Black Ivory Roots

PODCAST · history

Black Ivory Roots

Black Ivory Roots is a true storytelling podcast exposing America’s dark history and its violence against enslaved Black people. This podcast contains graphic descriptions of enslavement, violence, sexual exploitation, and systemic dehumanization. Listener discretion is advised.

  1. 9

    SAM Insurance: Behind the Policy

    This episode examines the tension between institutional protection and racial injustice through the lens of S.A.M. (Sexual Abuse and Molestation) insurance policies that shield organizations from misconduct claims. It contrasts these protections with the historical reality faced by Black men and boys who were devastated by false accusations, highlighting cases like the 1920 Duluth lynchings, the Scottsboro Boys, and Emmett Till. The discussion raises urgent questions about accountability, the prioritization of institutions over individuals, and what these choices reveal about societal values and justice.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  2. 8

    Anna Murray Douglass: The Forgotten Wife!

    History remembers Frederick Douglass as a giant, but it barely remembers the woman who helped make his rise possible. Her name was Anna Murray Douglass. Born free in 1813, she still lived in a world where freedom offered little protection for Black women. She worked in white households, saving every dollar she earned because she understood survival required sacrifice. When she met Frederick Bailey, who was still enslaved, she chose to help him escape. She used her own money, sold her bed, and helped arrange his disguise, fully aware of the risk she was taking. He escaped and became Frederick Douglass, while she remained behind and overlooked.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  3. 7

    Two Names! One Pattern.

    As we connect the story of father and son, we invite you to reflect on what their lives reveal about race, justice, and memory. This episode examines Louis Till’s story while exposing injustices that continue to echo through time.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  4. 6

    Salt in the Wound

    In this deeply unsettling episode, we explore the brutal reality of physical punishment endured by enslaved people at the hands of their captors. We explore the horrifying practice of whipping with leather lashes that tore into flesh, leaving wounds that became lifelong scars. It is a painful reminder of a dark chapter in history, marked by unimaginable suffering and profound dehumanization.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  5. 5

    The Lynching of Claude Neal

    In 1934, Claude Neal, a 23-year-old Black farmworker in Marianna, Florida, was accused of murdering a white woman. Before he could ever see a courtroom, a white mob took him from jail. What followed was not justice. It was a spectacle.Thousands gathered. The killing was anticipated. Souvenir photographs were taken. His body was mutilated and displayed. Newspapers reported it. Crowds attended. Claude Neal’s lynching was not hidden. It was public, organized, and celebrated.This episode examines how racial terror functioned as a community event, how violence was normalized, documented, and shared without shame. Claude Neal’s name is not just history. It is evidence.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  6. 4

    The Tragedy of Lula Sherman

    We uncover the story of Lula Sherman, a fourteen-year-old black girl whose life was taken by violence and whose suffering was nearly lost to history. This is not just a story of tragedy, but a story of truth, memory, and the fight to make sure her name is never erased.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  7. 3

    The Lynching Of Claude Neal

    In 1934, Claude Neal, a 23-year-old Black farmworker in Marianna, Florida, was accused of murdering a white woman. Before he could ever see a courtroom, a white mob took him from jail. What followed was not justice. It was spectacle. Thousands gathered. The killing was anticipated. Souvenir photographs were taken. His body was mutilated and displayed. Newspapers reported it. Crowds attended. Claude Neal’s lynching was not hidden. It was public, organized, and celebrated. This episode examines how racial terror functioned as a community event, how violence was normalized, documented, and shared without shame. Claude Neal’s name is not just history. It is evidence.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  8. 2

    Call Her Peggy

    This episode centers on Virginia in the 1700s, where control was engineered and suffering was routine. Her name was not preserved. What follows is a reconstruction based on documented punishment devices and recorded conditions because the archive refused to keep her whole.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  9. 1

    Black Sistory Speaks on Black History

    This is not a celebratory overview, but a grounded examination of how Black history was erased, misrepresented, and pushed to the margins and why documenting it became necessary Centering the work of Carter G. Woodson, this episode traces the origins of Negro History Week and its later recognition by the United States government, while confronting how history becomes easier to manage once it is sanitized. From the lived realities of enslaved women and children to the systems of labor and punishment that shaped daily survival, this episode lays the foundation for what Black Ivory Roots is committed to doing: recording what was never meant to survive. This is not about guilt. It is about accuracy.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

  10. 0

    What was buried, will be named!

    This is not history told. It is history exposed. This prologue reveals how enslavement became property and pain became profit.Black Ivory Roots is more than a podcast. It’s a record of what was buried, a voice for what was silenced, and a truth they tried to erase. Each episode is crafted to uncover the stories history refused to tell, centering the lives, pain, resistance, and legacy of Black voices across generations.If this story moved you, share it. Keep the truth alive. Listen, reflect, and remember. Follow and support us for more untold American dark history. 

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Black Ivory Roots is a true storytelling podcast exposing America’s dark history and its violence against enslaved Black people. This podcast contains graphic descriptions of enslavement, violence, sexual exploitation, and systemic dehumanization. Listener discretion is advised.

HOSTED BY

Black Sistory

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