On the Road to “Black Majority”

“Which of Britain’s thirteen North American colonies was more than half Black long before the American Revolution?” Retired Duke University historian Peter H. Wood finds that he can still stump groups of students, teachers, and parents with that question, even though it has been fifty years since he published Black Majority, his landmark study of slavery in colonial South Carolina. Today that book is taking on a fresh new life and proving more pertinent than ever.

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Nell’s Kitchen, Larry’s War Room

“Do you need a cup of coffee, comrade?”  The offer was generous, the home welcoming.  “Open up that thermos,” Larry would say to the visitor, tapping his pack of cigarettes on the kitchen table, with its littered ashtray and open books.  “Nell just made a fresh pot,” he’d announce, gesturing with a Styrofoam cup.  “Clear off that chair.  Have a seat.”

Years later, the cigarettes would disappear, a personal victory over the cancerous southern-based tobacco industry, a win that added decades to his life, before his lungs gave out.  It was not his only battle with the insanity of his beloved South—far from it.  “We have lots of snakes to kill,” he’d say, ever the Texan, even on Tobacco Road.

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