John W. Blassingame (1940-2000)

October 27, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Melissa Stuckey

|

John W. Blassingame|

Fair use image|

John Wesley Blassingame was one of the preeminent scholars in the study of enslaved African Americans.  His early monographs The Slave Community (1972) and Black New Orleans, 1860-1880 (1973) shattered racist and stereotypical portrayals of African American life by using testimony and evidence left by blacks themselves, evidence which had been largely ignored or dismissed by earlier historians.  With his edited volume, New Perspectives on Black Studies (1972), Blassingame helped to define the developing field of African American Studies.  A prolific scholar, Blassingame also co-wrote and edited, and co-edited many other works.  Among his important contributions are The Frederick Douglass Papers, Antislavery Newspapers and Periodicals, and Slave Testimony.

Dr. Blassingame received his B.A. from Fort Valley State University in 1960.  He earned his M.A. from Howard University in 1961, and his M.Phil and Ph.D. from Yale University in 1968 and 1971, respectively.  Before coming to Yale, Blassingame taught history at Howard University, Carnegie Mellon University, and the University of Maryland.  Blassingame began teaching at Yale in 1970 and became professor of African-American Studies, American Studies, and History in 1974.  Dedicated to nurturing African American Studies and students of the discipline, Blassingame was chair of African American Studies for more than a decade.   He taught Southern, African American, and Urban History.

John Blassingame was born in Oxford, Georgia on March 23, 1940, to Grady and Odessa Blassingame.  He married Teasie Jackson and the couple had two children, Tia Marie Blassingame and John Wesley Blassingame, Jr.  He died in New Haven, Connecticut on February 13, 2000 at the age of 59.

Author Profile

Melissa N. Stuckey has been assistant professor of African American history at Elizabeth City State University since 2017. She teaches a variety of courses, including North Carolina African American History and Black Women’s History. Her research interests center on the role of African American institutions in the struggle for Black freedom and civil rights. In 2019, Dr. Stuckey won over $500,000 from the National Park Service and the Institute for Museum and Library Services to help fund the rehabilitation of ECSU’s Rosenwald School building and Principal’s House. The long-term goal is to create within these historic structures an institute to collect, preserve, and share the histories of African American life and educational pursuits in Northeastern North Carolina. She is also leading several local African American history and historic preservation projects in Elizabeth City, in Old Oak Grove Cemetery, and the historic Sheppard Street-Road Street neighborhood that borders ECSU’s campus.

A specialist in early twentieth-century Black activism, she is author of several articles and book chapters, including “Boley, Indian Territory: Exercising Freedom in the All Black Town,” published in 2017 in the Journal of African American History and “Freedom on Her Own Terms: California M. Taylor and Black Womanhood in Boley, Oklahoma” published in This Land is Herland: Gendered Activism in Oklahoma, 1870s to 2010s (University of Oklahoma Press, 2021). Dr. Stuckey is currently completing her first book, entitled “All Men Up”: Seeking Freedom in the All-Black Town of Boley, Oklahoma, which interrogates the black freedom struggle in Oklahoma as it took shape in the state’s largest all-black town.

Committed to engaging the public in important conversations about African American history, Stuckey is also a contributing historian on the NEH-funded “Free and Equal Project” in Beaufort, South Carolina which interprets the story of Reconstruction for national and international audiences and is senior historical consultant to the Coltrane Group, a non-profit organization in Oklahoma committed to helping these towns survive in the 21st century.

Dr. Stuckey earned her Ph.D. from Yale University and her A.B. from Princeton University.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Stuckey, M. (2007, October 27). John W. Blassingame (1940-2000). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/blassingame-john-w-1940-2000/

Source of the Author's Information:

Robert L. Paris, “John W. Blassingame: March 23, 1940-February 13, 2000,” The Journal of African American History, Vol. 86, No. 3, (summer, 2001), pp.422-423. “In memoriam: John Wesley Blassingame,” Department of African American Studies, www.yale.edu/afamstudies/jwb.html; “Historian John Blassingame, Pioneer in Study of Slavery, Dies,” Yale Bulletin & Calendar, February 25, 2000 Volume 28, Number 22.

Further Reading