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John Harris

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  • New York in 1865, a slave ship, silhouette of Sanchez, and a page from Sanchez's notes.

    How a Cuban Spy Sabotaged New York's Thriving, Illicit Slave Trade

    Emilio Sanchez and the British government fought the lucrative business as American authorities looked the other way.
    by John Harris via Smithsonian on March 8, 2021
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Related Excerpts

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engraving of a slave ship

Why Did the Slave Trade Survive So Long?

The history of the Atlantic slave trade after the American Revolution is a story of sustained efforts to suppress it even as demand for slaves increased.
by James Oakes via New York Review of Books on March 25, 2021
A painting of a slave ship.

New York City and the Persistence of the Atlantic Slave Trade

Even after slave trade was banned, the United States and New York City, in particular, were complicit in allowing it to persist.
by Gerald Horne via The Nation on February 24, 2021
A wanted poster that reads "Wanted by the people: murder, aggravated assault and battery, denying civil rights, perjury. Brinley Evans, Thomas Lyons."

Wanted: An End to Police Terror

The pursuit of justice has been defined by a rote binary of punished in a cage versus unpunished and free.
by Stuart Schrader via Viewpoint Magazine on June 9, 2020
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