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At ‘Drunk History’ event, Newark’s Black culture beams through jokes and vital education
“Drunk History” is no longer confined to the streaming archives of Paramount Plus. The template was recently used to tell the story of New Jersey’s often misunderstood, but historically rich, city of ...
Last week, we shared with you the letter sent from Newark to John S. Caton in Massachusetts by an unknown sender in March 1834. She drew a drawing of downtown Newark and an explanation of the markings ...
There is another recollection that needs to be shared regarding the swamps, ponds and lakes in downtown Newark in the early 1800s. Isaac Smucker arrived in Newark in 1825 from the Shenandoah Valley to ...
This article was originally published in Chalkbeat. For nearly two decades, Scott Kern has worked to make history feel more alive for Newark students. He does so through close readings of Fredrick ...
When the citizens of Newark awoke on Sept. 8, 1942, no one could have foretold the tragedy that would happen before the day was over. It was a rainy day, and residents Dollie Campbell, of Wyoming ...
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