Maine 2025 2025-2026 Regular Session

Maine Senate Bill SP0183 Introduced / Bill

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STATE OF MAINE
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IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD
TWO THOUSAND TWENTY-FIVE
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JOINT RESOLUTION RECOGNIZING FEBRUARY 2025 AS 
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
WHEREAS, Maine's Black history and the story of Maine's role in the global economy of 
enslavement have been largely effaced from our narratives and from our collective 
consciousness; and
WHEREAS, from the earliest arrivals of people from Europe and Africa in the Americas, 
Africans and African Americans have been part of the story of this land, and researchers have 
identified over 2,000 people of color who lived in what is now called the State of Maine prior 
to the year 1800; and
WHEREAS, Africans who were brought involuntarily to these shores suffered generations 
of enslavement, and their descendants faced the injustices of lynch mobs, segregation and the 
denial of basic fundamental rights; and
WHEREAS, 
the earliest known slaving voyage departing from Maine's shores taking place in 1749 and the 
last known slaving voyage on a Maine-built vessel taking place in 1862; and
WHEREAS, 
people, representing only the tip of the iceberg, and slaving vessels were constructed in at least 
26 Maine towns; and
WHEREAS, Maine merchants were deeply entangled in the global economy of 
enslavement, as were the banks that handled their accounts and the insurance firms that secured 
their investments, and at a time when Havana, Cuba was the hub of the illicit slave trade, that 
city was Portland's number one trading partner; and
WHEREAS, it was not only Maine's coastal towns that were complicit in the global 
economy of enslavement through shipbuilding and merchant trading activities, but its inland 
regions as well: crops and livestock were routinely shipped in the "coastwise" trade to provision 
the sugar plantations of the West Indies, along with salted fish and even ice from this region; 
and
WHEREAS, great quantities of Maine timber were processed into barrel staves and 
shipped throughout the 18th and 19th centuries to the West Indies, where enslaved Africans 
were forced to fashion them into barrels; they then filled these barrels with the sugar and 
molasses that were shipped back to Portland and distilled into rum, which was used as currency 
in purchasing more captive Africans; and
WHEREAS, African Americans in all walks of life have shown resilience despite 
suffering under slavery and injustice and have made significant contributions throughout the 
history of the State and across the United States; and
WHEREAS, from the Revolutionary War through the abolitionist movement, to marches 
from Selma to Montgomery and across America today, and in this State, African Americans  Page 2 - 132LR0710(01)
have remained devoted to the proposition that all of us are created equal, even when their own 
rights were denied; and
WHEREAS, 
dates back to 1926 when Dr. Carter G. Woodson set aside a special period of time in February 
to recognize the heritage and achievements of African Americans; and
WHEREAS, 
President Gerald Ford issued a message recognizing Black History Month; and
WHEREAS, in 1986 Congress passed a Public Law designating February as "National 
Black History Month"; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED: That We, the Members of the One Hundred and Thirty-second Legislature 
now assembled in the First Regular Session, on behalf of the people we represent, take this 
opportunity to recognize the significance of Black History Month as an important time to honor 
the contributions of African Americans in the nation's history and encourage all people in the 
State to learn more about the past and to better understand the experiences that have shaped the 
State and the nation.