“Amongst Ourselves: Resisting Slavery at Whitney Plantation”
This new exhibit tracks the many ways the enslalved there navigated the perilous course toward survival. As the exhibit shows, it involved worship, maintaining blood or acquired kinship, education (especially literacy, the teaching of which to the enslaved was a crime in most Southern states), sharing folktales and foodways, even cultivating herbal remedies.
In the case of Prince and Alex, two French-speaking 14-year-olds, it took the form of escape. We know because of a classified advertisement, placed in a New Orleans newspaper by plantation owner J.J. Haydel, offering a $50 reward for their capture. The ad is reproduced at the start of the exhibit, which continues on panel displays throughout the property.
I walked the grounds of the plantation with Mary Niall Mitchell, director of the Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at the University of New Orleans and a UNO history professor. The project, which incorporates wonderful graphic illustrations by Langston Allston, is a collaboration between the Whitney and Midlo Center faculty, students, and graduate students. “Amongst Ourselves” also draws on “Freedom on the Move,” a digital database of fugitives from North American slavery maintained by Cornell University.
Later in our walk, I got to spend a few minutes with Ashley Rogers, the Whitney’s executive director.