Stamped -

  • 1415

    Prince Henry's Caper

    Prince Henry's goal was to "capture the main Muslim's trading depot [in] Morocco." (22).
  • 1450

    "The Chronicle of the Discovery and Conquest of Guinea"

    According to Kendi and Reynolds, "Zurara was the first person to write about and defend Black Human ownership". (25).
  • 1526

    First Known African Racist

    Johannes Leo, also known as Leo Africanus, "echoed Zurara's sentiments of Africans, his own people [and called them..] hypersexual savages" (26-7).
  • 1577

    Curse Theory

    In Chapter 2 of "Stamped," Reynolds explains that "English travel writer George Best determined [...] that Africans were, in fact, cursed" (30).
  • Richard Mather's Arrival

    Richard Mather was a Puritan who came to America to practice a "more disciplined and rigid" (32) form of Christianity.
  • "voluntary slaves"

    According to Richard Baxter, some "Africans [...] wanted to be slaves so that they could be baptized" (39).
  • Creation of White Privileges

    In response to Nathaniel Bacon's uprising, local government decided to give "all Whites [...] absolute power to abuse any African person" (45).
  • First Antiracist Writing in the Colonies

    The Mennonites were against slavery because they "equat[ed]" (41) discrimination based on skin color to discrimination based on religion.
  • American Philosophical Society (APS)

    Benjamin Franklin created "a club for smart (White) people" (57) to discuss ideas and philosophy.
  • The (American) Enlightment

    In the mid-1700's, "new America entered what we now call the Enlightenment Era" (56).
  • Phyllis Wheatley's Test

    Wheatley "proved herself [as intelligent and] human" (60) by passing a test given by some of the smartest men in the country at the time
  • Declaration of Independence

    Thomas Jefferson wrote down "All men are created equal" (68).
  • 3/5’s Compromise

    Where only 5 slaves represent 3 real humans in their terms. (73)
  • The Haitian Revolution

    A revolution that occurred in 1791 and that Haiti will represent the eastern side of the hemisphere of peace. (75)
  • (Possibly) North America's Biggest Uprising

    A rebel against there own slaves master by begging and asking them to care for them more. (80)
  • Jefferson's Slave Trade Act

    Jefferson made an slave trade act where people from the Caribbean and other places won't be allowed in America, But instead slaves are still being sold and bought all over America. (82)
  • The Missouri Compromise

    It was a compromise to allow that Missouri is officially now a slave state. pg (86)
  • Thomas Jefferson's Death

    The year where Thomas Jefferson died because of his old age. (88)
  • Garrison's First Abolition Speech

    Garrison is a black person who wanted to abolish slavery he looked up to David walker who also wanted to abolish slavery (96-96)
  • Nat Turner's Rebellion

    Nat turner was a slave and rebelled against slavery by killing slave owners. (98)
  • AASS Abolitionist Pamphlets

    A group of abolitionists. (99)
  • Samuel Morton's Theories

    A white person who studies about human skulls. (101)
  • Frederick Douglass' Narrative Published

    Was an American slave who learned how to read and write and published his own book from his pov. (102)
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin

    Tom was slave who met a white girl and her family bought him and treated him very nicely. The father of the girl wanted to free him but was unable to and her mother sold him to a harsh slave owner. (104-105)
  • Start of Civil War

    A economic war started between where we should keep slaves or free them and let them live like regular humans for freedom. (114-115)
  • The Emancipation Proclamation

    An act where if the slaves escaped from the confarreate army to the union army will be labeled as part of the union army. (115)
  • End of Civil War

    The war has ended and the reconstruction is that to rebuild the system and let black people have the same rights as white which lead them to be able to vote. (117)
  • The Fifteenth Amendment

    an amendment where no one could tolerate other races. (121)
  • Black Codes and Jim Crow

    laws that make black people not to live freely in the southern states. (119)