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Differing Historical Perspectives on Slavery in Maryland and the District of Columbia

Course number : LLP177   ID : 15786    Class Section Number : 1
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The word “slavery” brings up a mental image of the “peculiar institution” as it existed in the Deep South right before the Civil War. Slavery in the Washington area was different. It began the same – in the late 1600s, Ninian Beall’s tobacco plantation occupied the land where the White House is today – but it soon changed. After tobacco wore out the land, slavery made less sense, and it was hard to enforce with the increasingly diverse capital of the United States. By the time of the Civil War, Washington, D.C. still had slaves, but they lived among a population of free African Americans. Author James H. Johnston will discuss the differing perspectives on slavery that emerge from his two books, The Recollections of Margaret Loughborough, about a daughter of the Old Dominion of Virginia, and From Slave Ship to Harvard, which follows six generations of an African American family in Maryland. This class is offered in collaboration with Montgomery History.
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Class Details

2 Session(s)
Days of the Week :Multiple Days of the Week :
  Weekly - Fri.  
  Weekly - Fri.  

Location : Multiple Location : 
  O-OC-Off Campus - Rockville
  A-DL-WD&CE Virtual-Remote.

Instructor : TBA TBA 

CEUs : 0.3

 

Notice

Please read:  The second class session will meet at Josiah Henson Museum and Park at 11410 Old Georgetown Road North Bethesda, MD 20852. The admission fee is not included in the cost of the class.

Non-MD Resident 

Price: $60.00

MD Resident: 

$30.00


Registration Closes On
Thursday, June 20, 2024 @ 12:00 AM

Schedule Information

Date(s) Class Days Times Location Instructor(s)
6/21/2024 - 6/21/2024 Weekly - Fri 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM Online, A-DL-WD&CE Virtual-Remote  Map TBA TBA 
6/28/2024 - 6/28/2024 Weekly - Fri 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM Rockville, O-OC-Off Campus - Rockville  Map TBA TBA