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Robeson was the name of a white, slave-owning family in North Carolina before the American Civil War. Their Black slaves took the same surname and among them was William Drew Robeson, who ran away from the plantation, fought for the North in the Civil War and later became a Presbyterian minister and subsequently a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. He married a Quaker schoolteacher, Maria Louisa Bustill of Philadelphia, of mixed Black, American Indian and white Quaker descent. The Robesons were an upwardly mobile family and their three older sons were to have careers as a doctor, a businessman and a minister. Their youngest child, Paul Leroy Robeson, born in the parsonage of his father’s Witherspoon Street Church in Princeton, New Jersey, on April 9th, 1898, was to win worldwide fame as singer, actor and Black American icon.
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Gaps in Black and white home ownership transcend a booming market and threaten to leave some behind Michaelle Bond, Dominique DeMoe, The Philadelphia Inquirer © STEVEN M. FALK/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS DeLuca Homes and other builders are seeing an increase in orders for new houses as buyers face a low supply of existing homes for sale. Low inventory also is driving up prices, exacerbating the gap in home ownership between Black and white Americans.
The housing market has stayed strong throughout the pandemic, thanks in large part to historically low mortgage rates. But not everyone has an equal opportunity to take advantage, as the National Association of Realtors laid out in a report on race and home buying last month.
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