'Just outside of Mobile, Alabama, sits the small community of
Africatown, a town established by the last known slaves brought to America, illegally, in 1860. Decades after that last slave ship,
The Clotilde, burned in the waters outside Mobile, Africatown residents are pushing back against the forces of industrial destruction and national amnesia. Local struggles over environmental justice, land ownership, and development could determine whether Africatown becomes an historical destination, a living monument to a lingering past — or whether shadows cast by highway overpasses and gasoline tanks will erase our country's hard-learned lessons.
On the Media
spoke with
Deborah G. Plant, editor of a new book by Zora Neale Hurston's about a founder of Africatown,
Joe Womack, environmental activist and Africatown resident,
Vickii Howell, president and CEO of the
MOVE Gulf Coast Community Development Corporation, Charles Torrey, research historian for the
History Museum of Mobile, and others about the past, present, and future of Africatown, Alabama.'
Published on May 20, 2018 20:03