tom Cunneff via Golf Digest on September 30, 2020
6 Black Americans celebrating Juneteenth in 1900.

Reunion, Juneteenth and the Meaning of the Civil War

What would it mean to define the Civil War as a necessary and crucial final step in the long, even more tragic history of slavery in America?
by Ben Railton via The Saturday Evening Post on June 16, 2020

There’s a New Way to Deal with Confederate Monuments

Officials in a number of towns and cities are putting up signs to explain the monuments' racist history.
by Hannah Natanson via Washington Post on September 22, 2019
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