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UID:Indybay-18645745
SEQUENCE:18713233
CREATED:20100426T203400Z
DESCRIPTION:\nFilm evenings begin with optional potluck refreshments and social hour at 
  6:30 pm,\nfollowed by the film at  7:30 pm, followed by a discussion after 
 the film.\n\nTraces of the Trade:\nA Story from the Deep North\n\nBy 
 Katrina  Browne\n\nPresented by Holly Fulton\n– appearing in person\nand 
 facilitating discussions\n\nFirst-time filmmaker Katrina Browne makes a 
 troubling discovery — her New England ancestors (the DeWolf family) were 
 the largest slave-trading family in U.S. history! Given the myth that the 
 South is solely responsible for slavery, this film about a Northern slaving 
 family will come as a shock. The film follows Browne and nine fellow family 
 members on a remarkable journey which brings them face-to-face with the 
 history and legacy of New England’s hidden enterprise. Browne and her 
 nine fellow descendants set off to retrace the Triangle Trade:  from their 
 old hometown in Rhode Island to slave forts in Ghana to sugar plantation 
 ruins in Cuba.  Step by step, they uncover the vast extent of Northern 
 complicity in slavery while also stumbling through the minefield of 
 contemporary race relations.  In this bicentennial year of the U.S. 
 abolition of the slave trade, this film offers powerful new perspectives on 
 the black/white divide.\n\nThe DeWolf family name is revered in the 
 family’s hometown of Bristol, Rhode Island.  The family has a prominent 
 place in history, with a lineage of professors, philanthropists, 
 legislators, Episcopal priests and bishops.  Slave trade was hinted at in 
 the family annals, brushed off as poor relations in the family.\n\nFrom 
 1769 to 1820, DeWolf fathers, sons, and grandsons trafficked in human 
 beings.  They sailed their ships from Bristol, Rhode Island, to West Africa 
 with rum to trade for African men, women, and children.  Captives were 
 taken to plantations that the DeWolfs owned in Cuba or were sold at auction 
 in such ports as Havana and Charleston.  Sugar and molasses were then 
 brought from Cuba to the family-owned rum distilleries in Bristol.  Over 
 the generations, the family transported more than ten thousand enslaved 
 Africans across the Middle Passage. They amassed an enormous fortune.  By 
 the end of his life, James DeWolf had been a U.S. Senator and was 
 reportedly the second richest man in the United States.\n\nThe enslavement 
 of Africans was business for more than just the DeWolf family.  It was a 
 cornerstone of Northern commercial life.  The Triangle Trade drove the 
 economy of many port cities (Rhode Island had the largest share in the 
 trade of any state), and slavery itself existed in the North for over 200 
 years.  Northern textile mills used slave-picked cotton from the South to 
 fuel the Industrial Revolution, while banks and insurance companies played 
 a key role throughout the period.  While the DeWolfs were one of only a few 
 “slaving” dynasties, the network of commercial activities that they 
 were tied to involved an enormous portion of the Northern population.  Many 
 citizens, for example, would buy shares in slave ships in order to make a 
 profit.\n\nWheelchair accessible around the corner at  411  28th  
 Street\n\n$5 donations are accepted\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/04/26/18645745.php
SUMMARY:Traces of the Trade
LOCATION:Humanist Hall\n390  27th  Street\nmidtown Oakland, between Telegraph and 
 Broadway\nhttp://www.HumanistHall.org 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/04/26/18645745.php
DTSTART:20100429T023000Z
DTEND:20100429T043000Z
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