Black History Month
FILM: "Slavery and the Making of America"

SLAVERY AND THE MAKING OF AMERICA is a four-part series documenting the history
of American slavery from its beginnings in the British colonies to its end in
the Southern states and the years of post-Civil War Reconstruction. Drawing on a
wealth of recent scholarship, it looks at slavery as an integral part of a
developing nation, challenging the long held notion that slavery was exclusively
a Southern enterprise. At the same time, by focusing on the remarkable stories
of individual slaves, it offers new perspectives on the slave experience and
testifies to the active role that Africans and African Americans took in
surviving their bondage and shaping their own lives.
Read more about this
film...
EPISODE I:
Thursday:
February 7, 2008
2nd Floor Levin Dining Room
11:30 - 1:00
Refreshments served



Episode one opens in the 1620s with the
introduction of 11 men of African descent and mixed ethnicity into slavery in
New Amsterdam. Working side by side with white indentured servants, these men
labored to lay the foundations of the Dutch colony that would later become New
York. There were no laws defining the limitations imposed on slaves at this
point in time. Enslaved people, such as Anthony d'Angola, Emmanuel Driggus, and
Frances Driggus could bring suits to court, earn wages, and marry. But in the
span of a hundred years, everything changed. By the early 18th century, the
trade of African slaves in America was expanding to accommodate an agricultural
economy growing in the hands of ambitious planters. After the 1731 Stono
Rebellion (a violent uprising led by a slave named Jemmy) many colonies adopted
strict "black codes" transforming the social system into one of legal racial
oppression. (Run time: 60 minutes)
EPISODE
2:
Thursday:
February 14, 2008
1.213 Rebecca Sealy Building
11:30 - 1:00
Refreshments served



From the 1740s to the 1830s, the institution of slavery continued to support
economic development. As the slave population reproduced, American planters
became less dependent on the African slave trade. Ensuing generations of slaves
developed a unique culture that blended elements of African and American life.
Episode two follows the paths of several African Americans, including Thomas
Jefferson's slave Jupiter, Colonel Tye, Elizabeth Freeman, David Walker, and
Maria Stewart, as they respond to the increasingly restrictive system of
slavery. At the core of this episode is the Revolutionary War, an event which
reveals the contradictions of a nation seeking independence while simultaneously
denying freedom to its black citizens.
EPISODE
3:
Thursday:
February 21, 2008
2nd Floor Levin Dining Room
11:30 - 1:00
Refreshments served

 
One by one the Northern states, led by Vermont in 1777, adopted laws to abolish
and phase out slavery. Simultaneously, slavery in the Southern United States
entered the period of its greatest expansion. Episode three, which starts at the
beginning of the 1800s, examines slavery's increasing divisiveness in America as
the nation develops westward and cotton replaces tobacco as the country's most
valuable crop. The episode weaves national events through the personal histories
of two African American slaves -- Harriet Jacobs and Louis Hughes -- who not
only managed to escape bondage, but also exposed the horrific realities of the
slave experience in autobiographical narratives. These and other stories of
physical, psychological, and sexual exploitation fed the fires of a
reinvigorated abolitionist movement. With a diverse membership comprised of men
and women, blacks and whites, and led by figures including Frederick Douglass,
Sojourner Truth, and Amy Post, abolitionist sentiment gathered strength in the
North, contributing to the widening fissure and imminent break-up of the nation.
EPISODE
4:
Thursday:
February 28, 2008
2nd Floor Levin Dining Room
11:30 - 1:00
Refreshments served



Episode four looks at Civil War and Reconstruction through the experiences of
South Carolina slave Robert Smalls. It chronicles Smalls' daring escape to
freedom, his military service, and his tenure as a congressman after the war. As
the events of Smalls' life unfold, the complexities of this period in American
history are revealed. The episode shows the transformation of the war from a
struggle for union to a battle over slavery. It examines the black contribution
to the war effort and traces the gains and losses of newly freed African
Americans during Reconstruction. The 13th amendment abolished slavery in 1865,
the 14th and 15th amendments guaranteed black civil rights, and the Freedmen's
Bureau offered aid to former slaves throughout the 1870s. Yet simultaneously,
the formation of militant groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan threatened the future
of racial equality and segregation laws began to appear across the country.
Slavery's eradication had not brought an end to black oppression. |