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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240611
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250101
DTSTAMP:20260403T160543
CREATED:20240611T133053Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240611T133111Z
UID:10850-1718064000-1735689599@dyckmanfarmhouse.org
SUMMARY:I Was Here AR Neighborhood Tour
DESCRIPTION:The I Was here AR application uses Augmented reality to highlight the untold stories of enslaved Africans in Inwood\, who later forged an African American identity and shaped American history. \nI Was Here is a blend of technology and the arts that explores the history of America through the lens of the African diaspora\, from enslavement to the forging of an African American identity. In collaboration with the Dyckman Farmhouse Museum\, this app allows the user to visit significant historical site in Inwood\, and learn about the history of enslavement in Upper Manhattan. \nThe project exposes the significance of memory\, history\, and ancestry through public art and public history installations that serve as a mindful\, reverent\, and powerful acknowledgment of American history. \nDownload the application for iphone or android.
URL:https://dyckmanfarmhouse.org/event/i-was-here-ar-application-tour/
LOCATION:Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://dyckmanfarmhouse.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/HOME-SICK-3.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240620T190000
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UID:10836-1718910000-1718915400@dyckmanfarmhouse.org
SUMMARY:After Emancipation: Finding Black New Yorkers after 1827
DESCRIPTION:After Emancipation: Finding Black New Yorkers after 1827 \nBy Dr. Adam Arenson \nJune 20th at 7PM \nFREE on the Back Porch at the Dyckman Farmhouse \nThe enslavement of African and Native Americans ended less than two hundred years ago\, in 1827. And the 1850 census was the first to list every member of a household individually. Since these dates are relatively close together\, they help us see the patterns of Black settlement\, Black migration\, and Black resistance to the racism of U.S. history before\, during\, and after the Civil War. This presentation will discuss the ongoing research of Dr. Arenson\, which has included students as well as descendants of those enslaved in New York\, and sites from Seneca Village in Central Park to communities up the Hudson River and into Canada. \nDr. Adam Arenson has taught U.S. History\, including the history of slavery in New York\, at Manhattan College since 2014. He has earned history degrees from Harvard and Yale\, and has published two books and two edited volumes\, along with scholarly articles and history for the wider public in the New York Times and other publications. He is completing a book\, After the Underground Railroad\, with African Canadian public historian Irene Moore Davis. \n  \nDespués de la emancipación: encontrando neoyorquinos negros después de 1827 \nPor el Dr. Adam Arenson \n20 de junio a las 7 pm \nGratis en la terraza trasera del Museo Dyckman Farmhouse \nLa esclavitud de los africanos y los nativos americanos terminó hace menos de doscientos años\, en 1827. Y el censo de 1850 fue el primero en enumerar a cada miembro de un hogar individualmente. Dado que estas fechas están relativamente cercanas\, nos ayudan a ver los patrones de asentamiento negro\, migración negra y resistencia negra al racismo en la historia de Estados Unidos antes\, durante y después de la Guerra Civil. Esta presentación discutirá la investigación en curso del Dr. Arenson\, que ha incluido estudiantes y descendientes de aquellos esclavizados en Nueva York\, y sitios desde Seneca Village en Central Park hasta comunidades a lo largo del río Hudson y Canadá. \nEl Dr. Adam Arenson ha enseñado Historia de Estados Unidos\, incluida la historia de la esclavitud en Nueva York\, en el Manhattan College desde 2014. Obtuvo títulos en Historia de Harvard y Yale\, y ha publicado dos libros y dos volúmenes editados\, junto con artículos académicos e historia para el público en general en el New York Times y otras publicaciones. Está terminando un libro\, El ferrocarril subterráneo\, con la historiadora pública afrocanadiense Irene Moore Davis.
URL:https://dyckmanfarmhouse.org/event/after-emancipation-finding-black-new-yorkers-after-1827/
LOCATION:Dyckman Farmhouse Museum\, 4881 Broadway\, New York\, NY\, 10034-3101\, United States
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