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Department of Health and Social Services Library

#DHSSReads: Black History in Delaware

by Michelle Wynne-Feigin on 2025-02-06T09:00:00-05:00 | 0 Comments

The following books are available through Delaware Libraries.
If you have a 
Delaware library card, you can place a hold
and pick it up at the DHSS Library or any public library location.
Not sure if you have one? 
Email the DHSS Library and we will look up your account!

A Black Sailor and Soldiers: Thay Might Get a Hanceum Livehud for Themselves and There's book coverA Black Sailor and Soldiers: Thay Might Get a Hanceum Livehud for Themselves and There's by Denise Hayman
ISBN: 9798870127477
Publication Date: 2024-02-11
Set in 1865 Delaware, A Black Sailor and Soldiers is a play that dramatizes the African American experiences of a free Black community during the nineteenth century. Samuel and Abijah James volunteer for the Union Army during perilous times. This play reveals the critical roles they play in taking care of their families. It reminds us all of the long labored and arduous efforts men of their time engaged in to provide for their families and how race impacted their experiences.
 
 
 
 
Growing up Black in New Castle County, Delaware book coverGrowing up Black in New Castle County, Delaware by Jeanne D. Nutter
ISBN: 9780738506227
Publication Date: 2001-05-09
In this valuable volume of oral history, the recorded childhood memories of African Americans--from family rituals to first jobs, neighborhood games to school--are illustrated with vintage photographs culled from family albums and archives. Chronicling the period from 1900 to the 1950s, Growing Up Black in New Castle County, Delaware brings together the touching stories of African Americans in northern Delaware who grew up during an era of both hardship and happiness. In a time when racial segregation was law and the nation faced such challenges as war and economic depression, African-American children in New Castle County and around the country were busy exploring the world around them-playing with friends, celebrating holidays, attending school, and learning the important life lessons that would carry them through the rest of the twentieth century.
 
The Indispensables : the diverse soldier-mariners who shaped the country, formed the Navy, and rowed Washington across the Delaware book coverThe Indispensables : the diverse soldier-mariners who shaped the country, formed the Navy, and rowed Washington across the Delaware by Patrick K. O'Donnell
ISBN: 9780802156891
Publication Date: 2021-05-18
From the bestselling author of Washington's Immortals and The Unknowns, an important new chronicle of the American Revolution heralding the heroism of the men from Marblehead, Massachusetts On the stormy night of August 29, 1776, the Continental Army faced capture or annihilation after losing the Battle of Brooklyn. The British had trapped George Washington's forces against the East River, and the fate of the Revolution rested upon the shoulders of the soldier-mariners from Marblehead, Massachusetts. Serving side by side in one of the country's first diverse units, they pulled off an "American Dunkirk" and saved the army by transporting it across the treacherous waters of the river to Manhattan. In the annals of the American Revolution, no group played a more consequential role than the Marbleheaders. At the right time in the right place, they repeatedly altered the course of events, and their story shines new light on our understanding of the Revolution. As acclaimed historian Patrick K. O'Donnell dramatically recounts, beginning nearly a decade before the war started, and in the midst of a raging virus that divided the town politically, Marbleheaders such as Elbridge Gerry and Azor Orne spearheaded the break with Britain and shaped the nascent United States by playing a crucial role governing, building alliances, seizing British ships, forging critical supply lines, and establishing the origins of the US Navy. The Marblehead Regiment, led by John Glover, became truly indispensable. Marbleheaders battled at Lexington and on Bunker Hill and formed the elite Guard that protected George Washington. Then, at the most crucial time in the war, the special operations-like regiment, against all odds, conveyed 2,400 of Washington's men across the ice-filled Delaware River on Christmas night 1776, delivering a momentum-shifting surprise attack on Trenton. Later, Marblehead doctor Nathaniel Bond inoculated the Continental Army against a deadly virus, which changed the course of history. White, Black, Hispanic, and Native American, this uniquely diverse group of soldiers set an inclusive standard of unity the US Army would not reach again for more than 170 years. The Marbleheaders' chronicle, never fully told before now, makes The Indispensables a vital addition to the literature of the American Revolution.
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