Hopes and Impediments: War and Strategies for Belonging (Warner)
Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire
2025 Elinor Williams Hooker Tea Talk Series, Expanded
The principle of maneuvering in war emphasizes flexibility and adapting to changing conditions. Historically, African Americans had to navigate oppressive political and social environments, using spiritual and cultural tools to maneuver within systems designed to suppress them.
This session will highlight how, rather than passively accepting their imposed status, African and African American involvement in early wars like the Revolutionary War and the Civil War was both an offensive strategy and a spiritual defiance against a society that deemed them inferior.
Presenters:
Glenn Knoblock, Independent Scholar, Historian, Author, NH
Bob Sheppard, Lecturer, "Maine's Tuskegee Airman: A Son's Perspective"
Moderator: Mack Scottn III, Director of Undergraduate Studies, Brown University, RI
For more information, visit Elinor Williams Hooker Tea Talks 2025 - Black Heritage Trail NH