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Echoes OF US

Podkast av Alicia C Lacy- I M Y R I A D FM | Notable |Radio

engelsk

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Notable| Radio presents- Echoes of Us  Echoes of Us is a storytelling series that brings to life true, powerful, and often overlooked stories from African‑American history. Each episode is crafted in an intimate, narrative style—honoring the voices, courage, and brilliance of the people who shaped our world. Through longer, emotionally rich stories and uplifting messages, Echoes of Us celebrates resilience, legacy, and the everyday heroes whose echoes still guide us today. This show is created to inspire, empower, and remind people of color that their history is deep, their presence is powerful, and their future is limitless. Created By Notable Radio Curators

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19 Episoder

episode Echoes Of Us - “The Carpenter Who Built Freedom With His Hands” Narrated by Alicia Lacy cover

Echoes Of Us - “The Carpenter Who Built Freedom With His Hands” Narrated by Alicia Lacy

Notable radio presents echoes of us. The carpenter who built freedom with his hands. True story based on Robert Smalls. 
I want you to imagine Charleston, South Carolina, in 1862. A city wrapped in heat, tension, and the heavy silence of a country at war with itself. The harbor was full of Confederate ships, cannons, pointed towards the horizon. 
Soldiers pacing the docks with rifles slung over their shoulders. And in the middle of all that danger, all that chaos, there was a man. named Robert Smalls. A 23 year old enslaved dock worker with a quiet voice, a sharp mind, and a plan so bold, it sounded like something out of a movie. 
Robert worked on a Confederate transport ship called the Planter. He knew every rope, every lever, every sound the engine made. He knew the roots, the signals, the guards' routines. 
He knew the harbor better than the men who claimed to own it. But more than anything, Robert knew one thing for certain. He was not going to die enslaved. 
He had a wife, Hannah, and two children. He had a mother who lived her entire life in bondage. He had a future he refused to surrender. 
So Robert Smalls did something no one expected. He decided to steal the ship. At night, not in a storm, not in a moment of confusion, but at dawn, in full view of the Confederate army. 
The plan was simple, but deadly. The white officers slept on shore every night, leaving the enslaved crew alone on the ship. Robert waited until the guards were gone, then gathered the men he trusted. 
He told them the truth. This is our chance. If we fail, we die. 
If we succeed, we live free. They agreed. Just before sunrise, Robert put on the captain's coat and hat. 
He stood tall, shoulders back, heart pounding like a drum. He looked at the harbor, the check points, the soldiers, the cannons, and he took the wheel. One by one, they approached each Confederate post. 
Robert gave the secret hand signals. He blew the captain's whistle. He saluted like he belonged there. 
And the guards waved him through. When they reached the final checkpoint, the one closest to open water. Robert felt the weight of every ancestor behind him. 
He felt the prayers of every enslaved person in Charleston. He felt the fear, the hope, the fire. He gave the last signal. 
The guards waved again, and just like that, Robert Smalls sailed in Confederate warship, straight out of slavery. But he wasn't done. He steered the ship towards the Union blockade. 
The very ships the Confederates were fighting. He raised the white bedsheet his wife had sown the night before, and when the Union soldiers saw it, they didn't fire. They welcomed him. 
Robert delivered the ship, the cannons, the ammunition, and the Confederate codes to the Union Navy. He freed himself. He freed his family, he freed the entire crew. 
And then, because his courage didn't end at the water, he went on to become a Union war hero, a ship captain, a businessman, a five term U.S. congressman. A man who brought the plantation where he was, once enslaved, and let the former owner live there rent free, until she died. Robert Smalls didn't just escape slavery. 
He outsmarted it. He outlived it. He outshined it. 
Robert Smalls teaches us that freedom is built, not given. He reminds us that strategy is a form of strength. Intelligence is a weapon. 
Courage is a compass. And faith is a fuel. His story tells every person of color listening to your voice. 
Every day. That we are capable of impossible things. We are not defined by where we start. 
We are not defined by what we dare to do. Robert didn't wait for permission. He didn't wait for the world to change. 
He changed his world. With his mind, his hands, and his belief that he was met for more. And so are you. 
My name is Alicia Lacy.   You are listening to Echoes of Us.  Notable | Curators

3. jan. 2026 - 6 min
episode The Night Mary Fields Walked Ten Miles -Echoes Of Us Ep 1 Narrated By Alicia C Lacy cover

The Night Mary Fields Walked Ten Miles -Echoes Of Us Ep 1 Narrated By Alicia C Lacy

IMNX FM Notable Radio presents Echoes of Us — narrated by Alicia Lacey — telling the true story of Mary Fields, a former slave turned stagecoach mail carrier in 1800s Montana. When a blizzard stranded her and her wagon, Mary refused to abandon the mail, walking ten miles through knee-deep snow to deliver every letter, proving courage, duty, and the strength of a Black woman in a hostile frontier. Welcome to IMNX FM notable radio where we will bring you our series of echoes of us, which are short stories, um, told by African Americans throughout the world who want you to hear their echoes. Our 1st episode is called The Night Mary Fields Walked. 10 miles through the snow. And keep in mind, this original narration is written for our podcast. 
My name is Alicia Lacy and I am one of the narrators for this series. I want you to imagine Montana in the late 1800s, a place where the wind didn't just blow. It cut. 
A place where the snow didn't fall, it claimed, and in the middle of all that cold, all that emptiness, there was a black woman named Mary Fields. 6 feet tall, 200 pounds, born in slavery, in Tennessee, and somehow, through grit, and God, and pure, stubborn will, she ended up becoming the 1st black woman to carry U.S. mail on a stagecoach route. But the story I want to tell you isn't just about her job. It's about one night, the night that made her a legend. 
Mary was hauling mail through the mountains when a blizzard rolled in. The kind of storm that makes the world disappear. Her horses panicked, the wagon slid, and before she knew it, she was stuck miles from shelter. 
Miles from help and miles from anyone who even knew she was out there. Most people would have prayed. Mary cursed. 
She grabbed every sack of mail because she refused to let a single letter get lost, and she walked and walked. 10 miles in snow up to her knees. And boots that were never meant for the kind of cold that she was trapped in. She walked until breath felt like broken glass and her fingers stopped listening to her. 
But she kept going. And when she finally reached the station, half frozen, covered in ice, dragged and dragged all those bags of mail with her. Behind her, like they were her own children. 
The men inside just stared. One of them said, Mary, how did you make it? And she said, the mail was due. 
That's it. No drama, no bragging. Just duty. 
Mary Fields didn't live her life to be a symbol. She didn't care about being the 1st or the only. She cared about doing the job, protecting the people she loved, and proving every single day that a black woman could survive anything this country threw at her. 
And that night, in the middle of Montana's, heavy blizzard, she proved it. Her name is Alicia Lacy, and you are listening to our series called Echoes of Us.

3. jan. 2026 - 3 min
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