Speakers/Chautauqua Catalog

Name Dr. Sherri Burr
Email sburr5100@aol.com
Office Phone 505/277-5650
Address PO Box 27223
Albuquerque, NM  87125
US
Biographical Info Professor Sherri Burr’s academic credentials include a B.A. degree from Mount Holyoke College, an M.P.A. from Princeton University, and a J.D. from Yale Law School. She was the first African American female to be awarded tenure and promotion to full professor at the University of New Mexico in 1994. Professor Burr is the author or co-author of thirty-one books. In 2015, she became a Monticello fellow at the International Center for Jefferson Studies in Virginia to work on Complicated Lives: Free Blacks in Virginia, 1619-1865. Carolina Academic Press published the book, her 27th , in August 2019, and it was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in History. The book also received the 2020 New Mexico-Arizona Book Award for Best Cover Design, which included one of her own photos. *Please read the booking guidelines before applying for funds. Speaker must be contacted by host to arrange presentation date*
Program Title The Pre-Civil War Complicated Lives of People of African Descent
Program Description
Join Professor Sherri Burr, the author of Complicated Lives: Free Blacks in Virginia, 1619-1865, for a discussion on how the arrival of Africans changed the Virginia colony and the country into a multi-racial community where legal rights were advanced and restricted. Unbeknownst to most Americans, Africans and Indians possessed rights to own land (which was never stripped) and to vote (up until 1723). Slavery evolved in convoluted legal manner that was challenged after the Revolutionary War as prominent slaveholders contemplated how they could continue to hold humans. Instead of slavery being eliminated following the colonists’ successful fight for their liberty from Britain, several events increased its hold on the county, including the outlawing of the international slavery trade and the Louisiana Purchase. This brought pain to Native Americans who were dispossessed of their land and to enslaved Africans sold to the Deep South. This history of race progression and regression has repercussions for today.
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