Skip to content
Atlantic Black Box

Atlantic Black Box

  • Home
  • about us
    • What’s The Black Box?
    • The Crew
    • Press for Atlantic Black Box
    • contact us
  • The Logbooks
    • The Logbooks
    • Logbook Authors
  • Resources
    • online resources
    • resources for educators
    • books
    • videos
    • image gallery
  • Events
    • ABB Events
    • Events Around the Region
  • The Ship News
  • Become a Member!
  • Member Log-in

Tag: diseased ship

November 17, 2020November 17, 2020 Meadow Dibble Events, Maine, Massachusetts

Event: “The Diseased Ship: New England Sea Captains and the Slave Trade” Thursday 11/19

A free virtual talk by Meadow Dibble Hosted by Thompson Free Library, with support from the Maine Humanities Council November 19, 2020 at 6:00 pm Click here for Zoom link or email meadow_dibble@brown.edu Click here for Zoom link or email meadow_dibble@brown.edu #diseasedship #atlanticblackbox #slavetrade

October 26, 2020 Meadow Dibble Events, Maine, Massachusetts

Event: The Diseased Ship, New England Sea Captains and the Slave Trade –> tomorrow

A talk by Meadow Dibble Hosted by Liberty Library, with support from the Maine Humanities Council October 27, 2020 at 7:00 pm Register here This program made possible by the Maine Humanities Council World in Your Library in partnership with the Margaret Chase Smith Foundation. Register here

Support Atlantic Black Box Today!

Who we are

Atlantic Black Box is a 501c3 nonprofit that empowers communities throughout the Northeast to take up the critical work of researching and reckoning with our region’s complicity in the slave trade and extensive involvement in the global economy of enslavement. This grassroots historical recovery movement is powered by community historians and guided by a broad coalition of scholars, community leaders, educators, archivists, museum professionals, antiracism activists, and artists.

Why history?

We believe in building community better through enlightened conversation. Our mission is to initiate and sustain open, engaging, and inclusive dialog at the local and regional level about who we were, who we are, and who we hope to be going forward, informed by an evidence-based approach to understanding our history and the many ways in which it connects to our present.

 

Loading Comments...