Unspoken History Treasures

Unspoken History Treasures Teaches history using actual museum quality Artifacts, Documents, and Collectibles from 1600 - Present

Special thanks to the Massapequa Historical Society for keeping the history  ✨And his daughter Josie who made us feel li...
05/23/2026

Special thanks to the Massapequa Historical Society for keeping the history ✨And his daughter Josie who made us feel like we knew him for years🥰️ I love keeping the Ancestors alive♥️

🎷History🎷 History🎷 History🎷 speaking for the Ancestors 🎶🎵🎶🎵
04/24/2026

🎷History🎷 History🎷 History🎷 speaking for the Ancestors 🎶🎵🎶🎵

04/09/2026

🎷 Swingville: “Buddy” Tate & the Sound of Jazz 🎷

Join the Massapequa Historical Society for a fascinating afternoon of music, history, and local connections!

We’re excited to welcome guest speaker Carol A. Gordon, who will present “Swingville: ‘Buddy’ Tate.” Discover how the legendary jazz saxophonist Buddy Tate and the world of jazz connect to Massapequa’s own history. Carol’s Unspoken History Treasures presentations bring overlooked stories to life in engaging and surprising ways.

📍 Old Grace Church
4755 Merrick Rd., Massapequa, NY
📅 Sunday, April 26, 2026
⏰ 2:00 PM

Enjoy the presentation and stay to chat—light refreshments will be served.

Come learn something new, meet fellow history lovers, and explore another incredible chapter of our community’s past.

🔗 www.massapequahistoricalsociety.org

02/17/2026

I'm back my page was hacked...

Honored to meet Lieutenant Governor of New York State, Antonio Delgado, at the 22nd Annual Black History Month Celebrati...
02/06/2026

Honored to meet Lieutenant Governor of New York State, Antonio Delgado, at the 22nd Annual Black History Month Celebration at the Islamic Center of Long Island. It was truly a pleasure meeting you—thank you for the conversation. 🖤✊🏾 Looking forward to the campaign button you’ll be sending. You are a part of history. 😆

✨Grateful for anUnforgettable Black History Month Celebration ✨Sundays 22nd Annual Black History Month Celebration at th...
02/03/2026

✨Grateful for an
Unforgettable Black History Month Celebration ✨
Sundays 22nd Annual Black History Month Celebration at the Islamic Center of Long Island was truly powerful and inspiring. It was an honor to be part of a space filled with history, education, culture, and honored our past while inspiring our future.
A heartfelt thank you to the Islamic Center of Long Island for the invitation, and special thanks to Zainab Bey for your continued support and dedication, and to the Urban League of Long Island for sponsoring Unspoken History Treasures Museum and helping bring living history directly to the people.
Thank you to everyone who came out, listened, engaged, and celebrated Black history with us.

ThePast

✨ Unspoken History Treasures — Presenting Tomorrow ✨Join us as Unspoken History Treasures brings authentic historical ar...
02/01/2026

✨ Unspoken History Treasures — Presenting Tomorrow ✨

Join us as Unspoken History Treasures brings authentic historical artifacts to life, sharing powerful stories that honor our past and inspire our future. 🖤✊🏾

📅 When: February 1st, 2026
📍 Where: ICLI – Islamic Center of Long Island
🕑 Time: 2:00 PM

Come experience history beyond the textbooks during our 22nd Annual Black History Month Celebration. You don’t want to miss this meaningful presentation!

✨ Unspoken History Treasures ✨So much history has been overlooked, unheard, and untaught—but it still matters. 📚✨Unspoke...
01/16/2026

✨ Unspoken History Treasures ✨

So much history has been overlooked, unheard, and untaught—but it still matters. 📚✨
Unspoken History Treasures brings powerful, educational resources to light that inspire learning, conversation, and deeper understanding.

If you’re interested in bookings that educate, empower, and preserve truth, we’d love to connect with you. 🌍📖

📲 For bookings and inquiries:
Email me at: [email protected]

Because preserving history means educating the future. 💫📚

Unspoken History Treasures wishes Carol A. Gordon a Happy Birthday with a few vintage historical greeting cards 🎂
01/03/2026

Unspoken History Treasures wishes Carol A. Gordon a Happy Birthday with a few vintage historical greeting cards 🎂

Happy New Year! Thankful and grateful from the collection.Postcards 1907 and 1910, Harper's Weekly January 30, 1864 "Ema...
01/01/2026

Happy New Year! Thankful and grateful from the collection.
Postcards 1907 and 1910, Harper's Weekly January 30, 1864 "Emancipated Slaves, white (mulatto) and colored. Wilson Chinn; Charles Taylor; Augusta Broujey; Mary Johnson; Isaac White; Rebecca Huger; Robert Whitehead; Rosina Downs
EMANCIPATED SLAVES, WHITE AND COLORED.—The children are from the schools established in New Orleans, by order of Major-General Banks.
[Illustration on p. 69]

No. 1. Mercer Street, New York.
To the Editor of Harper’s Weekly:
The group of emancipated slaves whose portraits I send you were brought by Colonel Hanks and Mr. Phillip Bacon from New Orleans, where they were set free by General Butler. Mr. Bacon went to New Orleans with our army, and was for eighteen months employed as Assistant-Superintendent of Freedmen, under the care of Colonel Hanks. He established the first school in Louisiana for emancipated slaves, and these children were among his pupils. He will soon return to Louisiana to resume his labor.
Rebecca Huger is eleven years old, and was a slave in her father’s house, the special attendant of a girl a little older than herself. To all appearance she is perfectly white. Her complexion, hair, and features show not the slightest trace of negro blood. In the few months during which she has been at school she has learned to read well, and writes as neatly as most children of her age. Her mother and grandmother live in New Orleans, where they support themselves comfortably by their own labor. The grandmother, an intelligent mulatto, told Mr. Bacon that she had “raised” a large family of children, but these are all that are left to her.
Rosina Downs is not quite seven years old. She is a fair child, with blonde complexion and silky hair. Her father is in the rebel army. She has one sister as white as herself, and three brothers who are darker. Her mother, a bright mulatto, lives in New Orleans in a poor hut, and has hard work to support her family.
Charles Taylor is eight years old. His complexion is very fair, his hair light and silky. Three out of five boys in any school in New York are darker than he. Yet this white boy, with his mother, as he declares, has been twice sold as a slave. First by his father and “owner,” Alexander Wethers, of Lewis County, Virginia, to a slave-trader named Harrison, who sold them to Mr. Thornhill of New Orleans. This man fled at the approach of our army, and his slaves were liberated by General Butler. The boy is decidedly intelligent, and though he has been at school less than a year he reads and writes very well. His mother is a mulatto; she had one daughter sold into Texas before she herself left Virginia, and one son who, she supposes, is with his father in Virginia.
These three children, to all appearance of unmixed white race, came to Philadelphia last December, and were taken by their protector, Mr. Bacon, to the St. Lawrence Hotel on Chestnut Street. Within a few hours, Mr. Bacon informed me, he was notified by the landlord that they must leave. The children, he said, had been slaves, and must therefore be colored persons, and he kept a hotel for white people. From this hospitable establishment the children were taken to the “Continental,” where they were received without hesitation.
Wilson Chinn is about 60 years old, he was “raised” by Isaac Howard of Woodford County, Kentucky. When 21 years old he was taken down the river and sold to Volsey B. Marmillion, a sugar planter about 45 miles above New Orleans. This man was accustomed to brand his negroes, and Wilson has on his forehead the letters “V. B. M.” Of the 210 slaves on this plantation 105 left at one time and came into the Union camp. Thirty of them had been branded like cattle with a hot iron, four of them on the forehead, and the others on the breast or arm.
Augusta Boujey is nine years old. Her mother, who is almost white, was owned by her half-brother, named Solamon, who still retains two of her children.
Mary Johnson was cook in her master’s family in New Orleans. On her left arm are scars of three cuts given to her by her mistress with a rawhide. On her back are scars of more than fifty cuts given by her master. The occasion was that one morning she was half an hour behind time in bringing up his five o’clock cup of coffee. As the Union army approached she ran away from her master, and has since been employed by Colonel Hanks as cook.
Isaac White is a black boy of eight years; but none the less intelligent than his whiter companions. He has been in school about seven months, and I venture to say that not one boy in fifty would have made as much improvement in that space of time.
Robert Whitehead—the Reverend Mr. Whitehead perhaps we ought to style him, since he is a regularly-ordained preacher—was born in Baltimore. He was taken to Norfolk, Virginia, by a Dr. A. F. N. Cook, and sold for $1525; from Norfolk he was taken to New Orleans where he was bought for $1775 by a Dr. Leslie, who hired him out as house and ship painter. When he had earned and paid over that sum to his master, he suggested that a small present for himself would be quite appropriate. Dr. Leslie thought the request reasonable, and made him a donation of a whole quarter of a dollar. The reverend gentleman can read and write well, and is a very stirring speaker. Just now he belongs to the church militant, having enlisted in the United States army.
A large photograph of the whole group which you reproduce has been taken, and cartes de visite of the separate figures. They are for sale at the rooms of the National Freedman’s Relief Association, No. 1 Mercer Street, New York, or I will send them by mail on receipt of the price: $1 for the large picture, 25 cents each for the small ones. The profits to go to the support of the schools in Louisiana.

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Post Office Box 127
Massapequa, NY
11758

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