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Longfellow House Special History Study – Black History

  • American Revolution 250 Commemoration
  • Antietam African American Historic Resource Study
  • Chaco Culture National Historical Park Administrative History
  • Civil War Defenses of Washington Administrative History
  • Coltsville Historic Resource Study
  • Disability History Handbook
  • Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine Special History Study
  • Historic Resource Study for the Eastern Front Unit, Petersburg National Battlefield
  • Jimmy Carter National Historical Park Administrative History
  • Lincoln Home Scholars’ Roundtable & Working Group
  • Longfellow House Special History Study – Black History
  • Longfellow House Special History Study – Preservation
  • National Heritage Area Legislative History
  • Paterson Great Falls Historic Resource Study Addendum
  • Pecos National Historical Park Administrative History
  • Petroglyph National Monument Park Administrative History
  • Southwestern National Monuments Administrative History
  • Survey of African American History in Intermountain Parks
  • Tribal Engagement Support CHCU and PETR Administrative Histories
  • Valles Caldera National Preserve Historic Resource Study
  • Women in the American Revolution Study
  • World War II and the American Home Front Volume 2
  • World War II Heritage City Criterion Essays
  • World War II Home Front Education Materials
  • World War II Home Front National Historic Landmark Nominations
  • World War II Home Front Park Unit Working Groups

Statement of Work

This project will complete a Special History Study for Longfellow House-Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site focusing on Black History. This study will document and analyze the Black experience during and after John and Elizabeth Vassall’s occupancy in Cambridge, MA. Darby Vassall’s life dates provide rough brackets for this study; born enslaved at the Vassall house in Cambridge in 1769, about ten years after its construction, he died a prominent member of the free Black community in Boston in 1861.

Final Products & Resources

Black History at the Vassall Estate 

Longfellow House–Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site
Special History Study
Caitlin DeAngelis, Carla D. Martin, Rayshauna C. Gray, Aabid Allibhai, Eshe Sherley
September 15, 2025

Other resources:

Black History at the Vassall Estate virtual presentation

Virtual presentation in celebration of our latest publication: The Black History at the Vassall Estate. This landmark study documents and analyzes the Black experience at 105 Brattle Street (now Longfellow House–Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site) and in the wider international community of Africa, Canada, the Caribbean, and the United Kingdom. Research team members: Caitlin DeAngelis, Carla Martin, Rayshauna Gray, Aabid Allibhai, and Eshe Sherley introduce the study, share key findings, and take you behind the scenes of their research and writing process.

“Who are my ancestors?” The Descendants of Cuba Vassall

Before poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow gave the house its name, and long before it was designated Longfellow House-Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site, the Vassall estate was a pre-Revolutionary War plantation owned by the Vassall family. In the years immediately preceding the abolishment of slavery in Massachusetts, Cuba and Tony Vassall and their six children were enslaved by Vassall and other Massachusetts enslavers; when the family was freed in 1783, they reunited and fought for their rights as free people. As part of the National Park Service’s efforts to better understand this period of the site’s history, the site has recently prioritized bringing together the descendants of Cuba and Tony’s family to reflect on their ancestors’ legacy.

Project Participants

Dr. Caitlin DeAngelis, Project Historian
Dr. Carla D. Martin, Project Historian

Requests for Letters of Interest

Via our cooperative agreement with the National Park Service, the National Council on Public History seeks a qualified historian (or team of historians) to conduct a Special History Study for Longfellow House – Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site in Cambridge, MA. Focusing on Black history, this study will document and analyze the Black experience during and after John and Elizabeth Vassall’s occupancy (about 1769-1861). This project will uncover the lives and communities of enslaved and formerly enslaved people who worked at the Vassall House and lived in the surrounding community of Cambridge before, during, and after the American Revolution. The information produced from this study will greatly expand existing baseline information and will influence different aspects of the park, including interpretation and education programming, and influence how the park’s significance is presented to visitors and the public. In addition to a complete, peer-reviewed, edited, formatted, and publication-ready manuscript of a Special History Study, this project will also involve engagement with the site’s known descendant community (about a dozen individuals) and, we hope, identification of more descendants for future outreach. Please read the full narrative in PDF or Word format for the description of the project’s scope of work and timeline, as well as instructions for submitting your letter of interest.

Compensation: $80,650 (This is the total compensation for the principal investigator(s), RAs, Section 508 Compliance, travel, copy editing and formatting, and research expenses)
Deadline for Letter of Interest to NCPH:  November 1, 2022
Expected Date to Award Project:  December 1, 2022
Anticipated Start Date:  January 2023
Timeline for Completion:  September 2025

With Support From
NCPH Patrons & Partners
  • Indiana University Indianapolis
  • Arizona State University
  • American Association for State and Local History
  • American University
  • Central Connecticut State University
  • Historical Research Associates, Inc.
  • University of Central Florida
  • University of Maryland Baltimore County
  • Reid Public History Institute & University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Dept. of History
  • University of West Georgia, Department of History
  • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Chicago History Museum
  • Florida State University, Department of History
  • Kentucky Historical Society
  • Missouri Historical Society
  • Oklahoma State University, Department of History
  • St. John's University, Department of History
  • The CHAPS Program at The University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley
  • IEEE History Center at Stevens Institute of Technology
  • Loyola University
  • Middle Tennessee State University
  • Corporation for Digital Scholarship
  • Corporation for Digital Scholarship
  • Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission
  • University of Northern Alabama
  • Piraeus Bank Group Cultural Foundation
  • Meijer Heritage Center
  • University of Northern Iowa
  • Ball State University
  • National Park Service
  • University of Houston
  • New York University
  • New York University
  • Voces Oral History Center
  • Boise State University
  • University of Nebraska at Kearney
  • University of Arkansas at Little Rock
  • Stephen F. Austin State University
  • Washington State University
  • Historic New Orleans Collection
  • Historic New Orleans Collection
  • Thomas Jefferson's Monticello
  • New Mexico State University
  • University of Illinois Springfield
  • The Library of Virginia
  • The Library of Virginia

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Cavanaugh Hall 127, 425 University Blvd., Indianapolis, IN 46202-5140
(317) 274-2716
[email protected]