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The original item was published from 3/22/2021 11:34:00 AM to 3/24/2021 1:54:15 PM.

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Hampton History Museum

Posted on: March 22, 2021

[ARCHIVED] Descendant Engagement and Unearthing Collective Memory in Hampton Roads - Monday, April 5, 7 pm

Eola_Dance SQUARE

In February, Governor Ralph Northam announced that Fort Monroe, where the first Africans were brought to English speaking North America, was named a "site of memory" with the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization’s slave route project. Join Eola Lewis Dance, Acting Superintendent for the Fort Monroe National Monument on Facebook Live as she discusses contraband communities, archeology, and descendant engagement. 

Dance is a 20-year employee of the National Park Service. She has served in many roles in public history and historic preservation to include Frederick Douglass National Historic Site, Carter G. Woodson Home, and Harriet Tubman National Monument and Historical Park. After serving as the National Capital Regional Ethnographer, Eola joined the team at Colonial National Historical Park as the Park Historian and supervisor of Resources Stewardship and Science. In that role Eola manages a team of biologists, archeologists, and collections managers.  Similarly, Eola served as the Chief of Resources Management at Fort Monroe from 2012 - 2014.  With a commitment to descendant community engagement and the arts, Eola specializes in utilizing these approaches in discussing difficult topics in social history. She received a BA in History from Southern University A & M College, an MA in Historic Preservation from Savannah College of Art and Design, and a graduate certificate in Environmental Policy from The George Washington University. Eola is currently a third year PhD student at Howard University majoring in US History with a minor in African Diaspora and Public History. Her research focuses on race in 17th Century America, the evolution of racialized slavery, as well as opportunities for healing and reconciliation.

Hampton History Museum Facebook Live Videos

View all of our Facebook videos, including "Clips with the curator" and education videos.

After the lecture airs live on Facebook, it will be uploaded onto the museum's YouTube playlist and website www.hamptonhistorymusuem.org.


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