TIPHC Newsletter, Feb. 2-8, 2020

An enslaved man was crucial to the Lewis and Clark expedition’s success. Clark refused to free him afterward. Photo: Ed Hamilton's York statue on Riverfront Plaza in Louisville. (Raymond Boyd/Getty Images) (Washington Post) York had done his job superbly. Whether the enslaved, 30-something black man wanted to participate in Lewis and Clark’s expedition to

2023-04-26T15:11:33-05:00February 5, 2020|2020 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Nov. 24-30, 2019

The Electoral College’s Racist Origins More than two centuries after it was designed to empower southern white voters, the system continues to do just that. Photo by Frank Scherschel/The Life Picture Collection/Getty (The Atlantic) Is a color-blind political system possible under our Constitution? If it is, the Supreme Court’s evisceration of the Voting Rights

2023-04-26T11:00:34-05:00November 27, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Nov. 17-23, 2019

Enslaved Couples Faced Wrenching Separations, or Even Choosing Family Over Freedom Loved ones could be sold away at any time. Here's how married couples coped. Photo: Soldier and Companion, c.1861-65 (tintype with brass mat & leather case), American Photographer, (19th century)/Detroit Institute of Arts, USA/Founders Society Purchase, DeRoy Photographic Acquisition Endowment Fund and Coville

2023-04-27T13:13:06-05:00November 20, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Nov. 10-16, 2019

The Complexities of Slavery in the Nation's Capital Image: In this drawing from around 1815, the enslaved pass the United States Capitol wearing shackles and chains. (Library of Congress) (The White House Historical Association) For the first seventy-two years of its existence, the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C., harbored one of America’s most difficult historical

2023-04-26T13:50:53-05:00November 13, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Oct. 27-Nov. 2, 2019

Bass Reeves Finally Gets His Hollywood Moment in HBO’s ‘Watchmen’ The legend of the former Texas marshal figures prominently in Damon Lindelof’s new series. Photo credit: ilbusca/Getty, Public Domain (Texas Monthly) The series premiere of HBO’s Watchmen opens with a black-hooded figure in hot pursuit of a lawman; he quickly finds himself lassoed in

2023-04-26T12:30:58-05:00October 30, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|
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