Gallery Slavery in the President's Neighborhood: Primary Resource Gallery
While there are few written accounts of the enslaved and free African Americans who built, lived, and worked at the...
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While there are few written accounts of the enslaved and free African Americans who built, lived, and worked at the...
In the late eighteenth century, the original thirteen colonies dissolved and formed the United States. In 1787, delegates to the Constitutional...
As we consider life in the President’s Neighborhood, the unusual story of the Wormley Hotel and its Black founder, Ja...
On July 4, 1831, President James Monroe died after months of illness. Many Americans mourned the loss of the last “Founding Father” pres...
From 1818 to 1831, Tench Ringgold served as U.S. Marshal for the District of Columbia. His home (today known as the...
In 1818, John Gadsby was assessed and taxed for owning thirty-six enslaved individuals in Baltimore—including two young women named “Maria” and “K...
Speaking before the United States House of Representatives in 1825, congressman James K. Polk described American slavery as “a matter which re...
Women are often overlooked in history for their role in the institution of slavery. First Lady Julia Dent Grant, wife...
Uncovering the lives of enslaved people poses many challenges. Because enslaved people were denied the right of literacy, as a...
Andrew Johnson’s close association with Abraham Lincoln, as both his vice president and his successor, often disguises Johnson’s own...
Considered the last “Founding Father” president, James Monroe was born in 1758 into an affluent, slave owning family in Westmoreland County, Virg...
Nancy Syphax was a member of a prominent Washington, D.C. family that was considered to be among the “Black El...