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Showing Original Post only (View all)I used to lead tours at a plantation. You won’t believe the questions I got about slavery. [View all]
http://www.vox.com/2015/6/29/8847385/what-i-learned-from-leading-tours-about-slavery-at-a-plantationUp until a few weeks ago, I worked at a historic site in the South that included an old house and a nearby plantation. My job was to lead tours and tell guests about the people who made plantations possible: the slaves.
The site I worked at most frequently had more than 100 enslaved workers associated with it 27 people serving the household alone, outnumbering the home's three white residents by a factor of nine. Yet many guests who visited the house and took the tour reacted with hostility to hearing a presentation that focused more on the slaves than on the owners.
"He said, "Listen, I just wanted to say that dragging all this slavery stuff up again is bringing down America""
The first time it happened, I had just finished a tour of the home. People were filing out of their seats, and one man stayed behind to talk to me. He said, "Listen, I just wanted to say that dragging all this slavery stuff up again is bringing down America."
I started to protest, but he interrupted me. "You didn't know. You're young. But America is the greatest country in the world, and these people out there, they'd do anything to make America less great." He was loud and confusing, and I was 22 years old and he seemed like a million feet tall.
The site I worked at most frequently had more than 100 enslaved workers associated with it 27 people serving the household alone, outnumbering the home's three white residents by a factor of nine. Yet many guests who visited the house and took the tour reacted with hostility to hearing a presentation that focused more on the slaves than on the owners.
"He said, "Listen, I just wanted to say that dragging all this slavery stuff up again is bringing down America""
The first time it happened, I had just finished a tour of the home. People were filing out of their seats, and one man stayed behind to talk to me. He said, "Listen, I just wanted to say that dragging all this slavery stuff up again is bringing down America."
I started to protest, but he interrupted me. "You didn't know. You're young. But America is the greatest country in the world, and these people out there, they'd do anything to make America less great." He was loud and confusing, and I was 22 years old and he seemed like a million feet tall.

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I used to lead tours at a plantation. You won’t believe the questions I got about slavery. [View all]
KamaAina
Jun 2015
OP
Interesting...the one plantation I toured, the guide referred to them as "servants"
joeybee12
Jun 2015
#1
My ex toured one several years back (in Charleston, no less), and it was clear
bullwinkle428
Jun 2015
#4
Some of us would say what makes America great is our ability to rectify wrongs and expand rights.
trotsky
Jun 2015
#2
I was going to quote that also. Exactly. If you could be shot, or your family sold off, of course
uppityperson
Jul 2015
#44
... or chop off one of their feet. But then that was for trying to escape.
Joe Chi Minh
Jul 2015
#50
I went to Mount Vernon several years ago, and the tour guide(s) talked about the slaves
phylny
Jun 2015
#26
We must not talk about the things that make people of privilege uncomfortable
me b zola
Jun 2015
#17
I've heard some like that--they seem to think the white Americans did the blacks a favor to bring
raccoon
Jul 2015
#32
I took a bus tour once from New Orleans of a number of plantation homes. . .
markpkessinger
Jun 2015
#21
There's this fear amongst many whites that admiting it happened will "stir em up"....
Spitfire of ATJ
Jul 2015
#49
Just curious, did you know the history of the plantation or were you an employee?
akbacchus_BC
Jul 2015
#53