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VOL.37, NO.2
Quander, who is from one of the oldest documented African American families in the United States, traces his family back 11 generations to the 1670s. Their surname originated with ancestor Egya Amkwandoh, who was kidnapped in Ghana in the 1600s and forcibly brought to America. When asked his name, he answered,
PHOTO BY JASON SAULER PHOTOGRAPHY
One of America’s oldest families
FEBRUARY 2025
I N S I D E … PHOTO BY VISIT PENSACOLA
Two ancestors carry the torch By Glenda C. Booth The theme for this year’s Black History Month is “African Americans in Labor,” highlighting how African Americans helped build the United States — voluntarily and involuntarily. Both free and enslaved African Americans constructed the U.S. Capitol, the White House and the Smithsonian Institution’s first building, the “Castle.” They laid out the first streets of the nation’s capital. While George Washington was leading the Revolutionary War, he left his Virginia plantation, Mount Vernon, in the hands of enslaved men, women and children. As he fought, they were “keeping the home fires burning, pulling weeds, harvesting crops and running his fishery, distillery and spinning house. He could get rich while slaves got nothing,” said retired Washington, D.C., administrative law Judge Rohulamin Quander. Quander, 81, has ancestors who were enslaved on George Washington’s Mount Vernon plantation. He has spent decades documenting the many contributions African Americans have made to the country — contributions too often overlooked. “It’s so important to tell the truth about American history and the many ways African Americans have contributed to that history, literally and physically building that history,” Quander said.
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L E I S U R E & T R AV E L
Explore the Gulf Coast, “America’s Mediterranean,” or warm up in the British Virgin Islands page 26
Edwin Henderson, left, and Rohulamin Quander, right, stand at the site where, in 1915, Henderson’s grandfather established the NAACP’s first rural chapter. Both men are from two of America’s oldest families and work to ensure that historians tell the whole story.
ARTS & STYLE “Amkwandoh,” which was misinterpreted as, “I am Quando.” After being freed, some of the Quanders acquired land in Northern Virginia and Maryland. Today, four streets are named for the Quander family: one each in Virginia’s Fairfax County and Prince William County; one in Prince George’s County,
Maryland; and one in Washington, D.C.’s Navy Yard area.
Digging into the past
Virginia professor publishes his eighth book; plus, Bob Levey on a late-life splurge page 30
The Quander family gathers every year for a reunion. This year’s will mark the See BLACK HISTORY, page 32
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