Uncovering the Past: A group of fifth graders discovered their town’s secret history and honored a forgotten hero.
P-R-U-T. Dust flew through the air as these four letters were carved into a memorial in West Hartford, Connecticut, last May. More than 240 years after an enslaved man named Prut died in the Revolutionary War, he was finally being remembered. And it was all thanks to fifth-graders from the Renbrook School.
Slavery is a painful part of American history. From the 1600s to the 1800s, millions of people were kidnapped from their homes in Africa. Once in America, African natives were seen as property, not human beings. They were bought and sold by new “owners” who forced them to do backbreaking work from sunup to sundown. Many were sent to work on plantations. Others worked in homes, as cooks and maids.
One of those enslaved people was Prut. The Renbrook students learned that he died in 1776 at Fort Ticonderoga in New York. Prut, like countless other enslaved people, was likely sent to war in place of his owner. Or he might have run away to join the war after someone falsely promised him freedom.
explains Renbrook student Mikayla Grant. “People didn’t give much thought to when or
where he was born.”
Nicole Tocco, Executive Editor of Scholastic News Edition said of the article, “Truly, it was one my favorite stories of the year. Your students were so well-spoken and passionate and informed on such an important topic. It was one of those that I wish I had 10 more pages to devote to!”
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