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But Rhode Island, whatever the demographic shifts of recent years, is still an overwhelmingly white state. And even in the age of Obama, convincing the electorate to get behind the name change could take some work.

Richard Lobban, a professor emeritus at Rhode Island College who ran the school's African and African-American studies program for 13 years, is prepared to make the case. He's been doing it for years.

"The fact of the matter is, from the very beginning, we had slaves," he said.

Indians and Africans were pressed into servitude in the early colonial days. Merchants engaged in a "triangle trade" that swapped rum for African slaves, and slaves for West Indies molasses, which was used to distill more rum.

Narragansett horses were a favorite among overseers in the Caribbean. Salt cod harvested here was a staple food for slaves. Slavery was no ancillary part of Rhode Island's early economy, Lobban said. It was a central force. A shameful mark on a state that prides itself on a tradition of tolerance.

This is heavy stuff. And the people of Rhode Island, perhaps dimly aware of Brown's efforts to dig into its own history, could be forced to confront the state's larger entanglement with the slave trade head-on now that the plantations question is moving forward.

We'll see how they react.

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Related: Barbarisi assigned to the Sox; more changes coming, Heslin's rise: A change of the guard, but to what effect?, Former editorial writer says his last column got spiked, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Barack Obama, Politics, Political Policy,  More more >
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Comments
Re: Moving Off the Plantation?
Confronting "the state's larger entanglement with the slave trade" by simply changing a name taken sixty years before the start of that slave trade is only going to make the state's voters look like schoolchildren in civics class. In 1945, New York City changed the name of Sixth Avenue to Avenue of the Americas. The only people who call it now that are tourists and new arrivals. Names are only markers, even when appropriated to prove a point. I don't think anyone could argue that the state's history of slavery is anything but appalling, but the term Providence Plantations has absolutely nothing to do with slavery.   
By artytwo on 07/02/2009 at 1:09:44

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