The Library Company of Philadelphia

The Library Company of Philadelphia

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  • @odonnelletsu
    @odonnelletsuАй бұрын

    Excellent program

  • @fitzml1485
    @fitzml1485Ай бұрын

    One question is, how many slaves would have had access to Phillis Wheatey's level of education in order to write at that level? There were likely other budding black poets, but the education of slaves was rare, if it existed at all. Another question is, how many slaves had such close relationships with white people during that time? And, third, publication by blacks or even women wasn't common, so how many slaves had masters who were willing to promote their work to a publisher? One of the most remarkable things about Phillis Wheatley is, not only her writing talent given her circumstances, but her highly unique position and relationship with the Wheatleys and insteractinos with prominent white people. That may not prove that the poem is hers, but it makes it much more likely.

  • @javawatson1350
    @javawatson13502 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this ❤ I had no idea About William Cathay aka Cuffee.The continuous unraveling of our queer and trans history in U.S. is so quenching.

  • @peggybooth8211
    @peggybooth82113 ай бұрын

    Love the chat on Women, Aet and the environment in British North America

  • @Brookintellect
    @Brookintellect4 ай бұрын

    How do you know the Machapunga didn’t exist before 1584???

  • @nickmat3153
    @nickmat31535 ай бұрын

    wonderful! Thank you!

  • @garyjohnson8327
    @garyjohnson83275 ай бұрын

    Quit dressing in red face.

  • @laugustam
    @laugustam7 ай бұрын

    No proper list of measured ingredients. Shame. Was looking forward to baking this cake.

  • @slavaukrayini4442
    @slavaukrayini44427 ай бұрын

    Fascinating lecture! Really amazed at the low exposure of this video.

  • @EyeLean5280
    @EyeLean52808 ай бұрын

    Thanks so much for this!

  • @apollicino2824
    @apollicino28249 ай бұрын

    Interesting to think of the role of media and an image. When they discussed lithography and newspapers circulating images of Mary Jones and how abolitionist then shied away from publicizing images, it reminded me of the role media and images played in helping police departments to target BLM protesters. Crazy how whether it be lithography or the age of facial recognition technology...we are caught up in the similar dynamics of power and punishment being gleaned from the use of an image.

  • @BrandonTWills
    @BrandonTWills9 ай бұрын

    I’ve always thought North Carolina was more South Virginia due to the early settlements being people leaving Jamestown. Guess I didn’t know the half of it.

  • @franklinkettle6853
    @franklinkettle68539 ай бұрын

    Seneca tribe buffalo to Niagara falls

  • @franklinkettle6853
    @franklinkettle68539 ай бұрын

    I know these people in person

  • @apollicino2824
    @apollicino28249 ай бұрын

    Thank you for posting. I'm gearing up for my dissertation, so it is exciting to learn about these archives. :)

  • @suzannegilipost2145
    @suzannegilipost214511 ай бұрын

    I was sorry to miss this discussion and so happy to find it here.

  • @skate103
    @skate10311 ай бұрын

    Right! No thanks.

  • @daryleemanuel5325
    @daryleemanuel5325 Жыл бұрын

    I'm Tuscarora, and I can't believe someone with educational authority is speaking about this issue. Seeing as to how the state and federal government seems to think and act as if we are extinct,

  • @WolfRoss
    @WolfRoss Жыл бұрын

    Also consider that among the Spanish were Spanish, Basque, and Sephardic Jews. Just trying to understand my ancestors. The Saponi Tribe settled into Smith Twp. Whitley County, Indiana before 1850.

  • @BrandonTWills
    @BrandonTWills9 ай бұрын

    There was a Jewish man in the Lost Colony also. You don’t hear too much about them during that time.

  • @heathcliffgrassie7312
    @heathcliffgrassie7312 Жыл бұрын

    "PromoSM"

  • @AJTheBreeze2ILL
    @AJTheBreeze2ILL Жыл бұрын

    My grandpa's mom last name was Maddison b4 marriage Bettye Kearse is my cousin ✊🏽

  • @andywomack3414
    @andywomack3414 Жыл бұрын

    Assigned reading for Hist415 class, Dr. Sean Gallagher, Professor. Grew up in the region where much of these events occurred. I hate to admit not knowing much about this until now. I truly appreciate this research concerning the region I know fairly well I know the importance of the "Fall Line." I used to live on it. Brief history of the Susquehanna people; they were scattered, then gathered back together, then killed. A rather gut-wrenching narrative.

  • @TaliiPlays
    @TaliiPlays Жыл бұрын

    I am also a decedent of president James Madison

  • @FrejaW
    @FrejaW Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting! Stumbled upon this video and it captured me directly

  • @carolynschindewolf4452
    @carolynschindewolf4452 Жыл бұрын

    I am a lactation consultant and love the herbal recipe book included a remedy for sore nipples!

  • @bettyraynor-davis9
    @bettyraynor-davis9 Жыл бұрын

    I have been in the process of proving my Native American Tuscarora Heritage and think I have finally accomplished that feat. However not enough has been done to bring back the validity of our indigenous heritage. My gggreat grandmother Sarah Carter who married William Waterman was native American Tuscarora. Oral histories from my family enlightened me to our Mayflower and Native American roots. Sarah was the daughter of Edward Carter Indian Agent and his father was Sheriff John Carter. Many of the people who were deeded lands along the Neuse and Cape Fear Rivers and their tributaries were the Tuscarora who were reclaiming their lands according to the customs of the English settlers just as those indigenous people have done along the swamps of Drowning Creek that we now know as the Lumber River. I am so grateful for your research and videos. I am now predominantly of mixed European heritage but the blood of my Tuscarora ancestors has connected me to the land and its people and has led me to find and tell my own story of that heritage. We need more people to help bring together the stray shards of our Tuscarora nation. Very few Tuscarora actually left NC. They remained and are still here to today embedded in the fabric of the land that was traditionally their home. I am connected to the Carters and Blizzards whose Tuscarora Heritage is still present in Eastern NC living between the Roanoke and Cape Fear Rivers as they always have been. Thank you for this!

  • @ancient1returned974
    @ancient1returned974 Жыл бұрын

    Is this slide show available?

  • @juice2835
    @juice2835 Жыл бұрын

    What a classic World War I song. Love it

  • @patramorningstar3161
    @patramorningstar3161 Жыл бұрын

    Good luck finding anything online that is accurate and actually from someone who truly practices genuine obeah is indigenous and is protected by the passing down of the information orally there is a reason why you don’t see it in books

  • @azhanteewaa
    @azhanteewaa Жыл бұрын

    I’m glad she claims her family story and tells the world she is a descendant of one of the Founding Fathers of the United States, James Madison, the fourth President of the United States, and she is also a descendant of a slave woman whose ancestors were from Ghana. My mother told me my second great grandfather was a US Senator of Alabama , John Hollis Bankhead II, who fathered a son with Margaret Webber, a sharecropper who was married to Mr. Webber of Birmingham, Alabama. We are kin to the Bankhead family. I didn't believe it, but it showed my test through DNA on ancestry and my heritage websites. I come from a family that was a Senator, a Congressman, a House of Representatives member, and a Hollywood actress, Talluah Bankhead. I have family oral stories of my second great grandfather, Senator Bankhead, visiting his son, whom he loved dearly, my great grandfather, and my grandmother when she was a child in Mississippi while he was working on the Bankhead Highway from Washington DC to San Diego, California. I really need to write a book and make a documentary movie.

  • @edomite
    @edomite Жыл бұрын

    So this is him just talking about work instead of Benjamin Rush.

  • @chaselyfeinfo
    @chaselyfeinfo Жыл бұрын

    Do some history facts yall ain’t done enough, I love it but don’t discount people who look like you from history, think back further, copper colored tribes

  • @aariley2
    @aariley22 жыл бұрын

    This is such a funny song!!!

  • @selecttoursnyc7787
    @selecttoursnyc77872 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! I happened upon this lecture while researching a walking tour I put together on Pride in Central Park. The perspective about Mr. Halleck and how he fit into the society of his time is really helpful. I didn’t know about the flowers on his birthday and will try to pay my respects to his statue in a few weeks. I’m sorry I wasn’t aware of this live.

  • @RefractionHD
    @RefractionHD2 жыл бұрын

    I definitely appreciate the video, I'm trying to find as much material on Obeah as possible for research. I'm writing a story and have two characters who practice something that I've based around Obeah but finding the material online to learn about it is next to impossible and whatever information is out there is outstandingly little.

  • @patramorningstar3161
    @patramorningstar3161 Жыл бұрын

    Good luck with whatever you find online. Obeah is an indigenous practice that is passed orally by REAL practitioners.

  • @patramorningstar3161
    @patramorningstar3161 Жыл бұрын

    Good luck with whatever you find online. Obeah is an indigenous practice that is passed orally by REAL practitioners.

  • @Ecohoktet
    @Ecohoktet2 жыл бұрын

    Your reinterpretation of the wording on the placque detracts from the reality of the massacre if you take away the responsibility of the Paxton Boys. I have visited that placque in Conestoga and I have completed extensive research on this event. I hope your reinterpretation does not gloss over the tragedy.

  • @rainbowunicornprincessandt7796
    @rainbowunicornprincessandt77962 жыл бұрын

    Awesome presentation. Africans tend to be left out of most of history. We have the Moore surname in the family. Where did it originate? I read somewhere that they were Moorish. You will also see that surname in the Tuscarora Nation.

  • @Ecohoktet
    @Ecohoktet2 жыл бұрын

    Hello. I am retired teacher/professor, Social Sciences. I actually have completed much of my research on the Conestoga Massacre for the doctorate in American Indian History. I spent three weeks in Lancaster and did walk the land where the massacre occurred. I'm glad to see someone is continuing on with this story. I hope to be able to purchase the graphic novel for my bookstore now that I am retired.

  • @nicbonnstetter8970
    @nicbonnstetter89702 жыл бұрын

    Lovely program, thank you nicolette bonnstetter

  • @mamachief876
    @mamachief8762 жыл бұрын

    Greetings yes My appreciation to U both for Ur presentation. I Am 10:48 minutes into this video. I STILL am not sure who or better yet what these people Nationality or Color were.1828 Webster says we were COPPER COLORED PEOPLE.BUT THAT WAS NOT WHAT U TWO SHOWED US . WHY ????DIDN'T U SHOW THE TRUTH FROM the STart. Please SHOW US,US.

  • @joycedoty5982
    @joycedoty59822 жыл бұрын

    Excellent presentation .. I’ll look for more from Dr Smallwood.

  • @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary
    @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary2 жыл бұрын

    What a fantastic lecture. Thank you for this, it's lovely. The power of music is something else

  • @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary
    @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary2 жыл бұрын

    This lecture was wonderful to watch. I learned a lot. I need to re-watch it with a pen in hand and take notes.

  • @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary
    @TheRobertsonDaviesLibrary2 жыл бұрын

    That's so great! I love that there's a sense of continuity from copper plates and preservation of rare books to newer materials. It's vastly different, and yet, the continuity is there.

  • @garymattscheck9066
    @garymattscheck90662 жыл бұрын

    I have this. This is a dubbing never issued on Diamond Disc

  • @salomiambrosius1383
    @salomiambrosius13832 жыл бұрын

    og8ai vur.fyi

  • @MrChristianDT
    @MrChristianDT2 жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure where he got the explanation for the migrations of the Iroquoian peoples from, but that I am aware, the St. Lawrence Iroquoians were the first Iroquoian people (wherever it is they may have come from, or how long they had been there, I don't know.) & three groups split off from them. One travelled west along the north side of the Great Lakes, giving birth to the Huron, the Neutral Nation, then swinging back around across the Niagara River to form the Petun. One travelled west along the south side of the Great Lakes & gave birth to the Iroquois, the Erie, then they went back across the Allegheny River & travelled south, becoming the western tribes of the Susquehannocks. The final group split from the Mohawk & migrated straight south, giving birth to the Eastern tribes of the Susquehannocks, possibly the Tockwogh on the Delmarva Peninsula, & then the Nottoway, Meherrin, Tuscarora & Cherokee. Shortly thereafter, the Catawbas came into the area with the Saponi & broke the Cherokee away from the others & forced them off to the southwest. Then, the tribes who formed during the colonial era were the Wyandot, who were Hurons captured by the Iroquois Confederacy during the Beaver Wars & forced into a sort of vassal state scenerio, the Guyandotte, who were probably Petun & were ended up in southern West Virginia, whether they were vassals of the Iroquois as well, the Coharie who were the Tuscarora who stayed behind in North Carolina after the Tuscarora War & the Weston, who were most likely the last of the free Erie, who fled Ohio during the Beaver Wars & relocated to the Carolinas.

  • @kellyowens1868
    @kellyowens18682 жыл бұрын

    Your understanding of this topic far outpaces that of the speaker. From what I've learned recently from an interesting podcast called "The Other States of America," the Iraquois Confederacy was made up of 5 tribes in the up-state New York area, having nothing to do with the southern Tuscaroara, & Cherokee Iraquois speaking tribes. Much of what is called "The Beaver Wars," had nothing to do with the beaver fur trade with European traders, in fact. The Iraquois exterminated many smaller Algonquin speaking tribes to the East where beavers had long since been hunted out, in addition to their wars of aggression against other Iraquois speaking tribes like those of the larger Huron Confederacy to their west, the Machicans {The Last of the Mohichins}, due east of the Iraquios, Confederacy, & other tribal groups to the south. Another error I recognized was the speaker's timing of the use of wampum bead belts as a means of exchange. Until the delicate machinery to mass produce the tiny tubular shell beads was imported by early Dutch fur traders, wampum only existed in single, necklace strands. As far as the archeological record goes, no wampum belts have been discovered prior to the introduction of the small mechanical devices capable made in the Spanish Netherlands, during this time period. It's funny the speaker neglects to mention how common cannibalism of enemy war dead was among every Iraquois tribal group both before, & after the arrival of the first Europeans in north eastern North America. Being much more familiar with relatively peaceful tribes in California, & the desert Southwest I was shocked at the levels, & extent of torture the Iraquois subjected indigenous, & european captives to. I can see why these things were never discussed in high school settings because they are truely disturbing, but widespread ignorance of the truth is the unintended result. KOut

  • @MrChristianDT
    @MrChristianDT2 жыл бұрын

    @@kellyowens1868 Yeah, I try. I don't have any contacts among the tribes themselves, but I spent years researching & digesting anything I could get my hands on. I even helped rewrite some of the Native American sections of a few states' histories on Wikipedia, over time. Did the most on Ohio, Pennsylvania & West Virginia. I tried on some other states, but some of it wasn't great & a lot of it got deleted or rewritten either because I included something which wasn't correct (but then they deleted all the stuff I did get right along with it) or by some person watching the page who got so intense that their horribly inaccurate info was correct, they refused to allow it to be changed, altered or added to in any way. One was actually pretty funny, because I had to spend so much time in the article defending my position, it got deleted because it "read like a college thesis instead of giving established fact." But, it sucks that you still have info which was assumed to have been proven inacurate still running rampant out there, even among supposed experts in the field which tends to get in the way or learning more. Even members of tribes themselves don't often know that much about each other & accidentally perpetuate bad information about tribes other than themselves, thinking it was established fact.

  • @Nickelniner09
    @Nickelniner09 Жыл бұрын

    @@MrChristianDT if you were as knowledgeable as you say your work wouldn’t have been taken down for a few mistakes don’t come on here trying to discredit this distinguished scholar go out there and do your own presentations on this if you feel you can do a better job but that won’t happen because you’re not as smart as you think you are

  • @MrChristianDT
    @MrChristianDT Жыл бұрын

    @@Nickelniner09 I'm going by what the tribe says themselves. Albeit the sources who wrote it down in the first place had difficulty with some aspects of what they were trying to communicate, this has been publicly available information for 150 years. A lot of these scholars who get interested in the subject seem to only research one tribe. I tried to research pretty much the entire eastern half of the continent. And what "few mistakes" are we talking about, here?

  • @Motion090
    @Motion0903 жыл бұрын

    My 2nd Great Grandmonther is Eliza Brock born 1841 in New Bern, NC

  • @jeffwhaley2233
    @jeffwhaley22333 жыл бұрын

    Excellent! Thank you for facilitating this presentation. Please relay my praise to Dr. Smallwood for the concise presentation of such a broad topic! Fine lecture. I was an acquaintance of genealogist and historian Dr. Dallas Price, of Rose Hill, NC, and his commentary, during social gatherings, touched on such topics, I'm sure many interesting insights passed with him, and I would like to thank Dr. Smallwood for reminding me of precious memories in the telling of rare history. Particularly that which is difficult to piece together and little known to eastern North Carolinians. Fully enjoyed this presentation.

  • @bettyraynor-davis9
    @bettyraynor-davis9 Жыл бұрын

    Never heard of Dr Dallas Price. I knew Dr Dallas Herring personally. He descended from the Herrings and Southerlands of Eastern NC. I researched his collection a lot. He collected and preserved a vast amount of fantastic history and was so generous to share it with anyone and everyone. He wanted to leave his collection to me or someone close to him that would really appreciate what he had. I did not live in NC and could not accept what he offered but I am glad that his collection is now available through so many resources.