Black History
Stories of our ancestors
Who were the Black individuals living in and around Bartram’s Garden during the 1700s and 1800s? What were their lives like?
Since 2017, we have worked with historian Sharece Blakney to expand our understanding of this place and its past, with a specific focus on the Black history of Bartram’s Garden and nearby neighborhoods.
The historical discoveries made by Blakney speak to the humanity of people who lived in and around Bartram’s Garden in the late 18th and early 19th centuries and the inhumanity they suffered, both in their time and in their absence from the historical record. The details of their stories have the power to reach the deepest parts of us because they describe the way our ancestors were treated, how they treated others, and the essential fallacies at the heart of this nation’s founding.
Detail from Census of African Americans residing in Philadelphia and the Liberties. Vol. 4, Spring Garden & West Philadelphia (1847), Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, Swarthmore College Friends Historical Library.
Stories We Know: Recording the Black History of Bartram’s Garden and Southwest Philadelphia
Blakney’s initial research from 2017 is collected into a booklet called Stories We Know, edited by Aislinn Pentecost-Farren. The history includes a directory of people and places identified through archival research, including census records and manumission documents, and is paired with essays that reflect on the meaning of the research along with poetry by four youth interns at the Sankofa Community Farm.
The booklet is available for sale in the Welcome Center, priced at the cost of printing. A digital version can be accessed here.
This project was initiated as part of Southwest Roots, a partnership with Mural Arts Philadelphia funded by ArtPlace America.
Those We Met Along the Way: African American History and Bartram’s Garden
Blakney’s continued research into the Black history of Kingsessing and Southwest Philadelphia includes a series of vignettes further exploring the lives and histories of this area.
- Life on Oak Street
- George Bartram
- Slavery, Freedom, and Oak Street
- Torbert Ganges
- John and William Bartram: Abolition vs. Antislavery
A digital version of the collected vignettes can be accessed here.
About Sharece Blakney
Sharece Blakney is an independent historical research consultant. Her research interests focus on American slavery and freedom in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, specifically in legal and social history. Her current work, Stories We Know and Those We Met Along the Way, involves the development of the African American community in Kingsessing and Southwest Philadelphia. Previous projects include Charting a Path to Resistance, an interactive mural and mobile app commissioned by the City of Philadelphia. The mural centered on abolitionism, Black women activists, and racial violence in nineteenth-century Philadelphia.
Blakney holds an MA in American History from Rutgers University-Camden and is currently pursuing an MI in Library & Information Science with a concentration in Archives & Preservation at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.
Black History Blog
September 20, 2022
William Bartram, Indigenous Botany, and the Roots of American Medicine
Eighteenth century American medicine was closely tied to botanical knowledge. While the Bartrams’ contribution to early American medicine through their relationships with physicians in Philadelphia is well-documented, what is less...
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Publications
Research and writings by the Garden’s historians and other contributors.
Shared History
Honoring shared histories at Bartram’s Garden.