Posted on 09/08/2019 3:22:20 PM PDT by Drew68
CHARLOTTESVILLE A Monticello tour guide was explaining earlier this summer how enslaved people built, planted and tended a terrace of vegetables at Thomas Jeffersons estate when a woman interrupted to share her annoyance.
Why are you talking about that? she demanded, according to Gary Sandling, vice president of Monticellos visitor programs and services. You should be talking about the plants."
At Monticello, George Washingtons Mount Vernon and other plantations across the South, an effort is underway to deal more honestly with the brutal institution that the Founding Fathers relied on to build their homes and their wealth: slavery.
Four hundred years after the first enslaved Africans arrived in the English colony of Virginia, some sites are also connecting that ugly past to modern-day racism and inequality.
The changes have begun to draw people long alienated by the sites whitewashing of the past and to satisfy what staff call a hunger for real history, as plantations add slavery-focused tours, rebuild cabins and reconstruct the lives of the enslaved with help from their descendants. But some visitors, who remain overwhelmingly white, are pushing back, and the very mention of slavery and its impacts on the United States can bring accusations of playing politics.
Were at a very polarized, partisan political moment in our country, and not surprisingly, when we are in those moments, history becomes equally polarized, Sandling said.
The backlash is reflected in some online reviews of plantations, including McLeod in Charleston, S.C., where one visitor complained earlier this summer that she didnt come to hear a lecture on how the white people treated slaves.
The review sparked shock as it made rounds on the Internet. But stories of guests discomfort are familiar to many on the front lines at historical sites steeped in slavery...
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
LOL!
This tired old trope.
The jackass racist dude that bleats on about how he is delivering “difficult truths”.
“virtue signal”
And by all means tell me what virtue am I signalling.
That is the world view that was promoted by our former president and his handlers, not for the purpose of increasing understanding and uplifting people, but for keeping both groups down so they would not notice the elites' hands on their wallets.
The white indentured from Ireland had a terrible time, and the women in particular. But the most egregious abuse of enslaved Irish people, aside from Australian penal colonies, was the sugar slaves of the West Indes, who dropped dead like flies from the climate and sunstroke Ireland being farther north than much of Canada in terms of sun exposurebut not before being interbred with African slaves to make "a better class of slaves."
Irish Sugar Slaves of Barbados
Shamrock & Sugar The History of the Irish and the African in Caribbean
Cutting and shipping blocks of ice south to store for the summer was a big business before refrigeration. An ice house was a valuable building and Monroe’s plantation would have had a large one. Maybe more than one.
“Better known as buying, selling or trading of humans without their consent.”
Always a good idea to generate contempt for the politically incorrect Founding generation.
George Washington was perhaps the largest slave holder of his day. It’s time to quit celebrating his memory, get rid of his statues, rename the cities and State that have his name.
Yeah, because no paragraphs!
‘George Washington was perhaps the largest slave holder of his day. Its time to quit celebrating his memory, get rid of his statues, rename the cities and State that have his name.’
Why would anyone advocate doing those things?
Then they should definitely avoid Yad Vashem.
Huh. Sounds like youre a snowflake yourself.
The slaves brought to North America were already enslaved when they were in Africa. They were lucky to escape from Africa, where slave life was far more brutal. In America, many of them lived as well as the whites. Free, comfortable housing. Free food. Guaranteed work. Still, slavery is an evil institution, and we are still paying the price.
One reason that I have little tolerance for the recently increasing socialist feminazi revisionism and hatred against white men, is that I have swung pickaxes and lifted steel with Jamaicans, Hondurans and many others from third world holes along with enduring the hatred that is common in offices and academia. One thing that those men from horrid countries taught, was that people of any color can be tyrants. They also realized that the men who built the United States were, on average, not as likely to be tyrants.
People of every nation are descended from slaves who were treated brutally. It’s time to shed vanities, move on and to stop trying to ruin it. There won’t be any successful and enduring takeover of the United States by foreign entities. George Washington gave the people of the United States and many other nations a chance to live better than the people before him lived. As for black historical figures, it may be healthier to pay more attention to the words of men like Frederick Douglass than those of Susan B. Anthony.
Garbage Hussein Obama seeded the National Park Service with those types.
George Washington endorsed the Fairfax Resolves against slavery. Read about that, and read the letter from George Washington to John F. Mercer.
https://www.gilderlehrman.org/sites/default/files/inline-pdfs/t-03705.pdf
I will shut up now, you have an answer for everything. You know you are right and that is all that matters.
Are we to equate Monticello and Mount Vernon with Auschwitz? If so, we should tear them down now.
LOL!
Van De Cuck
Sorry that I wasn’t more tactful.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.