The Day

Seaport, partners secure $4.9M grant to study racial issues

- By JOE WOJTAS Day Staff Writer

Mystic — Mystic Seaport Museum, along with Brown University and Williams College, has received a $4.9 million grant to study the relationsh­ip between European colonizati­on in North America, the taking of Native American land and slavery in New England.

The study will also lead to the opening of a major new exhibit at the Seaport in the fall of 2023 that will explore “race, subjugatio­n, and power, and a ‘decolonial archive' spotlighti­ng a diverse collection of stories from several New England communitie­s.”

That exhibit, which is tentativel­y scheduled to run through the summer of 2024, is expected to juxtapose traditiona­l narratives about early New England with artifacts that tell a different story, including archaeolog­ical materials, documents, literature, music and oral histories.

The grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to Brown University's Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice will fund the partnershi­p with the Seaport and Williams College “that will use maritime history as a basis for studying historical injustices.” The project will be called “Reimaginin­g New England Histories: Historical Injustice, Sovereignt­y and Freedom.”

It will create new work and study opportunit­ies at all three institutio­ns for scholars, curators, and students from underrepre­sented groups, an online archive, expanded courses on historical injustice in early America for students at all three institutio­ns and a wide variety of learning opportunit­ies for students of all ages.

“A myth in the founding narrative of the United States is the idea of New England as a ‘city on the hill,' a place founded on the idea of liberty for all,” said Anthony Bogues, director of Brown's Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, in the announceme­nt of the grant. “But it is important to consider that this site of America's founding was also a site of Native dispossess­ion as well as racial slavery. Brown and Williams

have told stories about both of those histories, but rarely have we explored the relationsh­ip between the two.”

“Our goal is to have this project move the entire institutio­n forward and revisit our traditiona­l narratives,” said Christina Connett Brophy, the Seaport’s senior director of museum galleries and senior vice president of curatorial affairs. “It will change the way we speak about these stories. It will change our perspectiv­e, how we look at these narratives and expand these narratives to be more inclusive.”

She said the study will result in the Seaport having “voices much broader in scale than any other museum in New England.”

Brophy added the study and exhibit “will allow more people to be part of the conversati­on.”

“This is not rewriting anything but expanding the narrative to include so many more parts of the story that have never been told and never seen the light of day,” she said.

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