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FYI

At the last What's Happening in Black British History *Hannah-Rose Murray* who
created www.frederickdouglassinbritain.com a map Douglass's  travels in the
UK delivered a paper on here work:

*Mapping Black Abolitionists in Britain*

African American abolitionists made an indelible mark on nineteenth century
Britain. Their lectures were held in famous meeting

halls, taverns, the houses of wealthy patrons, theatres, and churches
across the country. I have mapped Black abolitionist

journeys in Britain and Ireland from the 1830s to the 1890s, and such
visualizations reveal that Britons inevitably and unknowably

walk past sites with a rich history of Black activism every day.

In this talk I will outline some of the key figures associated with this
mapping project including Frederick Douglass, Moses Roper

and Ida B. Wells, and illustrate how this project has brought new research
into light. For example, recording and visualizing

Frederick Douglass’ journey around Britain not only highlights his
exhausting lecturing schedule, but also the extensive

abolitionist network he helped to forge.

He travelled to Britain at a time of great industrial change and thus he
was able to tap into new transport links slowly emerging

in Britain. He wrote on his return to America he had “made use of all the
various means of conveyance, by land and sea, from

town to town, and city to city” and travelled the length and breadth of the
country. He had “journeyed upon highways, byways,

railways, and steamboats” and stated, “I have myself gone, I might say,
with almost electric speed.” The rapidity of the railway

boom was unprecedented and transformed British society: journeys were
faster, time was standardized, ship-building increased,

trade was made easier and quicker between towns and the countryside.
Recognizing this, Douglass argued in Leeds in 1846, that

“what is uttered this day in the Music Hall of Leeds, will, within fourteen
days resound in Massachusetts.”

I will also outline the website she has created and two maps highlighting
abolitionist speaking locations, the main focus of which

was to make black American contributions to British society more visible.
The website can be viewed here at

www.frederickdouglassinbritain.com


*Michael I. Ohajuru*
Senior Fellow Inst of Commonwealth Studies
about.me/michaelohajuru
mi
[log in to unmask]
079 40 50 79 00

*The John Blanke Project*

To see how far the John Blanke Project’s come and where it’s going check
out :
JohnBlanke.com <http://johnblanke.com/>
T
witter.com/WhoIsJohnBlanke <http://twitter.com/WhoIsJohnBlanke>
F
acebook.com/WhoIsJohnBlanke/ <http://facebook.com/WhoIsJohnBlanke/>

*Image of the Black in London Galleries*
Here's where
and when
you can see and hear my
 Image of the Black in London Galleries <http://bit.ly/The_IBLG>
  <http://bit.ly/The_IBLG>tours




On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 at 12:08, MSherwood <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> To follow my previous email and the responses from some of you, please see
> below …  A colleague in Edinburgh believes that the exhibition she mentions
> is will focus on where, to whom and on what Douglass (and perhaps others)
> addressed assemblies and meetings
>
>
>
> Were there parish registers in Scotland? They are certainly one way of
> uncovering the Black presence. As are all those paintings with Black
> servants in the background…
>
>
>
> *From:* BERNIER Celeste-Marie [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> *Sent:* 10 September 2018 04:02
> *To:* [log in to unmask]
> *Subject:* Re: | The University of Edinburgh
>
>
>
> Dear Marika Sherwood,
>
>
>
> Thank you so much for your kind email and I hope all's really wonderful
> with you. For your kind information I work across the history,
> politics, literature, visual cultures, philosophy and intellectual history
> as well as material cultures of African diasporic peoples, enslaved and
> free, from the 17th centuries until now.
>
>
>
> In terms of research that includes information related to Scotland, I'm
> curating an exhibition Strike for Freedom which opens at the National
> Library of Scotland in October. We've also been working on and we're about
> to go live on the first map of African American activism in the city (both
> print and digital publications). Every day I am grateful to the brilliant
> wonderful researchers who are undertaking trailblazing work in the areas of
> Scotland and Africa that inspire me on with everything they do.
>
>
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> Celeste-Marie Bernier
>
>
>
> Celeste-Marie Bernier
>
> Professor of Black Studies and Personal Chair in English Literature
>
> Co-Editor-in-Chief, Journal of American Studies, Cambridge University Press
>
> School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures
>
> University of Edinburgh
>
> George Square
>
> Edinburgh
>
> EH8 9LH
>
> Scotland
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> *From:* MSherwood <[log in to unmask]>
> *Sent:* 09 September 2018 15:59
> *To:* BERNIER Celeste-Marie
> *Subject:* | The University of Edinburgh
>
>
>
> Dear Professor Barnier,
>
>
>
> I am writing to congratulate you and with apologies, ask a question.
>
>
>
> I am delighted that the University has created a professorship of Black
> Studies. However, on reading about you on the web, your interest seems to
> be mainly on literature and arts. And on Frederick Douglass.  So will you
> these be the foci of ‘Black Studies’?
>
>
>
> What I would like is a massive amount of research on the relationship
> between Scotland and Africa, and on the presence/reception/experience of
> peoples of African origins/descent in Scotland! Should I be hopeful?
>
>
>
> Yours sincerely,
>
> Marika Sherwood
>
> Sr Research Fellow
>
> ICwS
>
> University of London
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
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