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DaNeen L. Brown

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  • A Symbol of Slavery — and Survival

    Angela’s arrival in Jamestown in 1619 marked the beginning of a subjugation that left millions in chains.
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Retropolis on April 29, 2019
  • How the Founder of Black History Month Rebutted White Racism in a Forgotten Manuscript

    Carter G. Woodson’s unpublished work was discovered in 2005 by a Howard University history professor.
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Retropolis on February 1, 2019
  • ‘They Was Killing Black People’: A Century-Old Race Massacre Still Haunts Tulsa

    Even as Black Wall Street gentrifies, unresolved questions remain about one of the worst episodes of racial violence in U.S. history.
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Washington Post on September 28, 2018
  • Missouri v. Celia, a Slave

    The story of the 19-year old who killed the white master raping her, and claimed self-defense.
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Retropolis on October 19, 2017
  • Court room 63 members of the all-black 24th Infantry are seated to be tried for mutiny and murder in Houston, 1917.

    Vandals Damage Historical Marker Commemorating 1917 Uprising by Black Soldiers

    100 years after a riot that left 19 people dead, descendants of the men held responsible are asking for posthumous pardons.
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Retropolis on September 8, 2017
  • Hunting Down Runaway Slaves: The Cruel Ads of Andrew Jackson and the 'Master Class'

    A historian collecting runaway slave ads describes them as “the tweets of the master class.”
    by DaNeen L. Brown via Retropolis on May 1, 2017
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