Discovery of Our Interconnected Legacies in Portsmouth, NH’s Slavery History 

Primary tabs

Program Type:

Presentation, History

Age Group:

Adult
Please note you are looking at an event that has already happened.

Program Description

Details

Prince Whipple, a young native of Africa, was transported during the Atlantic slave trade to America, and detained in slavery by William Whipple, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. In 1779, Prince Whipple, together with 19 other enslaved Africans, submitted a Petition for Freedom to the New Hampshire state legislature.

Centuries later, the descendants of African Prince Whipple and the white Whipple and Moffatt families join together in Portsmouth in a conversation about their discoveries of slavery and its legacy through shared stories. The panelists will discuss their connection with these two men and their New Hampshire families, African and White, as a living history. In the spirit of Sankofa, we explore together such questions as: what do we go back and learn from the past?  What do we do with what we find?  What is to be carried forward from reconciling past injustice? Who benefits?  What legacies will we pass to future generations?

Registration is required for this FREE program. You may register to attend in person at the Portsmouth Public Library or online. Register to attend. 

About the Panelists
Laurel Guild Yancey is the 6th-great-granddaughter of Prince and Dinah Chase Whipple.

Tonya Ward Singer is the 6th-great-grandniece of William and Catherine Whipple.