Brooklyn’s remarkable and unknown Black history revealed: ‘Slaveholding capital’
Long before it became the go-to borough for hipsters and commuters, Brooklyn was once America’s third largest city, independent and separate from Manhattan and the City of New York, explains Prithi Kanakamedala in “Brooklynites: The Remarkable Story of the Free Black Communities that Shaped a Borough” (NYU Press).
But it was also a place where, at the end of the American Revolution, one in three black inhabitants were enslaved, a statistic that, inevitably, drove a wave of activism in the years to come.
“Brooklyn was a slaveholding capital,” writes Kanakamedala. “And it was within this context that a free Black community at the town’s most northwestern tip would begin to contour the landscape and imbue the land with the radical possibilities of freedom.”
Gavin Newsham September 29, 2024
Read the full article here New York Post
Author Profile
Latest entries
- Political Corruption12/20/2024Call for $2.5 Trillion in Cuts Proves GOP Wants to ‘Steal Our Benefits’
- Political Corruption12/19/2024If Musk Blocking a Key Spending Bill Isn’t Oligarchy, I Don’t Know What Is
- Housing Conditions12/18/2024Woman Who Faced Racism When Buying a Home Speaks Out Against Bias
- Systemic Structural Racism12/16/2024Racism is a public health issue. Here’s why