Prof. Kimberly Welch, 'Eulalie Mandeville’s Money: A Free Black Woman and Her Legacy in Antebellum New Orleans'

Prof. Kimberly Welch, 'Eulalie Mandeville’s Money: A Free Black Woman and Her Legacy in Antebellum New Orleans'

In this episode, we’re joined by Kimberly Welch, Associate Professor of History and Law at Vanderbilt University. Kim is currently a Fellow-in-Residence at the Rothermere American Institute at the University of Oxford. She spoke with us about the paper she presented in the seminar, titled “Eulalie Mandeville’s Money: A Free Black Woman and Her Legacy in Antebellum New Orleans.” It’s part of her current book project, which follows the intertwined lives of two free people of color — Eulalie Mandeville and Bernard Soulié — across New Orleans, Santiago de Cuba, and Paris. Her work examines how discriminatory laws around marriage and inheritance shaped the transmission of wealth across generations for Black Americans.

To get a better sense of the world Kim brings to life in her forthcoming book, Megan and I revisited her 2022 article:

"The Stability of Fortunes: A Free Black Woman, Her Legacy, and the Legal Archive in Antebellum New Orleans." The Journal of the Civil War Era 12, no. 4 (2022): 473-502.https://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cwe.2022.0065.


Co-hosted by:

Megan Renoir, a PhD candidate at the University of Cambridge whose work focuses on Indigenous sovereignty and land conflict. See Megan’s recent publication here: “Recognition as Resilience: How an Unrecognized Indigenous Nation is Using Visibility as a Pathway Toward Restorative Justice”, The American Historical Review, https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/rhae467

Daisy Semmler (MPhil, 2025) examines the anti-literacy era in the United States (c. 1740–1865). Her work (re)constructs how enslaved and free African-descended people developed literacy through adaptive, informal, and mostly clandestine pedagogical practices.

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Episoder(81)

Prof. Christa Dierksheide & Prof. Nick Guyatt, ‘Jefferson’s Wolf: A Founding Father’s Troubling Answer to the Problem of Slavery’ (Harvard University Press, 2026)

Prof. Christa Dierksheide & Prof. Nick Guyatt, ‘Jefferson’s Wolf: A Founding Father’s Troubling Answer to the Problem of Slavery’ (Harvard University Press, 2026)

“The wolf is a metaphor for race war, and we mean race war on a genocidal scale.” We release this episode at a historic moment. This Saturday, 4 July 2026, marks the semiquincentennial of America's fo...

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Dr. Elsa Devienne, '"Paper or Plastic?": The Forgotten Movement to Ban Polystyrene in the US and the (Lost) Battle of Perception (1980s to today)'

Dr. Elsa Devienne, '"Paper or Plastic?": The Forgotten Movement to Ban Polystyrene in the US and the (Lost) Battle of Perception (1980s to today)'

“What happened? At one point, we were really close to banning polystyrene. What happened?”In this episode, we’re joined by Dr Elsa Devienne (Assistant Professor, School of Humanities and Social Scienc...

24 Jun 37min

Dr. Caroline Johnston, 'Rocky Mountain Extractivism in Washington'

Dr. Caroline Johnston, 'Rocky Mountain Extractivism in Washington'

This episode explores ‘carbon cowboys,’ the creation of A Blueprint for Conservative Government (1980), and an emerging historical concept: ‘extractive-statism.’Dr Caroline Johnston is a political, en...

20 Mai 41min

Dr. Patrick Griffin, 'The American Revolution and Global Empire'

Dr. Patrick Griffin, 'The American Revolution and Global Empire'

“Whether we like it or not, the American Revolution is kind of central to the idea of American civic life, and very central to American notions of sense of self. So, that's critical—and it has been th...

13 Mai 39min

Annual Pitt Professor Beth Bailey, 'Making Change: Why the US Army Matters'

Annual Pitt Professor Beth Bailey, 'Making Change: Why the US Army Matters'

"Of course, it's an institution of social change. Because it has to manage all of the social changes that are taking place in society—because it's pulling people in." In this episode, we're joined by ...

30 Apr 34min

Prof. David Farber, 'The War on Drugs'

Prof. David Farber, 'The War on Drugs'

“What makes one drug or another useful to politicians?” David Farber asks. At the seminar, Farber presented new work on the late twentieth-century “war on drugs” in the United States—what it was, how ...

15 Apr 30min

Dr. Erin Shearer, 'Enslaved Women, Infanticide, and a Feminist History of Harm: A New Direction in Slavery Studies'

Dr. Erin Shearer, 'Enslaved Women, Infanticide, and a Feminist History of Harm: A New Direction in Slavery Studies'

N.B.: This episode describes sexual violence and graphic bodily harm.(With sincere apologies for the re-upload due to a technical issue.) “We’re still, as a society, so apprehensive about ascribing to...

1 Apr 31min

Prof. Eliga Gould, 'Union and Disunion: The Turbulent History of the United States' Founding Treaty'

Prof. Eliga Gould, 'Union and Disunion: The Turbulent History of the United States' Founding Treaty'

When we think about the founding documents of the United States, two likely come to mind: the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. But perhaps not the third — the Treaty of Paris (1783), ...

6 Mar 42min

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