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The Archive
Unfiltered stories of Black resistance, erased heroes, and hidden truths. We connect the past to today’s fights so the next generation never has to ask “why didn’t they teach us this?”


How Franklin and Armfield Turned Human Trafficking Into Big Business
Franklin and Armfield became one of the largest slave trading companies in the United States during the 1830s. Operating primarily from Alexandria, Virginia, the company purchased enslaved Black people in the Upper South and transported them to the Deep South, where the cotton economy created enormous demand for labor.
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1 day ago3 min read


The Story America Doesn’t Tell About Black Wealth
The conversation around generational wealth often ignores how much Black wealth in America was violently disrupted or stolen.
Black families lost land through racial violence, discriminatory laws, fraudulent contracts, unequal courts, predatory lending, and government policies that protected segregation and economic exclusion.
smartbrowngirlllc
May 183 min read


They Defended Themselves. The Government Executed 17 of Them.
In 1917, 17 Black soldiers from the 24th Infantry Regiment were executed by the U.S. Army following events in Houston, Texas, known as the Camp Logan incident.
The soldiers were stationed in a segregated city and faced ongoing harassment from police and civilians. After police assaulted a Black woman and arrested a soldier who intervened, rumors spread that he had been killed in custody.
That night, a group of soldiers entered the city. Violence followed, resulting in 19 de
smartbrowngirlllc
May 23 min read


The “Superstitions” We Inherited Were Not Random
Many practices often labeled as “superstitions” in Black communities originated as survival strategies.
During slavery and segregation, behavior was shaped by risk, surveillance, and limited access to resources. Actions like limiting movement at night, being cautious with speech, and strictly protecting possessions were practical responses to those conditions.
Over time, these behaviors were passed down, but the original context was often lost.
smartbrowngirlllc
Apr 142 min read


What Happens When History Is Shortened
Historical amnesia doesn’t require deleting history. It works by simplifying it.
When key details are removed, events lose context. Without context, people can’t connect past decisions to present outcomes.
This affects how issues like voting rights, education, and inequality are understood. Policies that follow long patterns begin to look new. Structural problems begin to look individual.
That shift reduces accountability.
smartbrowngirlllc
Apr 35 min read
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