Exploring the Underground Railroad in the West

Exploring the Underground Railroad in the West

The National Park Service (NPS) National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Program and the NPS Pacific West Cultural Resources Program are joining the Organization of American Historians (OAH) to host a public forum on July 28 at 6:30-7:30 p.m. PT to explore current scholarship surrounding the history of the Underground Railroad in California, Oregon and Washington.

Many celebrate the history of the West as one filled with innovation and personal freedoms. However, not all people experienced the West in the same way. Even though California entered the United States as a free state, the government allowed some forms of slavery, limiting African Americans' personal freedoms. Scholars today are examining freedom seekers' individual courage and the actions they took to secure their full freedom. It is critical to illuminate these stories of resistance as communities continue to struggle for freedom, justice, and equity.

The public forum will allow NPS and OAH to share preliminary outcomes from a scholar’s roundtable and provide an opportunity to discuss ongoing academic work around the history of slavery and freedom seeking in the West. Through the public forum, NPS and OAH hope to identify future partners and stakeholder groups interested in documenting, preserving, and sharing this history.

The public forum will be broadcast via a YouTube livestream. After a brief discussion from the panel, NPS will take questions from the virtual audience to present to the scholars.

The panel includes expert scholars whose work addresses the history of race, slavery, freedom seeking and migration in the West. They include:

  • Albert Broussard, Professor at Texas A&M, will chair the panel. A trailblazer in researching and writing Black history, he has authored Black San Francisco: The Struggle for Racial Equality in the West, American History: The Early Years to 1877 with Donald A. Ritchie, and African American Odyssey: The Stewarts, 1853-1963, among other works. His recent research includes considerations of African American civil rights dialogues in Hawai’i.  
  • Katrina Jagodinsky, Associate Professor of History and Graduate Chair at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, is a legal historian who examines marginalized peoples’ engagement with 19th-century legal regimes and competing jurisdictions through the West.
  • Andrés Reséndez, Professor in the Social Science Department at UC Davis, specializes in early European exploration and colonization of the Americas, the U.S-Mexico border region, and the early history of the Pacific. 
  • Stacey Smith, History Professor at Oregon State University, focuses on the history of the North American West, with a particular emphasis on race relations, labor, and politics during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras. 
  • Kevin A. Waite, Assistant Professor in Modern American History at Durham University in the UK, is a political historian of the 19th-century United States with a focus on slavery, imperialism, and the American West. 

Original source can be found here.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

More News