Introduction

As we look at the history of slavery and race in America, we are engaging in a debate about ourselves, about what it means to exercise freedom, and to be a citizen of the United States.

What is this resource and what is its purpose?

What is this? The history articles present brief, scholarship-based snapshots of significant U.S. and St. Louis events. These are not comprehensive but aim to introduce readers to lesser-known historical perspectives, actors, and events.

Why is this important? As James Baldwin said, “History is not the past. It is the present. We carry our history with us. We are our history.” Many political debates and societal issues today stem from past decisions. Understanding these choices and their effects is crucial to improving our society.

What will I learn? We aim to show how racial views have shaped our nation's social, political, legal, and cultural development. We argue, as many historians do, that beliefs in Black racial "inferiority" and White racial "supremacy" have influenced our country alongside the goals of freedom and democracy. Thus, we focus on two themes:

We examine the impact that the United States’ history with slavery and segregation has had on the Black community, particularly by controlling access to where Black people could live (land and housing) and what they could do to make money (economic livelihood).

Who is our audience?

Students, St. Louis community members, and the public will find valuable resources on The Saint Louis Story. Within each snapshot look for headings highlighting relevant material for students and community members.

Students

This header highlights materials geared for middle and high school as well as college students. Community members may also find these resources valuable.

We explore the ways that the hopes, dreams, patience, frustration, and anger drove the African American community to cultivate thriving communities and to push the United States toward a more perfect expression of our ideals of freedom and democracy.

We hope these snapshots inspire deeper study and have provided links for further learning. We referenced Black scholars to highlight their important contributions to the nation's story.

Community Members

This header highlights materials geared for or created by community members. Middle and high school students as well as college students may also find these resources valuable.

Our Approach

  • We approach this narrative from an interdisciplinary perspective, relying on research from history, sociology, and race theory. In adopting a sociological/ historical approach to slavery and racism, we agree with historian Ira Berlin’s (1998) assessment that “[r]ace, no less than class, is the product of history, and it only exists on the contested social terrain in which men and women struggle to control their destinies” (p. 1). And, as sociologists Eduardo Bonilla-Silva (2018) has noted, “notions of racial difference are human creations rather than eternal, essential categories” (p. 8).

    In focusing on the sociological development of systemic racism, we rely upon the research and theories of two distinguished sociologists, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva and Joe R. Feagin. Both sociologists study racism in the context of African Americans in the United States. As such, their definitions of systemic (or structural) racism are focused on the experiences and opportunities (or lack thereof) for white people and Black people in the United States.

    Bonilla-Silva (2018) defines systemic racism as “the totality of the social relations and practices that reinforce white privilege” (p. 8). Feagin (2006) defines systemic racism as a system that:

    “[E]ncompasses a broad range of racialized dimensions of this [American] society: the racist framing, racist ideology, stereotyped attitudes, racist emotions, discriminatory habits and actions, and extensive racist institutions developed over the centuries by whites.” (p. xii)

  • In this site, we are not analyzing individual expressions of racism as unique acts. Nor are we engaging in a finger pointing exercise that separates heroes from villains in U.S. history. We explore how deeply held beliefs about the inferiority of the Black “race” has influenced the formation of the United States as a nation. We detail how the nation’s laws, conventions, and political system were influenced by White assumptions and fears about Black people to demonstrate how systemic racism has permeated all aspects of U.S. history. As Eduardo Bonilla-Silva (2018) has noted, “we are all affected by racialization and racial ideology” (p. 164).

    We also assert that systemic racism has remained “masked” from the dominant population because of its adaptability and subtly of expression in modern American life. This work is intended to encourage an honest conversation — rooted in historical evidence and demonstrated through sociological data — about the horrific effects that systemic racism has had on our nation, our states, our cities, but most importantly, upon us as a “United” people.

  • Historians have long debated the appropriate way to narrate African American history and have struggled to strike a balance between accurately describing victimization alongside agency. We recognize that this history focuses more on the ways that African Americans have been oppressed. In doing so, we do not intend to discredit the agency and heritage of African Americans. Our purpose is to look at how systemic racism has led to the ongoing struggles we face in the United States today. As such, we highlight the victimization experienced and perpetuated over 400 years of American history.

    We are also conscious of the fact that the very narrative of white people versus Black people may, in some ways, reinforce the separation that we trace from 1619 onward. It is not our intention to restrict the narrative to a simple binary. To the extent that Black/white language has been used historically, we rely upon it to demonstrate the centrality that notions of race have played in the formation of the United States.

  • We have divided the narrative by centuries. We start by tracing the early experience of African Americans in 1619 and overview how racial views from Europe influenced the early structures of governance from the colonies through the founding of the United States to the end of the nineteenth century. While not comprehensive, we explore the ways that attitudes, actions, ideology, and institutions systematically formed the United States into a nation divided between white people and Black people.

    We focus on key events that reveal the attitudes, actions, ideologies, and institutions within Missouri and the United States, that demonstrate the ways that racism adapted and infused itself more deeply into the structural framework of the country.

  • As we look at the history of slavery and race in America – more specifically in Saint Louis and Missouri – we are engaging in a debate about ourselves, about what it means to exercise freedom and about what it means to be a citizen of the United States. To quote Berlin again,

    “The tenacious nature of this argument [about slavery] speaks to the centrality of freedom in American life, which, in turn, is embedded in the very meaning of American citizenship as stated in the nation’s founding charters and in its connection to the nation’s most critical contemporary social problem: racism. For the American people, the struggle to abolish slavery, secured by constitutional amendment almost 150 years ago, remains very much alive among us and about us. (p. 1) “

    This website and this historical section continue that dialogue. We hope that by elevating this particular story within U.S. history we can more intentionally study the ongoing social/ political/ economic/ cultural struggles we face today. As communities organize to advocate for more economic opportunity, community-based policing, and fair access to health care and education, we all benefit from understanding the systems that contributed to the inequalities and biases experienced today.

    We also hope that this overview of systemic racism in Saint Louis and Missouri is a first step toward the collaborative effort of creating a more just and democratic community.