Sticker campaign targets slavery roots in New York City
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[July 07, 2021]
By Dan Fastenberg
(Reuters) - A New York-based campaign is
drawing attention to prominent New Yorkers whose names are emblazoned on
streets, schools, and storefronts and who it says had ties to slavery.
The campaign - called 'Slavers of New York' - says there are at least
500 sites that feature the names of figures who owned slaves. Many of
the slaveowners date from the 17th century when New York was New
Amsterdam, including colonial governor Peter Stuyvesant and the
Cortelyou family.
The group comprises artists, educators, activists and researchers, said
Ada Reso, campaign co-founder.
It places stickers through Brooklyn to draw attention to the mostly
unknown connections, and campaigns on social media.
The sticker campaign uses historical data "to educate New Yorkers about
the city, streets and neighborhoods they live in and around," Reso said.
"If more people knew what their street was named for, or who it was
named for, we can then foster another conversation about what it looks
like to name and claim your neighborhood," she said.
At a debate last month ahead of primary elections for New York City
mayor, the leading Democratic candidates agreed the city should consider
renaming sites named after slaveholders. The mayor's office did not
return a request for comment.
Campaign co-founder, comedian Elsa Eli Waithe, said that during the
pandemic she had come across census documents online that showed New
Yorkers and the numbers of slaves they owned.
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New York had slaves spanning from its days as a Dutch
colony until as late as 1827, when the last were freed.
"I just wondered who else knew this, who else had
this information? Because it was kind of new information to me,"
Waithe said.
The campaign then turned to the Black-owned and Brooklyn-based
sticker shop, Comik Ink, for production.
The result is a sticker modeled on New York's green street signs,
which refers to how many slaves the named people owned.
The campaign says they often find themselves replacing the stickers
after they have been taken down or defaced. But they have put up
more than a thousand so far and are planning to spread out to New
York's other four boroughs.

"A lot of these streets run through Black and brown neighborhoods
and the people walking these neighborhoods are still saying a slave
owner's name. And it's unbeknownst to them," said Waithe.
(Reporting by Dan Fastenberg; editing by Diane Craft and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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