From Richard Paul | 00:54:10

Hear the first person accounts of people who lived in slavery; the voices of those who worked to end slavery and those who strove to keep it in "A Small Southern Town: The Nation's Capital In Slave Times."
In this special designed for African American History Month, listeners will hear of one family's role in one of the largest mass escapes of slaves in American history.
"A Small Southern Town" combines dramatic readings of first person accounts from slave times with modern day analysis to shed light on little known aspects of slave life and slave times in the Nation's Capital.
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Rich...
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Review of A Small Southern Town: The Nation's Capital In Slave TimesA well-crafted example of using a personal account to present an historical event with broader overtones in an engaging, infomational manner. |
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Review of A Small Southern Town: The Nation's Capital In Slave TimesI am a fan of learning history through real human stories. I was worried when I read " dramatization" - but it's not overly so at all. It's more an evocative reading of various accounts, first person and historical, woven with present day inference and confirmation. Intelligent work, nicely edited, abundant sfx. Perfect for black history month/issues. vm |
From W-A-M-U at American University in Washington, this is ?A Small Southern Town: The Nation?s Capitol In Slave Times.? I?m Richard Paul. In this program ... one family?s break for freedom in the Escape To The Pearl.
When they teach you American history in school, there?s always a heavy emphasis on ?Mass?
movements ? Revolutions, Wars ... the drive West. What they don?t usually focus on though is that each mass movement begins, ends and is sustained by INDIVIDUAL choices. Will I be better off as an British subject? Should I risk moving West? Should OUR family remain slaves? It?s that final choice we?re going to hear about now ... The story of one Washington family -- The Edmonsons -- who were part of one of the largest recorded mass-escapes of slaves in American history.
The parents were named Paul and Amelia. Paul was a free man. Amelia was a slave. And under the la...
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BILLBOARD (60 sec.)
In: (crickets)We're taking ...
OQ: ...After this news. (music fade)
PROGRAM
In: We hold these truths...
OQ: ...I'm Richard Paul. (music fade)
Erica Fox
Posted on February 28, 2006 at 06:03 AM | Permalink
Review of A Small Southern Town: The Nation's Capital In Slave Times
This program was so awe-inspiring. So much more than dramtic readings. It truly gave you a personal feeling of what truly went on in slavery times in OUR OWN BACKYARD. A must add to your programming for anytime of the year.