GreaterDiversity.com - Author to Speak on a Slave Escape from a Durham Plantation
Click on the slide!
As Self-Publishing Explodes, Marketing Expert Offers 4 Tips for Authors

The number of self-published books has exploded, growing 287 percent since 2006, according to research by Bowker, the official ISBN agency for the United States....

Read More ...
Click on the slide!
Spelman College Leadership Conference Challenges Women Of Color To Embrace Future

...

Read More ...
Click on the slide!
New Guide Keeps Diversity Conversations Authentic

Chicago human resource executive and former chief diversity officer is now the author of a dynamic new diversity book, Profitable Diversity: How Economic Inclusion Can Lead to Success....

Read More ...
Click on the slide!
Frank Savage Knows How to Sail Against the Wind

Frank Savage has a theory about what it will take to bring down the rate of African-American unemployment, which is hovering at 14 percent, higher than any other group in the nation....

Read More ...

106RALEIGH - In 1848, Mary Walker fled slavery and the plantation that is now Historic Stagville in Durham, leaving behind her son and daughter.  She spent 17 years trying to recover her family.  Dr. Syd Nathans, professor emeritus with Duke University, tells of Walker's remarkable ordeal in the book "To Free A Family:  The Journey of Mary Walker" at Historic Stagville on Sunday, Feb. 12, at 2 p.m., and at the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh, on Monday, Feb. 13, at 11 a.m.  The programs are free.

 

The tale of Mary Walker is representative of the secret labors of hundreds of women escaping bondage and trying to reclaim their families in the South.  The story is also the basis for the Addy Walker doll in the American Girl doll collection.

 

Two extraordinary collections provide the basis for the story -- the letters and diaries of Walker's former North Carolina slaveholders, and those of the northern family who protected and employed her.  In spite of her persistence and the assistance of black and white abolitionists, she was not reunited with her children until the end of the Civil War.

 

The programs are sponsored by the N.C. African American Heritage Commission (AAHC), whose mission is to preserve, protect, and promote North Carolina's African American history, arts and culture for all people.  The AAHC is affiliated with the Department of Cultural Resources.

 

For additional information call Michelle Lanier at (919) 477-7103.  The Division of

State Historic Sites and the Division of State History Museums are within the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources.