No Stone Unturned: Preserving Slave Cemeteries in Alabama

No Stone Unturned: Preserving Slave Cemeteries in Alabama

10 min · 11 de oct de 2022
Portada del episodio No Stone Unturned: Preserving Slave Cemeteries in Alabama

Descripción

Alabama’s constitution still allows forced labor, 157 years after the thirteenth amendment abolished the practice. That’s not the only lasting impact of the slave trade in Alabama. APR spoke with the descendants of some of estimated four hundred thousand people enslaved here around the Civil War. Many say they can’t find the burial sites of their ancestors, due to unmarked graves or bad records kept by their white captors. Alabama Public Radio news spent nine months looking into efforts to find and preserve slave cemeteries in the state. Here's part one of our series we call “No Stone Unturned.”

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episode No Stone Unturned: "What happened in the South, happened in the North." artwork

No Stone Unturned: "What happened in the South, happened in the North."

Alabama voters head to the polls for the November midterm election next month. One issue on the ballot would do away with slavery. It’s still allowed in the state constitution. Alabama Public Radio news spent nine months looking into one lingering aspect of the slave trade. APR’s focus is on finding and preserving slave cemeteries in the state. By the time of the Civil War, an estimated four hundred thousand people were held as slaves in Alabama. Some accounts put the number throughout the South at closer to four million. That would appear to make the issue of slave cemetery preservation a southern issue. But, that doesn't appear to be the case. Here’s part four of our series we call “No Stone Unturned."

28 de oct de 202212 min