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VERSION:2.0
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NAME:Gwinnett County Public Library
X-WR-CALNAME:Gwinnett County Public Library
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:f89679c3-fb73-4a11-b21b-f03a24826789
SEQUENCE:0
DTSTAMP:20260716T155209Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240917T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240917T130000
SUMMARY:Community | Black America: East End of London 
LOCATION:Virtual\nVirtual
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Virtual;X-APPLE-RADIUS=10;
 X-TITLE=Virtual:geo:0,0
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DESCRIPTION:Join scholar\, Dr. Hannah-Rose Murray\, as she gives a virtual
  tour of Black lives and experiences in London's East End\, highlighting s
 ites that have impacted British society.\n\n.\nhttps://gwinnettpl.libnet.i
 nfo/event/11205505
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>The virtual tour will focus on the sites w
 here African Americans performed\, lectured\, and preached outside the cit
 y center of London.</p>\n<p>Black freedom fighters traveled to the British
  Isles during the 19th century to educate audiences about the brutalities 
 of slavery\, to write and publish their narratives\, to raise money to leg
 ally purchase themselves or family members\, or to settle and work in the 
 area. In their radical and politicized journeys of freedom\, they traveled
  thousands of miles to give lectures in large cities like London and Edinb
 urgh\, and to small villages like Bakewell\, Keswick and Pembroke.</p>\n<p
 >The reputation of the East End as a violent\, lawless\, slum-filled place
  began to emerge in the late 19th century. African Americans visited sites
  like Stepney\, Whitechapel\, Mile End\, Limehouse\, and Three Mills from 
 the 1850s onwards\, often speaking to working-class communities. Many of t
 he original sites no longer remain - a mixture of gentrification and bombi
 ng damage from WW2 for example - but it's important to recognize the impac
 t Black Americans had on the people in East London\, and how the rich\, vi
 brant and exciting history of the East End has always been shaped by Black
  activists and the antislavery movement as a whole.</p>\n<hr />\n<p><img s
 rc="https://static.libnet.info/frontend-images/events/gwinnettpl/Hannah_Ro
 se_Murray_headshot.jpg" width="93" height="93" alt="" /></p>\n<p>Dr. Hanna
 h-Rose Murray is a historian based at Queen Mary\, University of London. H
 er research focuses on Black activism in the transatlantic. Her first book
 \, <em>Advocates of Freedom: African American Transatlantic Abolitionism i
 n the British Isles</em> was published in 2020 by Cambridge University Pre
 ss\, and her accompanying website\, www.frederickdouglassinbritain.com att
 empts to map as many Black activist speaking locations as possible across 
 Britain and Ireland. She has organized numerous community events including
  talks\, school workshops\, heritage plaques\, performances\, podcasts\, p
 lays\, exhibitions\, and walking tours on both sides of the Atlantic.</p>\
 n<hr />\n<p style="text-align: center\;">Registration is required for onli
 ne access. Registration closes at the start of the program.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<
 /p>\n<p style="text-align: center\;">Please contact the Customer Contact C
 enter if in need of assistance accessing the program at 770-978-5154.</p>\
 n<p>* Presented by Adult Services&nbsp\;</p>\nhttps://gwinnettpl.libnet.in
 fo/event/11205505
URL;VALUE=URI:https://gwinnettpl.libnet.info/event/11205505
ATTACH:https://static.libnet.info/images/events/gwinnettpl/London.jpg
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