Mapping The African American Past (maap)

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
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Sinopse

Mapping the American Past (MAAP) illustrates places and moments that have shaped the long history of African Americans in New York City.

Episódios

  • Joseph Lloyd Manor - Jenna Coplin commentary

    21/01/2008

    Joseph Lloyd Manor Granted to James Lloyd I in 1685, Lloyd Manor encompassed approximately 3,000 acres of land on the north shore of Long Island. The Manor supplied the Boston-based merchant family with cider, cordwood, and clay among other inventory. It wasn't until 1711 that the first Lloyd, Henry, took up residence. That same year Henry Lloyd recorded the birth of a slave named Jupiter Hammon on Lloyd Neck.

  • Joseph Lloyd Manor - description

    21/01/2008

    Joseph Lloyd Manor Granted to James Lloyd I in 1685, Lloyd Manor encompassed approximately 3,000 acres of land on the north shore of Long Island. The Manor supplied the Boston-based merchant family with cider, cordwood, and clay among other inventory. It wasn't until 1711 that the first Lloyd, Henry, took up residence. That same year Henry Lloyd recorded the birth of a slave named Jupiter Hammon on Lloyd Neck.

  • Lakeville Community - Lynda Day commentary

    21/01/2008

    Lakeville Manhasset, a hamlet in the Town of North Hempstead, had a fairly large, steadfast African American settlement in the early 19th century. This community was unique due to its size and composition. The population was colonial in origin, comprised of people who were both born into slavery and "born free." By the third quarter of the 18th century, free African Americans had established a community along Valley Road near Lake Success

  • Lakeville Community - description

    21/01/2008

    Lakeville, Manhasset, Long Island Manhasset, a hamlet in the Town of North Hempstead, had a fairly large, steadfast African American settlement in the early nineteenth century. By the third quarter of the eighteenth century, free African Americans had established a community along Valley Road near Lake Success that was known variably as Success, Lakeville at Success and Valley Road.

  • Land of the Blacks - description

    21/01/2008

    Minetta Lane In the hills and swamps that stretched across Manhattan Island one mile north of New Amsterdam, both free and enslaved blacks began to clear the tangle of trees, vines, and shrubs to build their own homes and plant their own gardens.

  • Langston Hughes - description

    21/01/2008

    20 E 127th St One of the leading voices in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, Langston Hughes focused his writing on the realistic plight of black people.

  • Conflict with Central Park Development - Cynthia Copland commentary

    21/01/2008

    Conflict with the development of Central Park in upper Manhattan. Commentary by Cynthia Copland

  • Langston Hughes - Kellie Jones commentary

    21/01/2008

    Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses Langston Hughes.

  • Louis Armstrong - description

    21/01/2008

    34-56 107th Street in Queens The world’s most famous jazz musician lived in modest Corona, Queens.

  • Lewis H Latimer - description

    21/01/2008

    34-41 137th Street in Flushing, Queens Lewis Latimer was born free in 1848; his parents George and Rebecca Latimer made sure of that.

  • Marcus Garvey - description

    21/01/2008

    1900 Madison Ave. Thought by many blacks to be another Moses, Marcus Garvey rose from humble beginnings in Jamaica, West Indies, to become the number one advocate of the "Back to Africa movement."

  • Marcus Garvey - Kellie Jones commentary

    21/01/2008

    Kellie Jones, Associate Professor, Columbia University, discusses Marcus Garvey.

  • Marcus Garvey - Kenneth Jackson commentary

    21/01/2008

    Kenneth Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor in History and the Social Sciences, Columbia University, discusses Marcus Garvey.

  • Minton's Playhouse - description

    21/01/2008

    118th street at Saint Nicholas Avenue, Manhattan Henry Minton, a tenor saxophonist and the first black delegate to Local 802 of the musicians’ union, opened Minton’s Playhouse in 1938. Located on 118th street at Saint Nicholas Avenue in Harlem, adjacent to the Hotel Cecil, the Playhouse was a frequent temporary residence of musicians passing through New York.

  • Mother AME Zion Church - description

    21/01/2008

    158 Church Street In the late 1700s, the Methodists of the mostly white John Street Church welcomed Africans and their descendents, and many came to worship there.

  • New York City Draft Riots 1863 - description

    21/01/2008

    Gramercy Park With the Emancipation Proclamation, the Civil War began to be more about black freedom.

  • Origins of Seneca Village - Cynthia Copland commentary

    21/01/2008

    Formation of enclaves origins of Seneca Village, formerly in Central Park. Commentary by Cynthia Copland

  • Pierre Toussaint - description

    21/01/2008

    263 Mulberry St In 1996, Pope John Paul II bestowed the title of “Venerable” on Pierre Toussaint. Two years later, Pierre Toussaint Square was named for him.

  • Ralph Ellison Memorial - description

    21/01/2008

    Riverside Park on 150th Street, Manhattan The Ralph Ellison Memorial at Riverside Park on 150th Street, Manhattan New York is not your typical African American landmark in New York City.

  • Rikers Island - description

    21/01/2008

    Rikers Island On March 5, 1864, a crowd of over 10,000 New Yorkers watched in awe as 1,000 well-disciplined Union army troops left Rikers Island and marched west to the Hudson River, their dark blue uniforms and crisp white gloves and white leggings glistening in the sunlight.

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