Harriet Tubman's church in Canada was a crucial force in the abolitionist movement. It's still standing today
On a cold day in January 2024, Rochelle Bush walked up the steps of Salem Chapel, British Methodist Episcopal church in St Catharines, Ontario, Canada. Bush, the owner and primary tour guide of Tubman Tours Canada and Salem Chapel's historian, moved quickly through the church pointing out the history, which spans generations back to when the building was built centuries ago.
The church's roots stretch to about 1788 when Black people, many of whom were seeking freedom from slavery in the US, began to settle in the St Catharines area. Along with their hopes, dreams and plans for the future, these settlers, many of whom were followers of John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, and Richard Allen, a founder of the African Methodist Episcopal church, brought their religions with them.
Bush, like many parishioners of Salem Chapel today, is a descendant of those people, whom she calls 'freedom seekers'. Through her tours, she seeks to keep the memory of the Black Americans who sought freedom in Ontario, and the lives they built on arriving there, alive.
Salem Chapel is one of the oldest Black churches in Ontario. Though it may not be widely known to most Americans or Canadians, its influence on both countries' history is undeniable. The church, which is still in use as a religious institution, is considered a sacred site and tourist destination because of its importance for people who participated in the Underground Railroad and for their descendants.
After the passage of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, which required that people who escaped slavery be returned to the people who enslaved them even if they had made it to a state in which slavery was illegal, the Black community in Ontario rapidly increased with the arrival of thousands of fleeing Black Americans.
The expanding community outgrew the church they were using to worship, and the congregation decided to build a larger church to serve the growing population. On 4 November 1855, the new African Methodist Episcopal church, 'dedicated to the service of Almighty God', by Daniel Alexander Payne, an American bishop, was opened.
Related: Secrets of Success: the church that served a plantation remains a monument of resistance
The church's pulpit is the original – the same one that Harriet Tubman, who lived in St Catharines for about a decade, Frederick Douglass and John Brown would have sat before as parishioners or would have spoken behind as lecturers. Display cases contain original wrought iron rails, and the pews upstairs date back to the 1800s – the lower-level pews are from the 1950s. There are other time-specific items, such as an original offering plate, a first edition copy of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, a union jack flag from around the 1880s and a first edition copy of the biography of Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president.
St Catharines was known by prominent abolitionists, including Douglass, who wrote that the Underground Railroad had many branches, but that the one with which he was connected started in Baltimore and ended at St Catharines.
'He legitimized us as a final terminus on the Underground Railroad,' Bush said. 'We're the only ones in Canada that received that distinction. Thank God for Frederick Douglass.'
Salem Chapel and its community was a crucial force in the abolitionist movement –the church routinely held anti-slavery talks, its congregants protested against enslavement and also provided aid and shelter to people who had crossed via the Underground Railroad into Canada. With its close proximity to New York, and the Underground Railroad terminus in Rochester, where Frederick Douglass lived, the church became a meeting space for abolitionist leaders.
'The church was constructed when my family was living here, it was constructed when Harriet Tubman was living here,' Bush, who was born in St Catharines, told the Guardian. Black Americans who escaped enslavement 'wanted to put down roots and they wanted to secure their safety and freedom, because they knew that in the eyes of God, we're all the same, we're all equal. This church stands as a tribute to all of that.'
In late 2023, Salem Chapel became the first international listing in the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program by the US National Park Service, an acknowledgment that formerly enslaved people's lives did not end with their journey into Canada.
'The Network to Freedom commemorates the courage, resilience and creativity of freedom seekers and provides insight to their struggles against oppression,' Chuck Sams, the National Park Service director, said in a statement at the time. 'Every listing added to the program moves us closer to telling a more complete and inclusive history of our nation and its quest to form a more perfect union.'
For Bush and other stewards of Salem Chapel, it is increasingly important that the church's storied history is preserved and perpetuated.
'Salem Chapel is a forgotten treasure in African American history,' Bush said. 'When it comes to the majority of American scholars, predominantly white, they write that the freedom seekers or the runaways or fugitives went north or they went to Canada, and then that's the end of their journey. No! There's a lot about their journey and where they settled here.'
Bush's great-great-grandfather the Rev James Henry Harper was a free Black man from Columbia, South Carolina, who moved to St Catharines. He worked as a principal carpenter and minister at the church for a period of time during which Tubman was a frequent visitor. He and Bush's great-great-grandmother Margaret Harper, also of Columbia, South Carolina, are both buried in St Catharines.
When Bush shows tourists around St Catharines and Salem Chapel, she's showing them buildings and places that are linked both to her own personal history, and to American and Canadian history at large.
'It's a thrill to be in here for me. Growing up, you don't appreciate it until you hear it from others,' Bush said.
When describing the work done by members of the church, even those from centuries past, Bush uses 'we', 'us' and 'our'. Her words, like her existence, are testimonies to the deep connection she feels and embodies with her Black American ancestors. Her work with the church and on her tours are also a testament to that connection.
On her tours, Bush communicates quickly and casually. Through her words, the vestiges of old Black St Catharines come to life, even though the neighborhood and town around the church have changed in the centuries since it was founded. Bush, a wellspring of knowledge, talks about the freedom-seeking ancestors, as if they are old friends, rattling off key dates and sites of interest.
One of the most prominent former residents of the province is also the tour's namesake: Harriet Tubman, whose niece and sister-in-law are buried in St Catharines.
'This was her main base of operation. The scholars today believe she made no less than 13 trips back and forth … We do know that this was her base of operation and she attended this church,' Bush said.
When people visit Salem Chapel, Bush said they are typically astounded by the fact that Tubman was once there, too.
'They want to touch the pews, and nobody leaves without touching the pulpit,' she said. 'Many are brought to tears. They say they feel the ancestral spirits in here. People are usually just blown away and they praise God that the church is still standing.'
One of the stories she shares is of John Brown, who Bush calls the 'greatest white abolitionist to ever live'. He was in St Catharines in April 1858 to meet with Tubman for the first time. Tubman had previously dreamed about meeting Brown, according to WEB DuBois's biography of the leader, and when they actually met, she assisted him in planning the raid on Harpers Ferry.
Bush intertwines stories of the past with stories of the buildings that are still standing, contextualizing the shared histories of both. Bush's tour around St Catharines includes other significant, if surprising, American civil war history. She tells those who participate about Confederate soldiers who fought against the US in their treasonous effort and are now buried in St Catharines after fleeing persecution in the states. She shows attenders on the tour Niagara Bank, from which John Wilkes Booth, the man who assassinated Abraham Lincoln, had an uncashed bank note when was captured.
But the focus of the tour is on the people who escaped slavery to make new lives for themselves.
Bush tells attenders about Anthony Burns, who was enslaved in Virginia and was the centerpoint of one of the largest abolitionist revolts in US history before eventually gaining his freedom and pastoring Zion Baptist church in St Catharines. She shows them the burial site of John Lindsay, born in Washington DC and enslaved in Tennessee and Louisiana before eventually becoming one of the wealthiest men in Ontario.
A highlight of the tour is Richard Pierpoint, who was born in Senegal, captured and enslaved, and forcibly sent to the 13 colonies. There, he eventually gained his freedom by fighting with the British during the American revolution, and helped found the Colored Corps, Upper Canada's only unit comprising solely men of African descent, during the war of 1812. Pierpoint eventually settled in Ontario, near St Catharines.
The joy people experience is often marked by sobriety and an acknowledgment of pain. Bush's tours do not shy away from the seriousness of the horrors from which enslaved Black Americans were fleeing.
'The focus is on Black history and what our ancestors were running away from,' she said. 'The raping on the plantation … The number one dynamic of enslavement was the separation of families. You had no voice, you had no say … We mention that so everybody is on the same page because the idea now is to try to turn it into the yellow brick road and enslaved people had it good. No, we didn't.'
Related: 'We feel the pain but there is also joy': the healing power of diasporic connection
While some tours or sites that deal with locations and people who were either enslaved, enslavers or otherwise involved with the institution of slavery choose to passingly allude to the horrors of enslavement, Bush sees it as a central and necessary component of ensuring guests understand the importance of the freedom seekers' actions, the lives they eventually built in Canada and what they left behind.
'There's nothing positive about slavery and the Underground Railroad,' she said. 'Whereas you go to other locations and they don't want to discuss the atrocities of what people were running away from and so they try to make it all happy and that's not telling the truth. That's not telling the story, so you can't do that. You have to let them know what people were running away from.'
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Black America Web
5 days ago
- Black America Web
Historically Black Beaches Perfect for Your Summer Getaway
Source: Robert Abbott Sengstacke / Getty Summer is here and may of us are planning a getaway to enjoy some fun in the sun. Whether you are planning a weekend getaway or an extended time away, you might want to consider planning your summer vacation to explore the historic Black beaches that have shaped culture, community, and summer fun for generations. But the privilege we have today to travel wherever our heart desires wasn't something our elders, as early as two generations back were able to do. For decades during the Jim Crow era, Black Americans were excluded from most public beaches due to segregation laws and discriminatory practices. Out of necessity and vision, Black entrepreneurs and families established beachfront communities and resorts where their culture could thrive in safety and style. These sanctuaries offered a place to swim, dance, and celebrate—free from prejudice and full of possibility. Today, historically Black beaches stand as both reminders of a challenging past and beacons of community triumph. These sun-kissed coastlines aren't just scenic—they're living testaments to joy, resilience, and Black excellence. Take a deep dive into the many beaches across America that are historically black that might want to consider visiting. RELATED STORIES: Black Girls Travel: 7 Wellness Destinations That Give White Lotus Energy 48-Hours In Puerto Rico: A Weekend Girl's Getaway Guide American Beach, Florida Founded in 1935, American Beach gave Black families a safe haven to enjoy sun and surf during segregation. Today, its tranquil shores and legendary sand dunes (known as 'NaNa') invite visitors to reflect, relax, and celebrate a vibrant legacy. Bruce's Beach, California Bruce's Beach in Manhattan Beach stands as a symbol of perseverance and justice. Once seized from Black owners in the 1920s, it was returned to descendants a century later. Stroll the park, soak up Pacific views, and honor a community's unwavering spirit. Highland Beach, Maryland Nestled on the Chesapeake Bay, Highland Beach was founded in 1893 by Charles Douglass, the son of Frederick Douglass, as a bold response to discrimination. This inviting shoreline remains a refuge of Black heritage and pride, where generations gather for family reunions and cultural celebration. STAY INFORMED! CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER! Source: Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Oak Bluffs, Martha's Vineyard Oak Bluffs, on Martha's Vineyard, is a crown jewel among Black vacation communities. From the historic 'Inkwell' Beach—once a haven for Black swimmers—to Oak Bluffs' vibrant homes and annual events, every summer sizzles with a sense of belonging and tradition. Atlantic Beach, South Carolina Dubbed the 'Black Pearl,' Atlantic Beach holds a powerful legacy as one of the only Black-owned beach towns in the South. Home to spirited festivals and deep community roots, its sandy streets echo with music, laughter, and pride every summer. Idlewild, Michigan Known as 'The Black Eden,' Idlewild thrived from the 1920s to the '60s as a legendary resort for Black entertainers, artists, and families escaping segregation. Surrounded by shimmering lakes and tall pines, it's a tranquil escape buzzing with history and heart. READ MORE STORIES: Jay-Z & Beyoncé Bless The Stage Together, Hov Sends Shots At Kanye Cardi B Teases Major Announcement With Mysterious Message: 'Time's Up' Black Excellence Shines at ABFF: Ashanti, Nia Long, Jermaine Dupri, Da'Vinchi & More Sag Harbor, Long Island Sag Harbor's neighborhoods—Azurest, Ninevah, and Sag Harbor Hills—have been beloved Black havens for decades. This Hamptons retreat blends stunning shoreline, iconic summer homes, and a legacy of togetherness. Other Notable Destinations Chicken Bone Beach (Atlantic City, NJ) once rang out with jazz and good times as a segregated seaside space, while Freeman Park (North Carolina) and similar gathering spots keep the flame burning for Black beachgoers coast to coast. These storied beaches stand as vibrant symbols of resilience, legacy, and cultural pride. More than just destinations, they are sanctuaries where history is honored, traditions are celebrated, and community bonds are strengthened. Visiting these shores is not only a way to enjoy summer, but also an opportunity to connect with the enduring spirit that has shaped—and continues to inspire—Black America. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK . FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM & TWITTER . SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE . STAY INFORMED! CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER! HEAD TO THE HOMEPAGE The article 'Historically Black Beaches Perfect for Your Summer Getaway' was created with the help of SEE ALSO
Yahoo
21-06-2025
- Yahoo
Harriet Tubman's church in Canada was a crucial force in the abolitionist movement. It's still standing today
On a cold day in January 2024, Rochelle Bush walked up the steps of Salem Chapel, British Methodist Episcopal church in St Catharines, Ontario, Canada. Bush, the owner and primary tour guide of Tubman Tours Canada and Salem Chapel's historian, moved quickly through the church pointing out the history, which spans generations back to when the building was built centuries ago. The church's roots stretch to about 1788 when Black people, many of whom were seeking freedom from slavery in the US, began to settle in the St Catharines area. Along with their hopes, dreams and plans for the future, these settlers, many of whom were followers of John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, and Richard Allen, a founder of the African Methodist Episcopal church, brought their religions with them. Bush, like many parishioners of Salem Chapel today, is a descendant of those people, whom she calls 'freedom seekers'. Through her tours, she seeks to keep the memory of the Black Americans who sought freedom in Ontario, and the lives they built on arriving there, alive. Salem Chapel is one of the oldest Black churches in Ontario. Though it may not be widely known to most Americans or Canadians, its influence on both countries' history is undeniable. The church, which is still in use as a religious institution, is considered a sacred site and tourist destination because of its importance for people who participated in the Underground Railroad and for their descendants. After the passage of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, which required that people who escaped slavery be returned to the people who enslaved them even if they had made it to a state in which slavery was illegal, the Black community in Ontario rapidly increased with the arrival of thousands of fleeing Black Americans. The expanding community outgrew the church they were using to worship, and the congregation decided to build a larger church to serve the growing population. On 4 November 1855, the new African Methodist Episcopal church, 'dedicated to the service of Almighty God', by Daniel Alexander Payne, an American bishop, was opened. Related: Secrets of Success: the church that served a plantation remains a monument of resistance The church's pulpit is the original – the same one that Harriet Tubman, who lived in St Catharines for about a decade, Frederick Douglass and John Brown would have sat before as parishioners or would have spoken behind as lecturers. Display cases contain original wrought iron rails, and the pews upstairs date back to the 1800s – the lower-level pews are from the 1950s. There are other time-specific items, such as an original offering plate, a first edition copy of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, a union jack flag from around the 1880s and a first edition copy of the biography of Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president. St Catharines was known by prominent abolitionists, including Douglass, who wrote that the Underground Railroad had many branches, but that the one with which he was connected started in Baltimore and ended at St Catharines. 'He legitimized us as a final terminus on the Underground Railroad,' Bush said. 'We're the only ones in Canada that received that distinction. Thank God for Frederick Douglass.' Salem Chapel and its community was a crucial force in the abolitionist movement –the church routinely held anti-slavery talks, its congregants protested against enslavement and also provided aid and shelter to people who had crossed via the Underground Railroad into Canada. With its close proximity to New York, and the Underground Railroad terminus in Rochester, where Frederick Douglass lived, the church became a meeting space for abolitionist leaders. 'The church was constructed when my family was living here, it was constructed when Harriet Tubman was living here,' Bush, who was born in St Catharines, told the Guardian. Black Americans who escaped enslavement 'wanted to put down roots and they wanted to secure their safety and freedom, because they knew that in the eyes of God, we're all the same, we're all equal. This church stands as a tribute to all of that.' In late 2023, Salem Chapel became the first international listing in the National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom program by the US National Park Service, an acknowledgment that formerly enslaved people's lives did not end with their journey into Canada. 'The Network to Freedom commemorates the courage, resilience and creativity of freedom seekers and provides insight to their struggles against oppression,' Chuck Sams, the National Park Service director, said in a statement at the time. 'Every listing added to the program moves us closer to telling a more complete and inclusive history of our nation and its quest to form a more perfect union.' For Bush and other stewards of Salem Chapel, it is increasingly important that the church's storied history is preserved and perpetuated. 'Salem Chapel is a forgotten treasure in African American history,' Bush said. 'When it comes to the majority of American scholars, predominantly white, they write that the freedom seekers or the runaways or fugitives went north or they went to Canada, and then that's the end of their journey. No! There's a lot about their journey and where they settled here.' Bush's great-great-grandfather the Rev James Henry Harper was a free Black man from Columbia, South Carolina, who moved to St Catharines. He worked as a principal carpenter and minister at the church for a period of time during which Tubman was a frequent visitor. He and Bush's great-great-grandmother Margaret Harper, also of Columbia, South Carolina, are both buried in St Catharines. When Bush shows tourists around St Catharines and Salem Chapel, she's showing them buildings and places that are linked both to her own personal history, and to American and Canadian history at large. 'It's a thrill to be in here for me. Growing up, you don't appreciate it until you hear it from others,' Bush said. When describing the work done by members of the church, even those from centuries past, Bush uses 'we', 'us' and 'our'. Her words, like her existence, are testimonies to the deep connection she feels and embodies with her Black American ancestors. Her work with the church and on her tours are also a testament to that connection. On her tours, Bush communicates quickly and casually. Through her words, the vestiges of old Black St Catharines come to life, even though the neighborhood and town around the church have changed in the centuries since it was founded. Bush, a wellspring of knowledge, talks about the freedom-seeking ancestors, as if they are old friends, rattling off key dates and sites of interest. One of the most prominent former residents of the province is also the tour's namesake: Harriet Tubman, whose niece and sister-in-law are buried in St Catharines. 'This was her main base of operation. The scholars today believe she made no less than 13 trips back and forth … We do know that this was her base of operation and she attended this church,' Bush said. When people visit Salem Chapel, Bush said they are typically astounded by the fact that Tubman was once there, too. 'They want to touch the pews, and nobody leaves without touching the pulpit,' she said. 'Many are brought to tears. They say they feel the ancestral spirits in here. People are usually just blown away and they praise God that the church is still standing.' One of the stories she shares is of John Brown, who Bush calls the 'greatest white abolitionist to ever live'. He was in St Catharines in April 1858 to meet with Tubman for the first time. Tubman had previously dreamed about meeting Brown, according to WEB DuBois's biography of the leader, and when they actually met, she assisted him in planning the raid on Harpers Ferry. Bush intertwines stories of the past with stories of the buildings that are still standing, contextualizing the shared histories of both. Bush's tour around St Catharines includes other significant, if surprising, American civil war history. She tells those who participate about Confederate soldiers who fought against the US in their treasonous effort and are now buried in St Catharines after fleeing persecution in the states. She shows attenders on the tour Niagara Bank, from which John Wilkes Booth, the man who assassinated Abraham Lincoln, had an uncashed bank note when was captured. But the focus of the tour is on the people who escaped slavery to make new lives for themselves. Bush tells attenders about Anthony Burns, who was enslaved in Virginia and was the centerpoint of one of the largest abolitionist revolts in US history before eventually gaining his freedom and pastoring Zion Baptist church in St Catharines. She shows them the burial site of John Lindsay, born in Washington DC and enslaved in Tennessee and Louisiana before eventually becoming one of the wealthiest men in Ontario. A highlight of the tour is Richard Pierpoint, who was born in Senegal, captured and enslaved, and forcibly sent to the 13 colonies. There, he eventually gained his freedom by fighting with the British during the American revolution, and helped found the Colored Corps, Upper Canada's only unit comprising solely men of African descent, during the war of 1812. Pierpoint eventually settled in Ontario, near St Catharines. The joy people experience is often marked by sobriety and an acknowledgment of pain. Bush's tours do not shy away from the seriousness of the horrors from which enslaved Black Americans were fleeing. 'The focus is on Black history and what our ancestors were running away from,' she said. 'The raping on the plantation … The number one dynamic of enslavement was the separation of families. You had no voice, you had no say … We mention that so everybody is on the same page because the idea now is to try to turn it into the yellow brick road and enslaved people had it good. No, we didn't.' Related: 'We feel the pain but there is also joy': the healing power of diasporic connection While some tours or sites that deal with locations and people who were either enslaved, enslavers or otherwise involved with the institution of slavery choose to passingly allude to the horrors of enslavement, Bush sees it as a central and necessary component of ensuring guests understand the importance of the freedom seekers' actions, the lives they eventually built in Canada and what they left behind. 'There's nothing positive about slavery and the Underground Railroad,' she said. 'Whereas you go to other locations and they don't want to discuss the atrocities of what people were running away from and so they try to make it all happy and that's not telling the truth. That's not telling the story, so you can't do that. You have to let them know what people were running away from.'


Eater
17-06-2025
- Eater
The Almighty Peanut
Across the United States, you can find roasted or boiled peanuts at crowded events like ball games, fairs, festivals, and carnivals. An omnipresent part of global bar culture, peanuts are typically served as a snack, usually paired with foamy beer on tap and glasses of cheap wine to lure the customer into drinking more. It's an essential ingredient in candy, sauces, dressings, crispy fried chicken, on sandwiches, and in pies. Served on airplanes and even in burger joints, peanuts are firmly planted into the national culinary identity of the United States. The peanut is also deeply embedded in the Black diaspora and its many cuisines around the world, where the nut makes an integral appearance in West African dishes such as mafé and suya . Chef Bintou N'Daw of Bintü Atelier in Charleston reminisces about growing up with various peanut dishes. 'As a kid, I remember the sounds and smell of grandma sitting on the mat and roasting peanuts on the wood fire,' said N'Daw. 'I was fascinated as a kid by the way she would throw them in the air, and it would separate the skin, but she would always keep some skin on for color.' Peanut soups and stews like mafé were also the chef's first solid foods as a child. 'Some [peanuts] were pounded to make peanut flour for sauces, some would be pounded with a little more oil to make peanut butter for mafé , and some would be on a morning peanut sandwich served in a warm French baguette,' said N'Daw. The groundnut's journey into Black foodways is extensive, starting first in ancient South America — where, throughout the history of brutality and colonisation in the Americas, peanuts were vital to the survival of the Indigenous and the enslaved Africans and their descendants — and now, in farmlands across provinces in China and fields across West Africa, the largest producers of peanuts, before finally ending up on restaurant tables and in homes here in the U.S. and beyond. Peanuts originate in the tropical climates of South America. A natural hybrid of two plant species, Andean cultures would domesticate the plant alongside other pre-Columbian indigenous crops like potatoes and squash. Highly regarded and used in ceremonial practices and enjoyed as food, these plants would then be introduced to Asia, Africa, and Europe throughout the colonial era. 'Peanuts are believed to have been introduced to West Africa from South America, brought by Portuguese traders during the Transatlantic slave trade,' chef Awo Amenumey of North Carolina's Eh'vivi Ghanaian Cuisine explained. 'Over time, peanuts became ingrained in local agricultural practices and cuisine, contributing to the region's culinary identity.' When introduced, Africans took to the peanut easily, as it bore some resemblance to native ingredients like the Bambara groundnut. Like the groundnut, the peanuts were ground into a thick paste, used in soups and stews, roasted, or used for their oil. In countries like Sierra Leone, they were also used in traditional and ceremonial practices, such as being used to make a charm to bring forth bad crops toward an enemy. Peanuts would travel across Central and South America into the Caribbean, and by the 1700s, their presence began to be recorded by colonists in places like Jamaica. In Haiti, peanuts became an important crop, illustrated in dishes like mamba , the nation's version of peanut butter. '[It's] a filling but spicy spread, traditionally made with just roasted peanuts, scotch bonnet peppers, oil, and a little sugar and salt in a mortar and pestle, or pilon,' says holistic herbalist and researcher Rebecca Fils-Aime.'The peanut-based sweet dishes represent community and hospitality, since it is commonly shared among family and friends.' Although there is no specific historical date to mark when peanuts were brought to the United States, evidence shows that peanuts were grown in the gardens of enslaved Africans. After the Civil War and the abolishment of slavery in the Americas, the peanut became an inexpensive snack. By the early 1900s, agriculturist George Washington Carver was making scientific strides in agriculture using legumes, including the peanut. Carver would prove that peanuts were a low-maintenance crop that would improve soil by fixing nitrogen, and help showcase their high nutritional value. When American peanut farmers realized they were being undercut by cheaper Chinese imports of peanuts, Carver's work to popularize peanuts would help pass legislation and a tariff that protected them. This made imported peanuts more expensive, so American-grown peanuts became more competitive in the U.S. market. As a result, domestic peanut farmers had an easier time selling their crops, and many saw higher prices and more profits. This helped Carter gain widespread support and accolades from Black and white leaders around the world. His team at Iowa University would go on to create hundreds of industrial and culinary applications for the ingredients. In his most popular 'bulletin,' 1916's 'How to Grow the Peanut and 105 Ways of Preparing it for Human Consumption,' Carver tells the reader — everyone from 'a commercial peanut farmer to the housewife' —- how to grow and harvest peanuts, how to utilize them for soil health, and how to prepare the peanuts to be sold at market. He then wrote 105 recipes compiled from various sources using peanuts, with recipes like peanut soup, cakes and bread, and even mock meats, like chicken, veal, and sausages, and more. Many of his recipes and applications for peanuts are still used today. Today, chefs, caterers, culinarians, and historians are working to keep historical recipes alive while innovating their own, and those stories are often shared in some of the country's most inventive Black restaurants and culinary spaces. Chef and high school culinary instructor Jamie Barnes based in Charlotte, North Carolina, has roots in Virginia, and remembers several peanut dishes, including Virginia peanut soup, 'which is a direct but perhaps more bland version of groundnut soup and mafe.' But Barnes adds candied country ham, fried collards, okra, and even peanut granola to his soups, adding his own flair when he can. At Lasgidi Cafe in Phoenix, Arizona, Patience Ogunbanjo celebrates the diversity of the peanut through a menu that blends traditional ingredients and dishes with new interpretations. 'Our sizzling suya tacos, featuring carne asada or chicken thighs rubbed in a bold suya spice blend highlight the smoky, nutty depth that peanuts bring to grilled meats — known across West Africa,' she says. 'Across the African American culinary tradition, peanuts have continued to thrive in dishes like boiled peanuts and peanut butter-based stews, carrying the legacy of West African flavors into new cultural expressions. Peanuts are more than just an ingredient — they're a bridge between history, heritage, and the shared flavors of the diaspora.' Ghanaian chef Nana Wilmont of LoveThatIKnead supper club and Georgina's Foods is reminded daily of the importance of the peanut. 'Seeing crops like groundnuts, black eye peas, and okra move across the African diaspora shows the undeniable resilience of a people, recreating these culinary traditions and foodways no matter the circumstance.' The influence of the nutty legume is worldwide, but it has found a special place in the hearts and homes of Black cuisine.