Out of the Shadows: Remembering New Hampshire’s Black Past
Live Sunday July 30, 11 a.m.
Peterborough UU Church and
Streamed http://www.monadnocklyceum.org
Music by Virginia Eskin at 10:30 a.m.
JerriAnne Boggis invites us to look at our state’s history through fresh eyes. As Executive Director of New Hampshire’s Black Heritage Trail, Boggis is committed to sharing the stories of our Black communities and residents, including Harriet E. Wilson, America’s first Black female novelist, and Wentworth Cheswell, the first Black person voted into public office. Such heroes, along with the 2003 discovery of the African Burial Ground in Portsmouth, led to the creation of this Trail and a fuller understanding of our true history.
Boggis, who came to the U.S. from Jamaica and eventually settled in New England, holds a master’s degree in creative writing from Southern New Hampshire University. The Entrepreneurs Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Trust named JerriAnne the recipient of their 2022 Social Innovation Leader Award.
Writer, educator, and community activist, she seeks to illuminate the complexity and richness of 350 years of Black history in New Hampshire. Boggis believes knowing that history can help us find empathy and common ground as we move forward