The list of events below is far from exhaustive. It is drawn from information available at the time. Readers should check the internet for events planned in Cecil, Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Somerset, and Worcester counties for more information.
The Kent County portion of this article has been updated to eliminate events mistakenly included.
Kent County
On Feb. 18 at 9 am, the Kent County branch of the NAACP will host its annual prayer breakfast at the Potters House Ministries in Fairlee. The guest speaker will be Bishop Ronald Fisher. Potters House Ministries is also hosting a Black History Month event at 4 pm on Feb. 15. The speaker will be Kia Reed, co-pastor of Abundance Life Restoration Ministry. The invited guest choir is the Burke Family. Additionally, there will be a reading by Judith Kennard.
An alumni mixer at Washington College will be held in the Hynson Lounge on Feb. 8. It will honor the late Rep. Elijah Cummings. The speaker will be Cummings’s nephew, Raymond Cummings. Registration is recommended. More information is online.
On Feb. 20, at 5:30 pm, the Washington College Black Studies program will screen the film, Gurumbé, in Norman James Theater, William Smith Hall.
The Black Studies Program at Washington College is hosting a “Food and Film” event at 7 pm on Feb. 20 in the Norman James Theater. The film, I Am Not Your Negro, written by James Baldwin and narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, will be screened. A dinner and Black studies interest meeting will be held before the screening at 6 pm.
There will be a lecture at Washington College on Feb. 27 at 5:30 pm in Litrenta (Toll Science Building) by Dr. Meira Goldberg of the Fashion Institute of New York, titled “On Blackness in Flamenco.”
Talbot County
In Talbot County, a visit to Unionville is a good way to learn more about Black history on the Eastern Shore. The town was settled in 1867 by 18 free Black veterans who fought in the Union Army. The land was donated by an abolitionist Quaker family, the Cowgills. A stipulation of the gift was that the veterans would build a church and school, which they did. St. Stephen A.M.E. Church and its graveyard still exist, and the 18 veterans are buried there. Further information.
Dorchester County
The Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitor Center in Dorchester County has special events planned for every weekend in February. Visit its website for information. We highly recommend a visit to this museum anytime.
While you are in Dorchester County, you might also visit the Handsell Historic Site in Vienna. Its history includes African Americans, Native Americans, and European settlers. Their research team has compiled information on 214 enslaved individuals associated with the site. More is on the web.
Wicomico County
Salisbury University is holding a series of events for Black History Month under the theme of Black resistance. The kick-off event is on Feb. 1 at 6 pm in Holloway Hall. The event celebrates Black talent at the university and is sponsored by the Multicultural Alliance and National Pan-Hellenic Council.
On Feb. 8 at 6 pm in Blackwell Hall, Al “Hondo” Handy, author of the memoir, Defying Expectations, and a SU alumnus, will speak of his experiences as a young Black man who defied the odds by becoming one of the first Black students to attend an all-White school before integration and winning a state basketball championship.
On Feb. 9 at 5 pm in the Wicomico Room of the Guerrieri Student Union, “The Harriet Tubman Museum Experience: I Got Shoes-Songs of Freedom Along the Underground Railroad” will be presented by Linda Harris and David B. Cole. It’s a program that combines narration and live banjo music, and is sponsored by the Office of Diversity and Inclusion.
Victoria Jackson-Stanley, also an SU alumna, will discuss her personal and professional life, including serving as the first Black mayor of Cambridge, Md., on Feb. 15 at 6 pm in Holloway Hall auditorium.
Gospel Fest will be sponsored by the University Gospel Choir and the Office of Diversity and Inclusion on Feb. 19 at 6 pm in Holloway Hall auditorium. This will feature Eastern Shore gospel singers.
The Ernie Bond Curriculum Resource Center will host its fifth annual SU African American Poetry Read-In on Feb. 22, 6-7:30 pm in Conway Hall 226, Attendees are invited to read or present videos of their own original poems or works by their favorite African American poets. Videos can be submitted by contacting saford@salisbury.edu.
A native of Wicomico County, George Shivers holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland and taught in the Foreign Language Dept. of Washington College for 38 years before retiring in 2007. He is also very interested in the history and culture of the Eastern Shore, African American history in particular.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk