When:
Monday, Feb 12, 2024 6:00p -
7:30p

Where:
Online event
Surrounding areas
Boston, MA 02110

EventScheduled OfflineEventAttendanceMode

Admission:
$5

Hosted by:
news Historic New England

Categories:
History, Social Good, Virtual

Event website:
https://www.historicnewengland.org/

In 1743, six women, Yallah, Morandah, Mowoorie, Simboh, Burrah, and Yearie were among the human cargo disembarked from the slave ship Jolly Bachelor in Newport, R.I. These and other Africans labored on many farms throughout New England and New York, including Historic New England’s Watson and Casey Farms. As slavery ended, their status remained ambiguous and largely unfree.


Join Historic New England, artist Jean-Marc Superville Sovak and public historian Peter Fay, to hear the untold stories behind Jean-Marc's poignant sculpture Six of the First, which stands as a monument to the six women. Sovak and Fay will follow the lives of the enslaved in New England and New York as they emerged from slavery to build a free community still imperiled by indentured servitude, disenfranchisement, and the poorhouse.


Tickets $5. Historic New England Members are free

Advance tickets required.

Please call 617-994-6678 for more information.

The link for the webinar will be included in the order confirmation for this program.

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02/12/2024 18:00:00 02/12/2024 19:30:00 America/New_York Six of the First, but Far From the Last: <p>In 1743, six women, <strong>Yallah, Morandah, Mowoorie, Simboh, Burrah, and Yearie</strong> were among the human cargo disembarked from the slave ship <em>Jolly Bachelor</em> in Newport, R.I. Th... Online, Boston, MA 02110 false MM/DD/YYYY

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