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Racism

Maryland
The Lynching of George Armwood

The Lynching of George Armwood

03/01/2022 in Maryland by Henry Kokkeler

George Armwood was the last recorded lynching in the state of Maryland. The story of his murder and its shocking aftermath exposed the depth and sinister workings of white supremacy in one of the darkest chapters of American history.

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DC
The Battle for Bryant Street: How A Black D.C. Family Helped Overturn Racial Covenants Nationwide

The Battle for Bryant Street: How A Black D.C. Family Helped Overturn Racial Covenants Nationwide

08/24/2021 in DC by Ben Miller

Racial covenants made much of Bloomingdale off-limits to Black buyers. A welder, a polyglot immigrant, and a Civil Rights icon rallied to change that.

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DC
Jefferson's Missing Daughter

Jefferson's Missing Daughter

04/02/2021 in DC by William Choi

Harriet Hemings was the daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings. After twenty years of living as as her father's slave, she moved to Washington to begin her life anew... and promptly disappeared from the historical narrative.

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DC
The 1868 Mayoral Election, African-American Vote, and Riots That Followed

The 1868 Mayoral Election, African-American Vote, and Riots That Followed

03/12/2020 in DC by Karis Lee

On January 8, 1867, Congress passed the District of Columbia Suffrage Bill, granting African-American men the right to vote for the first time in U.S. history. D.C.’s black community was ecstatic. But though this was certainly an exciting start, the stakes surrounding the black vote escalated in June 1868, when the two candidates for Washington’s new mayor promised vastly different futures for the city.

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DC
When the Klan Descended on Washington

When the Klan Descended on Washington

12/11/2019 in DC by Gonzalo Pacanins

“Phantom-like hosts of the Ku Klux Klan spread their white robe over the most historic thoroughfare yesterday in one of the greatest demonstrations the city has ever seen.” So read The Washington Post on the morning of August 9th , 1925. On the previous afternoon, the nation’s capital bore witness to the largest Klan march in the city’s history as tens of thousands of robed Klansmen marched down Pennsylvania Avenue towards the Washington monument, most of them feeling no need to wear a mask.

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Maryland
How a Maryland Crime Shaped a Presidential Election

How a Maryland Crime Shaped a Presidential Election

05/01/2019 in Maryland by Blake Wilson

In 1987, a convicted murderer from Massachusetts was apprehended in Prince George's County after a short police chase.  His arrest would set off a chain of events that would become the hot button issue of the 1988 presidential campaign.

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  • DC (566)
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Latest Posts

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Boundary Stones explores local history in Washington, D.C., suburban Maryland and northern Virginia. This project is a service of WETA and is supported by contributions from readers like you.

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