New Book to Detail the Work of the Colored Conventions Project

The Colored Conventions Project (CCP) is a scholarly and community research project focused on digitally preserving Black political activism from the 1830s to 1890s. Founded in a graduate class at the University of Delaware, the CCP brings together interdisciplinary scholars and students, librarians and independent researchers, national teaching partners and media specialists, academic institutions, and members of the public. In 2020, CCP became one of three flagship projects of the Center for Black Digital Research at Pennsylvania State University.

Over the course of the seven decades in the nineteenth century, Black men and women traveled to attend meetings advertised as “Colored Conventions.” These political gatherings offered opportunities for free-born and formerly enslaved African Americans to organize and strategize for racial justice. For example, the National Convention of Colored Men, held in October 1864, convened leading abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass, at the Wesleyan Methodist Church, which is still standing in downtown Syracuse. At that convention, organizers presented the Bill of Wrongs and Rights, a document outlining inequalities faced by African Americans. The CCP digitizes documents like these, along with period images related to the Colored Conventions Movement, to create interactive online exhibits that provide insight and understanding of early Black organizing.

Gabrielle Foreman is the cofounder and faculty director of the CCP. She is is professor of English, African American studies and history, and holds an endowed chair in liberal arts at Pennsylvania State University. She is now serving as the 2021 Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities at Syracuse Univerity. Professor Foreman is the lead editor of a new book The Colored Conventions Movement: Black Organizing in the Nineteenth Century (University of North Carolina Press, 2021.)

Dr. Foreman earned her bachelor’s degree in American studies at Amherst College in Massachusetts. She was in one of the earliest cohorts of the doctoral program in ethnic studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Before joining the faculty at Penn State in 2019, Dr. Foreman was the Ned B. Allen Professor of English and professor of history and Africana studies at the University of Delaware.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Higher Education Gifts or Grants of Interest to African Americans

Here is this week’s news of grants or gifts to historically Black colleges and universities or for programs of particular interest to African Americans in higher education.

Three Black Leaders Appointed to Diversity Positions at Colleges and Universities

The three scholars appointed to admininstraive positions relating to diversity are Marsha McGriff at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, JeffriAnne Wilder at Oberlin College in Ohio, and Branden Delk at Illinois state University.

Remembering the Impact of Black Women on College Basketball

As former college basketball players, we are grateful that more eyes are watching, respecting and enjoying women’s college basketball. However, we are equally troubled by the manner in which the history of women’s basketball has been inaccurately represented during the Caitlin Clark craze.

Trinity College President Joanne Berger-Sweeney Announces Retirement

In 2014, Dr. Berger-Sweeney became the first African American and first woman president of Trinity College since its founding in 1823. Over the past decade, the college has experienced growth in enrollment and graduation rates, hired more diverse faculty, and improved campus infrastructure.

Featured Jobs