Skip to content
No results
  • Home
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • Our History
    • Why the Oyster Shell?
  • Events
    • #PAVONIA1643 Billboard Campaign 2022
    • Dismantling Eugenics 2021
    • Homelands Gathering 2020
    • 2018 Inaugural Lenape Pow Wow
  • Research
    • Remembering Pavonia
    • Indigenous Foodways
    • Passaic Fish Weir Complex
    • Indigenous Place-Names Map
    • A Timeline of Dispossession, Enslavement and Extraction
  • Who We Are
  • News
  • Contact Us
    • Opportunities
The Public History Project

an interdisciplinary research consortium

  • Home
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • Our History
    • Why the Oyster Shell?
  • Events
    • #PAVONIA1643 Billboard Campaign 2022
    • Dismantling Eugenics 2021
    • Homelands Gathering 2020
    • 2018 Inaugural Lenape Pow Wow
  • Research
    • Remembering Pavonia
    • Indigenous Foodways
    • Passaic Fish Weir Complex
    • Indigenous Place-Names Map
    • A Timeline of Dispossession, Enslavement and Extraction
  • Who We Are
  • News
  • Contact Us
    • Opportunities
The Public History Project

an interdisciplinary research consortium

  • What we are inspired by

Disability as Colonialism / Colonialism as Disability

Real Art Ways presents a conversation between New York-based artist Alex Dolores Salerno, Puerto Rico-based artist Miguel González Cordero, and exhibiting artist Kevin Quiles Bonilla. On Thursday July 22 at 6:30 PM EDT, the three artists presented their work and…

  • PHP
  • July 22, 2021
  • What we are inspired by

Key Shinnecock Burial Ground At Sugar Loaf Hill Will At Long Last Be Returned To Tribe

“Tuesday, July 20, was a day of celebration for members of the Shinnecock Nation, some of whom gathered at the summit of Sugar Loaf Hill, the tribe’s most sacred burial ground, to mark its return. The Shinnecock Nation Graves Protection…

  • PHP
  • July 21, 2021
  • What we are inspired by

Professor Pepijn Brandon receives Vidi grant to research Land Grabbing and Dutch Expansion

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Professor Pepijn Brandon receives Vidi grant of 800,000 euros to research the history of land grabbing and Dutch expansion during the 16th-18th Century The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) has awarded 78 experienced researchers a Vidi…

  • PHP
  • July 14, 2021
  • What we are inspired by

Amsterdam’s mayor apologizes for the city’s role in slavery

On July 1, 2021, mayor Femke Halsema of Amsterdam apologized, on behalf of the city council, for the involvement of former city governments in the worldwide slave trade and slavery. She did so during the annual national commemoration of trans-Atlantic…

  • PHP
  • July 1, 2021
Prev
1 2

Connect with Us

Copyright © 2025 The Public History Project