Slavers in New York

In the 1830s Clement Clarke Moore came out as the author of a poem he had written anonymously, “A Visit to St. Nicholas,” commonly known as “Twas the Night Before Christmas.” Moore was a professor of theology and also a prominent resident of New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood, where a park is named after him.

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"Someone" has a Name

The first words on this website are, “The cell phone videos are hard to watch but watch them I do.” And, “It’s never far from my mind that someone risked their safety to press the Record button, to document the humiliation, abuse and sometimes death of Black Americans taking place on the other side of the lens.”

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Ann BanksComment

A White Supremacist Reformed by History

I first encountered Ty Seidule when I stumbled onto a video lecture he posted in 2015, in which he asserted that slavery was not merely acause of the Civil War, it was the cause. While this has long been the consensus view of historians, the video garnered 30 million views and sparked such vitriolic hate mail as to warrant alerting the FBI.

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Ann Banks Comments
The Confederate in my silverware drawer

Like many people, I was sickened to witness rioters brandishing the Confederate battle flag -- that most potent of racist symbols -- in the halls of the United States Capitol. In this USA Today op ed, I draw a connection between the enduring lie of white supremacy and the contents of my silverware drawer. A.B.

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Filippo CiampiniComment
It’s Time to Lose the Lost Cause

Don’t miss Tom Hanks’ latest, in which he plays a “doggedly heroic” former Nazi officer who rescues an abducted child whose Jewish protector has been lynched and a “No Jews: This is white man’s country”” sign affixed to his shirt.

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Ann BanksComment
Our interview with Donnamarie Barnes sponsored by the Shelter Island Library

Ann Banks’ great-great-grandfather. A.J. Pickett was a slaveholder. Karen Orozco Gutierrez’s great-grandfather Milton Howard was one of the people he enslaved. Five generations later, the two women—one from New York City, one from Iowa, -- met in Montgomery, Alabama, to explore the disturbing truths of their shared past. In this webinar sponsored by the Shelter Island Library, they are interviewed by Donnamarie Barnes.

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