Lethe Tanner was here

Susan Cook

The Lethe Tanner Was Here podcast, tells the story of a woman born enslaved in 1781 but through self-determination and guile, she frees not only herself but over 18 family and friends from enslavement in Washington DC. Lethe’s resolve and tenacity continued after she attained her freedom as she became an integral figure in supporting educational, religious, and community-based organizations that helped the early Black community in Washington. The podcast is researched, written, produced, sound edited, and narrated by Susan Cook, who is a descendent of Lethe Tanner’s sister, Laurana. For more information about Alethia, please visit, AlethiaTanner.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episodes

  1. 05/02/2023

    Episode 1: Whose Land

    Episode 1 lays the foundations for the economic structures, the cultural practices, and the changing land and peoples that inhabit the world into which Lethe Tanner was born. Providing the context to later understand and appreciate the journey that Alethia took towards her self-empowerment and that of her community. SOURCES FOR EPISODE 1  can be found on LetheTannerWasHere.com Help support the Lethe Tanner Was Here podcast, by subscribing on the LETHE TANNER WAS HERE Patreon page. I'm just getting it going but will be posting additional information, research updates, and questions and answers. Thank you!! ……… Lethe Taner Was Here was researched, written, edited, produced, and narrated by Susan Cook ......... Special thanks to all the voices who helped bring this episode to life. So first, thanks to Patricia Williams, my lovely neighbor who read a passage from Margaret Walker’s poem, For My People. To the amazing Medicine Singers whose track Sunset I have used in this episode. They sing in an Eastern Algonquin dialect, so I’m thrilled to be able to use their song. Thanks to my dear friend Robin Kouyate and her beautiful daughter Jasmine for their voices. And to the wonderful voice over actors whom you can find on fiverr.com. They are Linton Tulloch Richard Stibbard Peter Walters Grace Jensen Soraya Martin TJ Trueh I want to give a special thanks to TJ who read the list of inventory which given the content was a difficult ask. But he gave it such beautiful and soulful reading that really gave the proper homage to those people who were enslaved..... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    27 min
  2. 01/26/2024

    Episode 2: "...shall serve Durante Vita"

    At the beginning of the 1700s, as the transatlantic slave trade picked up pace, and labor from enslaved people became the dominant labor force in the American colonies, those initial landowners in the colony of Maryland enacted ever-restrictive laws that formalized and centered slavery upon the concept of one’s race and determined that they “shall serve Durante Vita.”  It’s important to take the time now to explore this aspect of early American history, as It is very important to understand the patterns that emerged during this era because these are the underpinnings of the laws, economics, and social structures that are vital to understanding Lethe Tanner’s world ….and our own. This podcast is supported in part by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts. ………… RESEARCH SOURCES Kulikoff, Allan. Tobacco and Slaves: The Development of Southern Cultures in the Chesapeake, 1680-1800. University of North Carolina Press, 1986.SlaveVoyages.org, An excellent source for searching all sorts of data about the transatlantic slave trade.Law , Robin (ed.). The English in West Africa: The Local Correspondence of the Royal African Company of England, 1681-1699, Part 1,2, 3. Oxford, Oxford University Press , 2007Wilkerson, Isabel. Caste: The Origins of our Discontent, Random House, 2020Newspapers.comLand records from Maryland State Archives and Maryland State Archives, Land RecordsPrince George’s County Historical Society  VOICEOVER CREDITS: All the voiceover actors who helped bring this episode to life. Stacy Thomas…..reading Slave Auction poem JP Wright…..as Commander Towgood Pete McGiffen …..reading Royal African Company charter Bobby Lax…..as Captain Phillips Bud Lucas…..as Francis Nicholson Uni V. Sol…..reading Maryland Gazette Talitha Huddleston..…..reading from Caste Autumn Holley…..reading punishments against women  Matt Davies…..as Joseph Belt Eric Little…..reading Maryland laws defining slavery/miscegenation Grace Diane Jensen…..as Mary Belt Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    22 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
14 Ratings

About

The Lethe Tanner Was Here podcast, tells the story of a woman born enslaved in 1781 but through self-determination and guile, she frees not only herself but over 18 family and friends from enslavement in Washington DC. Lethe’s resolve and tenacity continued after she attained her freedom as she became an integral figure in supporting educational, religious, and community-based organizations that helped the early Black community in Washington. The podcast is researched, written, produced, sound edited, and narrated by Susan Cook, who is a descendent of Lethe Tanner’s sister, Laurana. For more information about Alethia, please visit, AlethiaTanner.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.