EWH Tea Talk: Sites of Memory: Reconstructing the Past

Sankofa Trolley Tours

Christ Episcopal Church 1035 Lafayette Rd., Portsmouth, NH

This informative overview of the Portsmouth Black Heritage Trail is just right for a first visit to the city or for those who prefer an alternative to a walking tour. Our well-trained and experienced Sankofa Scholars narrate an hour and a half tour of sites that tell the stories of Black people from the time they arrived on the colonial-era wharves lining the waterfront, to laboring in the local maritime-related industries, until New Hampshire joined the Union by adopting the…

$25

Sankofa Walking Tour: Backyards and Cellar Holes: Who Lived at the MacPhaedris-Warner House?

Warner House 150 Daniel St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Valerie Cunningham & Kevin Wade Mitchell As focus shifts from the front of the house to the backyards and cellar holes of New Hampshire’s historic house museums, we consider some of the material culture experienced by household servants, including those whose black bodies had helped create their white family’s wealth. NOTE: This tour meets at the Warner House, 150 Daniel St. at 2 pm Register Online

$20

Reading Frederick Douglass

Strawbery Banke Museum 14 Hancock Street, Portsmouth, NH, United States

A public reading of one of the 19th century’s most famous speeches will take place at noon on July 3rd, 2018, at the Strawbery Banke Museum Visitor’s Center in Portsmouth. “What to the Slaves is the Fourth of July?” asked Frederick Douglass in 1852. Douglass, one of our nation’s greatest orators and abolitionists, was asked to speak at an event commemorating the signing of the Declaration of Independence. People of all ages and different walks of life are asked to…

Free

Sankofa Walking Tour: A Quest to Thrive: Economics of Slavery & Portsmouth’s Early Black Community

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Angela Matthews Institutionalized slavery in Colonial America provided immense wealth and material culture to many European immigrants and their descendants in the Americas, as Portsmouth’s house museums bear witness. This tour brings into focus an economic system dependent upon the international slave trade with its constant supply of kidnapped unpaid African workers and their descendants, who, against the odds, created one of this country’s oldest Black communities. Register Online

$20

Sankofa Walking Tour: Thirst for Freedom: From NH’s Slave Trade to its Civil Rights Movement

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Nur Shoop Colonial Portsmouth newspapers testify to the local slave trade, runaways, abolitionists and anti-abolitionist activities, followed by conflicting opinions of the Civil War. In the 20th century, the legacy of that early history was reflected in news about de facto segregation in housing and public places. This tour includes many of those historic landmarks from the early nineteenth through the twentieth centuries. Register Online

$20

Sankofa Walking Tour: Ain’t She A Woman: Let me tell you her story

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Valerie Fagin Can you imagine the hustle and bustle of a prosperous Colonial seaport town? This tour invites you to discover the world of early Portsmouth’s from the perspective of African American women. In spite of enslavement and hardship, these women fought for freedom, defied a president, and educated generations of children to follow. Hear their stories about love and faith and struggle, as you walk past the homes of the families who enslaved them.…

$20

Sankofa Trolley Tours: Special Greenland Tour: Ona Marie Judge Staines

Christ Episcopal Church 1035 Lafayette Rd., Portsmouth, NH

Ona Marie Judge Staines, Neither Bond nor Free Sankofa Tour Guide: Tammi Truax Hear the compelling true story of Ona Marie Judge, the woman who successfully evaded the President and Martha Washington to live as a free woman. Visit the historical sites where her courageous story unfolds. On this tour you will learn how Ona was able to elude the Washingtons’ efforts to recapture her and meet some of Portsmouth’s most famous families, the Langdons and the Whipples, who would…

$25

Sankofa Walking Tour: Meet Jack Stains, a “Black Jack” in Historic Old Portsmouth: A Living History Tour

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Kevin Wade Mitchel as Jack Staines Seafaring was one of the most significant occupations among both enslaved and free Black men between 1740 and 1865. Black seamen sailed on whalers, warships, and privateers. Some were enslaved and forced to work at sea, but by 1800 most seamen were free to seek adventure and economic opportunity aboard ship. On this tour you will meet Jack Staines, husband to Ona Judge Staines, the President and Martha Washington’s…

$20

Sankofa Walking Tour: Thirst for Freedom: From NH’s Slave Trade to its Civil Rights Movement

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Nur Shoop Colonial Portsmouth newspapers testify to the local slave trade, runaways, abolitionists and anti-abolitionist activities, followed by conflicting opinions of the Civil War. In the 20th century, the legacy of that early history was reflected in news about de facto segregation in housing and public places. This tour includes many of those historic landmarks from the early nineteenth through the twentieth centuries. Register Online

$20

Sankofa Walking Tour: A Quest to Thrive: Economics of Slavery & Portsmouth’s Early Black Community

The Old Meetinghouse 280 Marcy St., Portsmouth, NH

Tour Guide & Sankofa Scholar: Angela Matthews Institutionalized slavery in Colonial America provided immense wealth and material culture to many European immigrants and their descendants in the Americas, as Portsmouth’s house museums bear witness. This tour brings into focus an economic system dependent upon the international slave trade with its constant supply of kidnapped unpaid African workers and their descendants, who, against the odds, created one of this country’s oldest Black communities. Register Online

$20
Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire

The Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire promotes awareness and appreciation of African American history and life in order to build more inclusive communities today.

Contact Info

Mail: 222 Court Street, Portsmouth NH 03801
Phone: 603-570-8469
Email: info@blackheritagetrailnh.org
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Office Hours:
M - F 10 - 4 pm

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