Kitsap Sun shares the stories of two Black pioneers that settled in the area in the 1890’s:
A Tahuya slough, once named for the N-word, was farmed by Black pioneer born into slavery
Josh Farley Kitsap Sun
Published 6:00 AM PDT Aug. 4, 2022 Updated 11:34 AM PDT Aug. 5, 2022
Editor’s note: This story deals with past racism and contains a quote that includes a racist term. The term is obscured in the sentence but retained within a quote to directly acknowledge the historical context surrounding the location and the speaker’s intentional use of the term to illustrate a piece of Kitsap’s past and why the word is avoided today.
TAHUYA — Wind gusts whipped up saltwater whitecaps as night fell over the great bend of the Hood Canal on Sept. 2, 1890. The steamer Delta, capping a long arch of a voyage from Seattle to Union, dispatched a skiff to ferry six Black men toward the canal’s north shore where they’d hoped to homestead.
“… Between nine and ten o’clock, the boat upset because the sea was quite rough,” a small article in the weekly Mason County Journal on Sept. 5 stated flatly. “… And two of the party … were drowned.”
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