*Virginia, the first of America’s 13 colonies, was chartered on this date in 1606. This article briefly describes the settlers as the First Families of Virginia (FFV). These were white-American planters and slaveholders in Colonial Virginia who were socially prominent and wealthy. Though Sir Walter Raleigh did not settle there, other families descended from England. They settled at Jamestown, Williamsburg, The Northern Neck, along […]
learn more*The birth of Anthony Johnson is celebrated on this date in 1606. He was an African slave and farmer and one of the first Black property owners in colonial America. He was a tobacco farmer in Maryland and had his right to legally own a slave recognized by the Virginia courts. There is no information […]
learn moreIt was on this date in 1619 that 20 Africans arrive at Hampton, Virginia, aboard a Dutch ship. They were the first Africans on record to be forcibly settled as involuntary laborers in the North American British Colonies.
Africans came ashore at Point Comfort, present day Fort Monroe in Hampton, VA. President Barack Obama declared Fort Monroe a National Monument in 2011 in part because he said that is where the first Africans came ashore in North America.
learn more*The Dutch West India Company was founded on this date in 1621. They were a chartered company of Dutch merchants, slave traffickers, and foreign investors. Among its founders were Willem Usselincx and Jessé de Forest. The Republic of the Seven United Netherlands granted it a charter for a trade monopoly in the Dutch West Indies and gave […]
learn more*The Dahomey Amazons are celebrated on this date in 1625. Also called Mino, or Minon, “our mothers”, they were a Fon all-female military regiment of the Kingdom of Dahomey. Western observers and historians named them due to their similarity to the mythical Amazons of ancient Anatolia and the Black Sea. King Houegbadja, the third King of Dahomey, is […]
learn more*The Kingdom of Dahomey is celebrated on this date in 1625. This was a pre-colonial African kingdom located within present-day Benin that existed until 1904. The oral story goes that Dakodonu considered their second king was granted permission by the Gedevi chiefs, the local rulers, to settle in the Abomey plateau. Dakodonu requested additional land from a […]
learn more*The birth of Ganga Zumba is celebrated on this date in c 1630. He was the first leader of the vast escaped Afro Brazilian slave settlement of Quilombo dos Palmares, or Angola Janga, in the present-day Alagoas, Brazil. Ganga Zumba is said to have been the son of princess Aqualtune, the daughter of an unknown […]
learn more*Fort Amsterdam is remembered on this date in 1631. This fort was used by the British and Dutch to facilitate Black African slave labor in the Middle Passage. It was built by the English between 1638 and 1645 as Fort Cormantin and was captured by the Dutch West India Company in 1665 in retaliation for the capture of […]
learn more*The Swedish African slave trade began on this date in 1650. This was a business venture that many white European countries involved with the Middle Passage. In the mid-17th century, Sweden established trading stations along the West African coast, with bases in an area called the Swedish Gold Coast, which is today part of Ghana. Sweden and […]
learn more*On this date in 1653, we affirm the Cape Coast Castle. This was one of about forty “slave castles,” or commercial forts, built on the Gold Coast of West Africa (now Ghana) by European traders. It was initially a Portuguese trading post. However, in 1653, the Swedish Africa Company constructed a timber fort there. It originally was a […]
learn more*Fort Apollonia was established on this date in 1655. It was used during the Middle Passage; its name Apollonia was given by a Portuguese explorer who sighted the place on the Feast of Saint Apollonia on this month and day in History. The Swedes established a trading post at Apollonia as part of the Swedish Gold […]
learn more*On this date, in 1655, Johnson v. Parker was decided. This case involved the designation of indentured servitude and slavery. The Northampton County Court ruled in favor of Anthony Johnson, whose slave, John Casor, ran away and claimed to be an indentured servant. The court charged Johnson’s neighbor, Robert Parker, with having “most unjustly kept” […]
learn more*On this date, in 1659, Fort James was built. This was a slave-holding fort located in Accra, Ghana. It was built by the Royal African Company of England (RAC) as a trading post for both gold and slaves in 1673, where it joined the Dutch Fort Crêvecœur (1649) and the Danish Fort Christiansborg (1652) along the coast of […]
learn more*On this date in 1660, the Osu Castle is affirmed. This slave fort (also known as Fort Christiansborg) is a castle in Osu, Ghana, on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea in Africa. The facility was built by Denmark-Norway, Portugal, Akwamu, Britain, and finally, post-Independence Ghana. Under Denmark–Norway control, it was the capital of the Danish […]
learn more*On this Indigenous Peoples Day, the 1662 founding of the Royal African Company (RAC) is briefly examined. This was an Irish/English commercial slave trading company set up by the royal Stuart family and the City of London to trade along the west coast of Africa. It was led by the Duke of York, who was the brother of Charles II and later took the throne as James […]
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