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A black and white photograph of people's faces

COVID Chronicles Delaware

On July 1, 2020July 1, 2020 By covidchroniclesdeIn Delaware, Essential Workers, Healthcare, Sheltering in Place, Social Distancing
A documentary short film about life and coping during COVID-19 by Nichelle Polston & Key Robbins, from Hernormal and Lucaviz Productions in association with the Delaware Historical Society.

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It's Time! #DoMore24DE has officially begun & we need your help to reach our goal & gain stretch pool dollars! Link in bio to donate.
#DoMore24DE starts TOMORROW at 6pm! Help us do more to preserve Delaware history. Link in bio to help Read House & Gardens preserve their iconic gates & help the Mitchell Center for African American Heritage with their summer research interns.
24 hours of giving - 2 opportunities to fund DHS projects! Start your own fundraiser or get reminders to donate with the link in our bio!
If you love history and want to support the work of #Delaware students and teachers – we need you! National History Day in Delaware is a year-long history education program that challenges students in grades 6 through 12 to engage in historical research, analysis and interpretation, and creative expression through project-based learning. We’re looking for volunteer judges for the National History Day Virtual State Contest. Judges must be comfortable technology. For more information, email RFay@dehistory.org.
Samuel Cornish was born free and grew up in Sussex County. In 1827, Cornish and John Russwurm founded Freedom’s Journal, the first Black newspaper in the United States. Freedom’s Journal promoted Black achievements, education, and opposed colonization. #BlackHistoryMonth
Peter Spencer was one of many important leaders in the founding of Black churches in Delaware. Spencer, along with William Anderson founded the Union Church of Africans in Wilmington in 1813. Now the African Union Methodist Protestant (AUMP) and the Union American Methodist Episcopal churches, it is the oldest independent African American denomination in the United States. Spencer also started the August Quarterly, the oldest continuously celebrated African American festival in the United States. #BlackHistoryMonth

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