Join us at the Museum for a FREE presentation with Professor Fiona Vernal that explores how and when Hartford's North End became a Black community. What kind of stories did the community tell about themselves? And why does it matter for how we think about Hartford today? A companion program to to the Making History, Making Change Lecture Series, organized by Smithsonian Affiliations. About the Speaker: Fiona Vernal is Associate Director of the Africana Studies Institute (ASI), Associate Professor of History and Africana Studies at the University of Connecticut and the Director of Engaged, Public, Oral, and Community Histories (EPOCH), at UConn. EPOCH is a public-facing initiative aimed at integrating research, teaching, and scholarship in broader public policy interventions and capacity-building for community organizations. She is currently working on a book and digital humanities project, "Hartford Bound" that integrates oral histories, archival research, and GIS methodologies to offer new visual and spatial histories of race, ethnic belonging, migration, and community succession in Hartford, Connecticut.
Thursday Apr 9, 2026
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM EDT
Apr 9, 2026, 6:00pm to 7:00pm Timezone: Eastern Time (US & Canada)
Connecticut Museum of Culture and History 1 Elizabeth Street Hartford, CT 06105
Free
Natalie Belanger
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Printed courtesy of www.whchamber.com/ – Contact the West Hartford Chamber of Commerce for more information.
948 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, CT 06107 – (860) 521-2300 – info@WHChamber.com