Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

There was a huge slave market on Wall Street, and a new marker will remind everyone

Harper’s Magazine illustration of the New York City slave market in 1643
Harper’s Magazine illustration of the New York City slave market in 1643
Harper’s Magazine illustration of the New York City slave market in 1643
(Harper’s/Wikipedia Commons)

It’s one thing to understand generally that America was built on the backs of enslaved men and women from Africa. It’s another thing altogether to see a historical marker clearly stating that fact, right on New York City’s Wall Street.

That’s coming soon.

WNYC reports that the public sign — the first of its kind in the city — will make it clear that 1700s New York had an official location for buying, selling, and renting human beings. It's been approved by the City Council and will be unveiled June 19.

The planned location is described as a “pocket park on the northeast corner of Wall and Water Streets,” just a block from the historic location of the slave market that was on the corner of Wall and Pearl Streets from 1711 to 1762.

Thousands of men, women, and children were sold there, during a time when slaves helped build City Hall.

According to WNYC, which obtained a draft of the marker, it includes the phrase, “Slavery was introduced to Manhattan in 1626.”

“It’s not a feel-good story,” Thomas J. Davis, a professor at Arizona State University who writes about slavery in the North, told WNYC. “It’s not a story that people have wanted to hear.” But, he said, “folks need to ‘fess up and understand the long, black roots that New York has.”

Read more and listen to the story at WNYC.

Further reading:

See More:

More in Life

Culture
What happens when a tradwife has to put her money where her mouth isWhat happens when a tradwife has to put her money where her mouth is
Culture

The buzzy new novel Yesteryear offers a sadistic influencer comeuppance fantasy.

By Constance Grady
The Highlight
The fight for paid parental leave is more winnable than you thinkThe fight for paid parental leave is more winnable than you think
The Highlight

The playbook has been hiding in plain sight.

By Rachel Cohen Booth
Culture
The diabolical, millennial obsession with chicken Caesar wrapsThe diabolical, millennial obsession with chicken Caesar wraps
Culture

Can a CCW and a Diet Coke really heal millennial ennui?

By Alex Abad-Santos
The Highlight
Is it wrong to send your kid to private school?Is it wrong to send your kid to private school?
The Highlight

How to think about what’s best for your child — and for all the other children, too.

By Sigal Samuel
The Highlight
What do we lose when we erase ugliness?What do we lose when we erase ugliness?
The Highlight

Beyond the beauty binary.

By Constance Grady
Future Perfect
Why it feels like there’s never enough time for your relationshipsWhy it feels like there’s never enough time for your relationships
Future Perfect

The problem is not the number of hours. It’s “time confetti.”

By Sigal Samuel