EVERY STORY restores
stories of Black Land Loss, to inspire public awareness, community activism, political leadership, and change.
Collecting, preserving, and amplifying
ADD YOUR STORY TO THE ARCHIVe
Share your stories on video, transform personal memories into collective restoration. Every story is both an act of resistance and a return of value—reminding audiences that while land can be taken, legacy cannot.
Please take a moment to provide your information below, and one of our team members will reach out to you directly. Thank you for connecting with us.
WHAT WAS STOLEN, STILL SPEAKS
The Black Land Loss Narrative Archive will form an invaluable resource for scholars, authors, historians, educators, storytellers, policymakers, and change agents who wrestle with issues of restitution, reparations, racial inequity in home ownership, and the racial wealth gap.
Through documenting stories of Black land loss, the archive will help to demonstrate the magnitude of what Black families have lost and will contribute to national dialogue to encourage paths to restitution, rebuilding, and healing.
George Fatheree III with Tavis Smiley
Noted attorney and social impact entrepreneur, George Fatheree III, who represented the family in the historic Bruce's Beach case, talks about the work of the Black Land Loss Narrative Archive Project and how Black families can protect themselves from land dispossession.
MFA Boston returns works by 19th-century
enslaved artist David drake to his heirs
Over more than a century, the stoneware pottery has become a powerful representation of the artistic history of enslaved people.
© 2026
The information you are submitting will be reviewed to determine if we would like to conduct a formal interview for inclusion in the archive. We are the sole owners of the information collected on this site. We only have access to the information that you voluntarily give us. We will not sell or rent this information to anyone. We will use your information to respond to you, regarding the reason you contacted us. We will not share your information with any third party outside of our organization.
By submitting a contact form on this website, you agree to be contacted by BLLNAP to explore possible inclusion in the archive.
Disclaimer: The Black Land Loss Narrative Archive Project is not offering to, and does not, provide any legal support or legal advice. Our focus is to ensure that stories of Black land loss are not lost or forgotten and that they can be preserved and amplified to inform our national dialogue around issues of race, justice, restitution, and reparations.