
Rewind: Seneca Village and New York's Forgotten Black Communities
Jun 19, 2020
In this insightful discussion, historian and tour guide Kamau Ware, founder of the Black Gotham Experience, teams up with Tia Powell Harris, former director of the Weeksville Heritage Center. They explore the rich but often forgotten history of Black communities in New York City, from the origins of Seneca Village to the bustling streets of Little Africa. Topics include the political power gained through property ownership, the devastating displacement for Central Park, and the vital preservation efforts for these historic sites that shape today's cultural landscape.
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Seneca Village's Political Power And Erasure
- Seneca Village was a 19th-century African-American land-owning community that offered property-based voting rights and social institutions.
- The city used eminent domain to erase it in the 1850s to build Central Park, obliterating thirty years of community life.
African Burial Ground's Revelatory Find
- The 1991 discovery at 290 Broadway revealed an African burial ground with hundreds of remains and ritual artifacts.
- The site reframed New York's early Black presence and became the African Burial Ground National Monument.
Origins In The Land Of The Blacks
- Kamau Ware recounts the 'Land of the Blacks' origins where early freed Africans obtained plots in New Amsterdam.
- He links those original landowners to building the early city infrastructure and forming a sustained community up Broadway.
