318. Part 2 of our
interview with Nick Douglas, author of
Finding Octave. With a flash of recognition, the author meets the gaze of his
ancestor in a sepia-toned photo. Knowing next to nothing about
this man, his great-great-grandfather Octave, he follows two
families that lead to his own. On a journey stretching from
Haiti to India, and back to the 16th century, the author's
adventures strangely echo those of his ancestors. Finding Octave
finds an America where "free people of color"-unfettered blacks,
Indians and Creoles-had power and wealth that whites struggled
to claim as their own. In this pre-Civil War America, blacks
negotiated their own freedom from slavery. Some chose to be
slaveholders themselves. Confronting the terrible truth about
slavery within his family, the author uncovers an American
secret.
- This week in Louisiana history. June 22, 1983. Louisiana
repeals last racial classification laws.
- This week in New Orleans history. June 22, 1947. Pistol Pete
Maravich is Born.
- This week in Louisiana.
June 28-29, 2019
Beauregard
Watermelon Festival
Louisiana Fun, Sugartown Sweet
313 W. 1st St.
DeRidder, LA 70634
(337) 463-5534
Friday 4 pm - 12 am
Saturday 10 am - 12 am
Watermelon carving, seed spitting and eating contest, biggest
watermelon contest, frozen t-shirt contest, watermelon
pageant.
- Postcards from Louisiana. Bruce interviews Anonymous for the
Voiceless in Jackson Square. They're an animal rights group.
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The blog articles of Nick Douglas can be found at https://afropunk.com/writer/nickdouglas/.
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