Sugar, Slavery, and Revolution: The Real History of White Gold

  • Mon, Feb 28, 2022 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
  • Eastern Standard Time

Ticket Price Free This event is now over
Description

Join Stratford Hall’s Director of Collections and Visitor Engagement, Dr. Kelley Fanto Deetz, for a lecture on the history of sugar in the Atlantic world. Deetz will discuss the cultural and political history of one of the most profitable crops in the colonial era. Focusing on material culture and culinary history, this lecture will highlight the role of enslaved laborers, abolitionists, and planters as they battled over this controversial ingredient. Join us for this Black History Month lecture to learn more about Sugar, Slavery, and Revolution in the Atlantic World. 

Dr. Kelley Fanto Deetz is a historian and archaeologist, and works as the Director of Collections and Visitor Engagement at Stratford Hall and a Visiting Scholar in the Department of African American Studies at U.C. Berkeley. She holds a BA in Africana Studies and History from The College of William & Mary and an MA and Ph.D. in African Diaspora Studies from the University of California at Berkeley. She is the author of the critically acclaimed book Bound to the Fire: How Virginia’s Enslaved Cooks Helped Invent American Cuisine, which was named as one of the top ten books on food of 2017 by the Smithsonian Magazine. You can find her most recent work in Audible’s The Great Courses on the History of Sugar, and her contribution to the forthcoming cookbook California Soul, with celebrity and OWN tv star Chef Tanya Holland and Alice Walker.

This program will be offered virtually and pre-registration is required. We invite you to pay as you wish to support lectures like this and future programs at Stratford Hall.

Date & Time

Mon, Feb 28, 2022 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Stratford Hall Historic Preserve

Stratford Hall brings together people from around the world to experience two-thousand acres of natural and human history, preserved and presented so that we can all learn from the courageous struggles of our ancestors, taking inspiration both from what they endured and what they accomplished. There are few places in America where people can travel down small, rural roads to arrive at a vast site that preserves so many aspects of early-American life, from the Great House where the influential Lee family helped to forge a new nation, to the fields worked by enslaved Africans, to the waters of the rivers that fueled trade, to the ground, which still yields secrets about the people and animals that lived before.

Come experience this extraordinary place and learn about a layered history that began millions of years ago - a history that continues to educate, inspire, and influence Americans to the present day.