Don Wildman
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
At Monticello and Mount Vernon, enslaved people built and sustained the homes of presidents.
In Charleston and New Orleans, auction blocks once stood near busy docks where human lives were bought and sold alongside cotton and sugar.
In Washington, D.C., enslaved labor helped construct the White House and the Capitol, enduring symbols of liberty and freedom constructed amid bondage.
Follow the geography and the system comes into wider focus.
Tobacco in Virginia, rice in the Carolinas, sugar along the Mississippi, cotton spreading across the Deep South.
These landscapes generated immense wealth that flowed north into banks, insurance companies, factories, railroads, universities, institutions, and infrastructure that benefited from slavery even as many denied responsibility for it.
Slavery built one America while another claimed distance.
The nation divided not only by belief but by geography, between those who depended openly on enslavement and those who profited while looking away.
To understand the United States, we must read the land itself.
Because slavery was not a side story.
It was a national system, embedded in the ground beneath our feet.
It is American History Hit.
I'm Don Wildman.
One of the things we try to do on this series is find a clear path into history that can otherwise feel dense and overwhelming.
Not to simplify it, but open it up.
This episode is especially important in this regard because our story is so often relegated to the past when it has so much to do with our shared present.
We'll discuss today the earlier years of American slavery, where this system came from, how it took shape on this continent, and why decisions made at the beginning of this nation mattered so long afterwards.
For this, we're fortunate to have the guidance of historian Justine Hill Edwards, author of a number of award-winning books and publications, including Savings and Trust, The Rise and Betrayal of the Freedmen's Bank, which won the 2025 Frederick Douglass Book Prize.
as well as Unfree Markets, The Slave's Economy, and the Rise of Capitalism in South Carolina.