Where Was I?
Before White Rock Lake was a lake, it was a valley. Before the park and the running trail existed, that valley held a community. And before it was a community, it was freedom — for people who had just been told they were free for the first time. This episode was recorded six weeks ago. A lot has happened since. Including the Supreme Court gutting the Voting Rights Act in a 6-3 ruling that didn't take anyone's ballot ...it just made sure it doesn't count. We need to talk about that too. This is the episode about what gets passed down when nothing gets passed down. About drowned cities and bulldozed neighborhoods and the compound interest on stolen futures. About Seneca Village and Lake Lanier and Overtown and Rondo and Cape May. About what Negro removal looked like, how many times they did it, and why the racial wealth gap is not a mystery, it has an address. Hundreds of them. No commercials today. SHOW NOTES: A note on timing: This episode was recorded approximately six weeks before its release date. In that time, the Supreme Court issued a 6-3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais effectively gutting Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act , the provision protecting minority voters from discriminatory redistricting. An updated opener and closer reflect the current moment. Topics covered: * White Rock Lake, Dallas TX and the freedman's settlement of Egypt * The history of urban renewal as federal policy (1949–1974) * Seneca Village, New York City (1857) * Forsyth County, Georgia / Lake Lanier (1912, 1950) * Overtown, Miami, Florida * Rondo, St. Paul, Minnesota * Cape May, New Jersey and Harriet Tubman * Louisiana v. Callais and the gutting of the Voting Rights Act (April 29, 2026) * James Baldwin and Negro removal * The racial wealth gap as manufactured, documented policy This week's song: Fast Car — Tracy Chapman Add to the WHERE WAS I playlist on Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5YhLXMVhdV7YGTJ4p9kM6t?si=3afba2c3ab3c42cf] Further reading: * Amber Ruffin's segment on Black towns hidden underwater * James Baldwin's interview during the filming of Take This Hammer (San Francisco, 1963) * The history of Seneca Village and Central Park * Campaign Legal Center: votingright.org * Black Voters Matter: blackvotersmatterfund.org Thoughts? Corrections? Things I missed? Leave a comment on Spotify or email: wherewasipodcast.jenn@gmail.com [wherewasipodcast.jenn@gmail.com] WHERE WAS I with Jennefer Wilson drops every Wednesday.
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