The Drinking Gourd Project

The Drinking Gourd Project Sponsors Traces of the Trade Event

Concord, MA – The Drinking Gourd Project will present a screening and discussion of Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North. This award-winning film documents – the DeWolfe family’s exploration of their slave-trading legacy. Their journey retraces the Triangle Trade – from Rhode Island to slave forts in Ghana to sugar plantation ruins in Cuba. A discussion with DeWolfe family members will follow the film. This free event will be held on March 5th from 7:00 – 9:00 pm at the Concord Art Association, 37 Lexington Rd,. Concord, MA.

Inside the Bigelow House

by Liz Clayton
Editor’s note: The following commentary is part of a series from the Drinking Gourd Project, dedicated to preserving the Caesar Robbins house as an educational center for the untold stories of Concord’s early Africans, abolitionists and other civil liberties advocates.
Dressed in her hoop skirt, scarf and shawl, Rosa Hallowell set out tea cups [...]

Uncovering history: Girl Scouts are first to try out Abolitionists tour

The girls were transported back to mid-19th century Concord, re-enacting a meeting of the Concord Female Anti-Slavery Society and learning about Concord’s role in the underground railroad and of women like Maria Prescott, Mary Grace, Mary Brooks and the Grimkes, who all played prominent roles in the town’s anti-slavery movement.

Traces of the Trade: A Drinking Gourd Presentation

You’re invited to joinConcord’s Untold Revolutionwith a screening & discussion of

This award-winning film documents one family’s journey to retrace their legacy of Northern slave-trading — from their old hometown in Rhode Island to slave forts in Ghana to sugar plantation ruins in Cuba, and their powerful & inspiring message of restorative justice. A discussion led [...]

CFASS in Concord

Concord’s role in the American Revolution and in the literary and philosophical ‘revolution’ of Transcendentalism has long been celebrated. Less well known, is the leadership that women of Concord provided to yet another revolution – the abolition of slavery in the United States.For decades, the Concord Female Anti-Slavery Society sponsored speakers, raised funds, wrote [...]