• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Monday, January 30, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Hidden Fortress discussion on marronage history

October 18, 2022
in Entertainment
Reading Time: 8min read
A A
Hidden Fortress discussion on marronage history
0
SHARES
4
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

play

if you’re black and wade in the water you go to jail on Tybee in 1960

Civil Rights activist Edna Branch Jackson and Evalena M. Hoskins talk about participating in wade-ins on Tybee during the 1960s.

Richard Burkhart, Savannah Morning News

Go around 20 miles up the Savannah River towards Richmond Hill and you’ll probably miss the patch of trees once known as the Bear Creek Fortress. The name might fool you a bit, the fortress wouldn’t give off the same look as Fort Pulaski or Sumter.

Instead, it was one of many maroon communities in the United States –– an almost forgotten history of formerly enslaved people in the Lowcountry.

The “hidden fortress” will be investigated further in a discussion hosted by The Book Lady at The Learning Center with bestselling author George Dawes Green; award-winning historian of the African Diaspora, Sylviane Diouf; director of the Ossabaw Island Education Alliance, Paul M. Pressly; and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Southeast Region’s Regional Historic Preservation Officer/Regional Archaeologist, Richard Kanaski.

More on The Kingdoms of Savannah: George Dawes Green explores local hidden history in his latest novel, ‘Kingdoms of Savannah’

‘It won’t be the same city at all’: Titan of Savannah knowledge John Duncan leaves mammoth legacy

How do we honor its conflicted history?: State’s oldest plantation subsumed by industry

For many, this talk may be the first time hearing about maroon communities or the concept of marronage. Maroon communities were predominantly made up of escaped enslaved people who would marronage, or the act of extricating oneself from slavery, and live in an autonomous community.

The communities would be made up of a few houses and would be designed to allow the members to hide deep within the forests, bogs or swamps of the Lowcountry or Florida to make it difficult for others to find them.

While the act of marronage and these communities was well-documented in Latin America and the Caribbean, the ones in the United States have only started to become uncovered in recent decades. Most of that work comes from Dr. Sylvaine Diouf, starting with her book, “Slavery’s Exile: The Story of the American Maroons,” which was published in 2014.

Calhoun Square to lose its name?: What to know about latest plans to address controversy

“There was never a comprehensive study of maroons in the United States. I was actually not looking to write a book, I was looking to read books and studies about them, and I couldn’t find any. So I wrote one,” Diouf said. “I was really interested in finding who they were, what they ate, what kind of clothes (and) what kind of shelter (they had)? I mean, really, to go very deep into the people and their way of life, and also the different kinds of marronage that exists.”

For the Bear Creek community, Diouf said it’s especially unique for the amount of people that were thought to be there (possibly over 100), the amount of land they had and the fact that it was the only fortified maroon community in the United States.

“What was really specific concerning (Bear Creek) was that it had a real war camp. First of all, it was a large company…it was about 17 acres so they planted corn and other crops. They had several houses, a sentry, etc. So it was a fortified camp and it’s the only one I found in the U.S.”

The fortification, or better yet, the ability of knowing how to fortify the camp, came from the start of the community following the Revolutionary War when enslaved people fought for the British as part of the Siege of Savannah. Their incentive was freedom after fighting and while the British didn’t win the war, they declined the invitation to move to an English settlement and decided to stay near the city.

Local column: Savannah’s Black history is well-chronicled. Trolley tour operators must do better.

“There were a handful of them that started this. The first references (are) to 10 to 12 people plus women that founded this community. And that first community may have been on Abercorn Island, which is part of that Bear isle complex with Belleisle,” said Paul Pressly, who has been studying marronage explicitly in this region.

“They certainly did fight and one thing that needs to be emphasized is the fact that this is what’s not known, but recent research has shown that as many as 10% of the British troops were Africans and African-American. They provided that crucial difference in terms of manpower.”

George Dawes Green was turned onto the marronage of the Lowcountry by the late historian John Duncan, bringing it to the forefront of his latest novel, “The Kingdoms of Savannah.” For Green, there’s something impactful of reaching into these untold histories through the lens of a novelist.

“I’m looking at some questions of what it is that inspires us to find these communities; how the narratives that we hear about Savannah, how they really shaped the character of the city. This is a story that has never been told,” he said. “It’s been told in some history books, but it never reached the popular consciousness and it’s never reached our textbooks, and until now, I just think this is really an essential story to tell about Savannah’s history.”

More: Famed ‘Midnight’ Bird Girl photograph among Savannah items up for auction from Duncan collection

The event this week hopes to expand that — not only by creating a conversation around this history, but also pushing the narrative deeper to the popular consciousness. For Diouf, bringing these stories to the forefront are key in providing a richer, more varied account of American history.

“People know about the Underground Railroad, but the communities and individuals, and small groups, living in the swamps and forest, and living free as they wanted to — they define their own world, they define their own freedom and that part has been completely erased,” she said.

“In this country, the idea of freedom and autonomy, and self for Black people was not accepted, really. If you have Black resistance here (in the South), it’s really only runaways to the north (and they) were a small part of runaways in general. People from the Deep South; people from Georgia, South Carolina, etc. could never make enough. So this whole Underground Railroad thing, which is historical, it’s true. But it’s focusing on a very small part of the people who actually free themselves.

“Only the maroons were actually free. I mean, it was a very dangerous freedom. They were pursued by dogs and living among bears and whatnot; it wasn’t easy. But they were living in their own world.”

IF YOU GO

WHAT: Hidden Fortress: Fugitives, Marronage, And Black Resistance On The Savannah River

WHEN: Thursday at 7 p.m.

WHERE: The Learning Center, 3025 Bull St.

COST: $10-25

INFO: thebookladybookstore.com/events/2022/10/20/hidden-fortress-fugitives-marronage-and-black-resistance-on-the-savannah-river

Zach Dennis is the editor of the arts and culture section, and weekly Do Savannah alt-weekly publication at the Savannah Morning News. He can be reached at zdennis@savannahnow.com or 912-239-7706.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

In Kiel, attack on ‘critical race theory’ ignores bullying of Black student

Next Post

‘Black Adam’ producers say they made ‘a lot of edits’ to cut violence to obtain PG-13 rating

Next Post
‘Black Adam’ producers say they made ‘a lot of edits’ to cut violence to obtain PG-13 rating

‘Black Adam’ producers say they made ‘a lot of edits’ to cut violence to obtain PG-13 rating

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
5 most disappointing Steelers from 2022

5 most disappointing Steelers from 2022

January 21, 2023
24 Black History Facts You May Not Know

24 Black History Facts You May Not Know

January 25, 2021
Public Schools Are Struggling to Retain Black Teachers. These Ex-Teachers Explain Why – TIME

Public Schools Are Struggling to Retain Black Teachers. These Ex-Teachers Explain Why – TIME

January 5, 2022
Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

August 25, 2021
Black Bears sweep series from Tomahawks | Sports

Black Bears sweep series from Tomahawks | Sports

October 30, 2022
Battle Lines Drawn Over Florida’s Rejection of Black History Course

Battle Lines Drawn Over Florida’s Rejection of Black History Course

January 30, 2023
Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

January 30, 2023
Sports world reacts to first Black QB matchup in Super Bowl history between Patrick Mahomes, Jalen Hurts

Sports world reacts to first Black QB matchup in Super Bowl history between Patrick Mahomes, Jalen Hurts

January 30, 2023
Blacks still pay more than others for home ownership -MIT study

iONE Digital Announces Brand Repositioning for 2023

January 30, 2023
Spanish Black Olives Exports to the U.S. Continue to Fall

Spanish Black Olives Exports to the U.S. Continue to Fall

January 30, 2023

Recent News

How Restaurants Can Create Better Experiences

How Restaurants Can Create Better Experiences

January 30, 2023
The Point, Sept. 27, 2021: Why The Problem Of Heirs’ Property Caused Black Families To Lose 90% Of Their Land

The Point, Jan. 26, 2023: WUFT Special Report: Behind the bet: the rise of sports betting

January 26, 2023
Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

January 30, 2023
WARNER MUSIC GROUP RELEASES 2022 ANNUAL ESG REPORT

WARNER MUSIC GROUP RELEASES 2022 ANNUAL ESG REPORT

January 26, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

Battle Lines Drawn Over Florida’s Rejection of Black History Course

Battle Lines Drawn Over Florida’s Rejection of Black History Course

January 30, 2023
Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

Great Lives to Feature GPS Technology Pioneer Gladys West

January 30, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com