The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

New tour highlights American slavery

- By Ben Finley

On a recent afternoon, tour guide Justin Bates pointed to the spot where historic Jamestown’s legislatur­e first convened in July 1619. He then gestured toward another nearby spot where some of the first slaves in English North America arrived a few weeks later.

“Freedom over there,” Bates told visitors near the banks of Virginia’s sprawling James River. “Slavery over here.”

Jamestown has long been associated with the legend of Pocahontas and more recently as a place where a harsh winter turned some colonists into cannibals. But the historic site is now offering a regular tour that encourages visitors to consider the beginnings of American slavery.

The “First Africans” tour is the first of its kind at His- toric Jamestowne, a heritage site at the location of the 1607 James Fort. But it’s part of a much larger reckoning over slavery, an institutio­n that took root in England’s first permanent colony 12 years after its founding.

In January, President Donald Trump signed into a law the “400 Years of African-American History Commission Act.” It requires a commission to develop programs that acknowledg­e the Africans arrival in 1619 and slavery’s impact.

Meanwhile, Virginia has launched its 2019 Commemorat­ion, American Evolution. It recognizes the first English-style legislatur­e in North America in Jamestown and other historical milestones fromfour centuries ago, including the Africans’ arrival.

In 1619, the Africans came on two ships, the White Lion and the Trea- surer, that had recently raided what’s believed to have been a Spanish slave vessel in the Gulf of Mexico. Sailing into the Chesapeake Bay to what is now Hampton, Virginia, the ships traded more than 30 Africans for food and supplies.

English colonists took the Africans, who came fromwhat is nowAngola, to properties along the James River, including Jamestown.

A visitors’ center and monument are planned for the landing site in Hampton. Known then as “Point Comfort,” the area is now part of Fort Monroe, a former U. S. military base owned by the National Park Service.

“It’s a difficult story,” said Terry E. Brown, the first black superinten­dent of the Fort Monroe National Monument. “But I want the nation to understand this is an American story.”

Recognitio­n of the enslaved Africans’ arrival also provides a counternar­rative to the claims of white nationalis­ts that America’s roots are white.

“It was not a white society with people of color as interloper­s, playing bit parts,” said James Horn, president of the Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation, which oversees archaeolog­ical digs there.

One ongoing excavation focuses on an African woman who was taken to Jamestown in 1619. She had been given the name Angela, likely by the Spanish before her arrival, and lived in the house of Captain William Pierce, a wealthy merchant and planter.

The structure no longer exists. But archeologi­sts with the National Park Service and Jamestown Rediscover­y have uncovered its brick floor and located the kitchen area where Angela likely worked.

The “First Africans” tour includes the excavation site as well as a spot on the river where Angela likely first stepped off a boat into Jamestown.

“Think about what that must have felt like,” Bates recently told a group of visitors. “Scary,” a woman said. Kym Hall, the National Park Service’s superinten­dent of Colonial National Historical Park, which includes Jamestown, said tears have been shed at the excavation site. Some of those tears were her own.

“We hope to bring some empathy and connection and understand­ing about these stories of origin,” she said.

Some historians are wary of focusing too much on 1619. Davidson College professor Michael Guasco has written that the Africans’ arrival in Virginia was just a “blip on the radar screen” in the larger context of slavery.

More than 500,000 enslaved Africans had already crossed the Atlantic to other European colonies, including places that later became part of the United States.

Guasco warned that too narrow a focus on 1619 risks the implicatio­n that the Africans entered an establishe­d white society. Jamestown’s inhabitant­s were living “on death’s doorstep on the wisp of America.”

“Virginia was still Tsenacomma­cah, Europeans were the non-native spe- cies, and the English were the illegal aliens,” he wrote in September for Black Perspectiv­es, a blog for the African American Intellectu­al History Society.

Those working at Jamestown have sought to address such concerns, emphasizin­g its shared racial history.

Bates, the tour guide, charts the history of the European slave trade and the growth of American slavery. He also details the evolution of colonial laws, many passed in Jamestown, that created a racebased system of enslavemen­t.

Jill Williams, a black woman who recently visited the excavation site with her husband and son, said she was unaware of Angela’s story until she arrived in Jamestown.

“It’s nice to go somewhere and know there’s a story about your people. That doesn’t always happen,” said Williams, 52, of Hempstead, New York.

“It’s a tough history to grapple with,” she said of the Africans who arrived in 1619. “But they came here and survived. They took care of people. They raised people.”

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 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation archeologi­sts show artifacts and discuss what they know about one of the first enslaved Africans to live in English North America in Jamestown, Va. They’re at the excavation site of a house where an enslaved woman named Angela lived in the 1600s. A new tour at the site of the historic Jamestown colony encourages visitors to consider the beginnings of American slavery. It’s part of a broader national effort to reckon with slavery’s legacy.
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation archeologi­sts show artifacts and discuss what they know about one of the first enslaved Africans to live in English North America in Jamestown, Va. They’re at the excavation site of a house where an enslaved woman named Angela lived in the 1600s. A new tour at the site of the historic Jamestown colony encourages visitors to consider the beginnings of American slavery. It’s part of a broader national effort to reckon with slavery’s legacy.
 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, a Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation archeologi­st shows artifacts and discusses what they know about one of the first enslaved Africans to live in English North America in Jamestown, Va. A new tour at the site of the historic Jamestown colony encourages visitors to consider the beginnings of American slavery. It’s part of a broader national effort to reckon with slavery’s legacy.
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, a Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation archeologi­st shows artifacts and discusses what they know about one of the first enslaved Africans to live in English North America in Jamestown, Va. A new tour at the site of the historic Jamestown colony encourages visitors to consider the beginnings of American slavery. It’s part of a broader national effort to reckon with slavery’s legacy.

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