21,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Erscheint vorauss. 10. Juni 2024
payback
11 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Martha's Vineyard has always been a unique island and vacation destination, made even more diverse with the arrival of Black homeowners in the 19 th century. Early landowners included the formerly enslaved Charles Shearer, who along with his wife Henrietta, founded Shearer Cottage. However, the fall of the first Black community on the island came in the 1890s when forty Black and Indigenous people were required to remove their cottages from the Martha's Vineyard Camp Meeting Association. Despite this painful blow, other families, including the Wests, Jones and Huberts bought island homes,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Martha's Vineyard has always been a unique island and vacation destination, made even more diverse with the arrival of Black homeowners in the 19 th century. Early landowners included the formerly enslaved Charles Shearer, who along with his wife Henrietta, founded Shearer Cottage. However, the fall of the first Black community on the island came in the 1890s when forty Black and Indigenous people were required to remove their cottages from the Martha's Vineyard Camp Meeting Association. Despite this painful blow, other families, including the Wests, Jones and Huberts bought island homes, challenging restrictive and racist covenants that encumbered the properties. They then passed their homes on to subsequent generations, leading to a legacy of Black homeownership that thrives to this day. Authors Thomas Dresser and Richard Taylor explore the challenges, triumphs and the sense of community that has endured.
Autorenporträt
Thomas Dresser grew up in central Massachusetts and has lived on Martha's Vineyard since the mid-1990s. He wrote African Americans of Martha's Vineyard in 2010. This is his sixteenth book with The History Press. He can be reached at thomasdresser@gmail.com or thomasdresser.com. Richard Lewis Taylor has been a summer resident on Martha's Vineyard for more than forty-five years. He is the "Oak Bluffs" columnist for the Vineyard Gazette . In his capacity as the president of the Union Chapel Educational and Cultural Institute, he established the Charles Ogletree Public Forums. His service to the island was recognized by the Martha's Vineyard Museum, which bestowed on him the Martha's Vineyard Medal.