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We follow a paper trail back in time to learn about the laborers -- some of them enslaved -- who put their backs into the graceful old building that now houses the National Portrait Gallery. When construction began on th...
Who Built This Place? is an episode from PORTRAITS by Deborah Sisum. We follow a paper trail back in time to learn about the laborers -- some of them enslaved -- who put their backs into the graceful old building that now houses the Nationa...
This episode belongs to PORTRAITS.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 21, 2025, 24:02 long, audio available.
We follow a paper trail back in time to learn about the laborers -- some of them enslaved -- who put their backs into the graceful old building that now houses the National Portrait Gallery. When construction began on the building in the 1830s, Washington D.C. was in the midst of a mini building boom as a seat of freedom and democracy. Yet the city also had an active slave trade. By sifting through reams of microfilm and estate records, historian Michael Hussey was able to establish that at least 17 men who worked at this site were enslaved. His next step was to try to sketch a portrait, however faint, of one of their lives.
You can listen to Who Built This Place? online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Who Built This Place? is an episode from PORTRAITS by Deborah Sisum.
This episode is 24:02 long.
This episode was published on Jan 21, 2025.
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You can listen to Who Built This Place? on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Who Built This Place? is from PORTRAITS by Deborah Sisum.
Published Jan 21, 2025 and 24:02 long