In 2013, Azie Mira Dungey, an actress working as a re-enactor at Mount Vernon, launched a web series based on the questions she got from tourists. The series, called Ask A Slave featured the host in character as Lizzie Mae, an enslaved handmaiden to George Washington, answering real questions she’d received from tourists.A year later, Margaret Biser, a historic site tour guide, launched a Twitter account to share observations from misinformed visitors.
Last month a guy walked into our historic slave quarter and went, “This isn’t that bad!”
— Af Am History Fail (@afamhistfail) June 26, 2015
And in 2016, Bill O’Reilly, whose name appears in the byline of several books about history, found himself defending an assertion about the relative comfort of the slaves who helped build the White House.How did such a wide, varied and inaccurate understanding of slavery come about? Possibly because slavery isn’t taught effectively in many schools. One textbook in Texas called enslaved people “workers from Africa”. And a new study from the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Teaching Tolerance project found that students had little knowledge of slavery and its effects on society.As historian Hasan Kwame Jeffries writes in the report’s preface: