Benjamin Banneker, the Black Authority that Shaped DC

Gabrielle Birchak/ February 17, 2026/ Modern History

It was late win­ter of 1791, and the air near the Potomac car­ried a sharp cold that made every breath feel like a mea­sure­ment. A small camp stood at Jones Point, near Alexan­dria, at the edge of what would become the ten-mile square of the new fed­er­al dis­trict. There was no sky­line yet, no dome, no mar­ble. There was only dark­ness, trees, water, and a crew try­ing to turn wilder­ness into coordinates.

A lantern swung low. Papers were weighed down with stones. Met­al tools caught faint light. And a man, whis­per­ing num­bers and look­ing up at the sky, stood slight­ly apart from the camp’s bustle.

His name was Ben­jamin Banneker.

By Frank Schu­len­burg — Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=87515432

He was not a gen­er­al. He was not a com­mis­sion­er. He was not a law­mak­er. He was a Black man in a slave­hold­ing coun­try, and he had been there at night doing what the work depend­ed on: record­ing star posi­tions, track­ing time, and turn­ing celes­tial motion into usable lines on Earth.

Ban­nek­er was part of the ear­ly repub­lic, which exposed a pro­found con­tra­dic­tion. The nation spoke in the lan­guage of lib­er­ty, but it had been built to deny lib­er­ty. It praised rea­son, but it fenced rea­son off by race. Yet here was a self-taught Black astronomer doing pre­cise fed­er­al work for the cap­i­tal of the Unit­ed States.

Ban­nek­er was not in charge of the project, but his obser­va­tions helped anchor it. He had watched the sky the way sur­vey­ors need­ed some­one to watch it: patient­ly, accu­rate­ly, and with enough math­e­mat­i­cal skill to turn obser­va­tion into evidence.

And that raised the ques­tion at the cen­ter of his life, and at the cen­ter of the ear­ly republic:

How did a self-taught Black astronomer become an authority in a country built to deny his authority?

By Charles Alston — U.S. Nation­al Archives and Records Admin­is­tra­tion, Pub­lic Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16895070

Origins and the conditions that made him possible

Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er was born as a free black child on Novem­ber 9, 1731, in Bal­ti­more Coun­ty, Maryland. 

That first fact shaped every­thing that fol­lowed. Being born free did not mean being safe. It did not mean being treat­ed as an equal. It meant Banneker’s life began inside a nar­row cor­ri­dor of pos­si­bil­i­ty, and that cor­ri­dor could have closed at any time.

His moth­er, Mary, was a free black woman, and his father, Robert, was a for­mer­ly enslaved per­son from Guinea. Ban­nek­er grew up on his par­ents’ tobac­co farm near Bal­ti­more. When he was six years old, his par­ents put his name on the deed, mak­ing him the ben­e­fi­cia­ry of 100 acres of land.[1]

Some of the sources on the fol­low­ing infor­ma­tion are a bit vague. Accord­ing to ency­clo­pe­dic sources, in Banneker’s ear­ly years, he was taught to read by his grand­moth­er, who often read him the Bible. As Martha Elli­cott Tyson not­ed in her 1854 writ­ings for the Mary­land His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety, Ban­nek­er was sent to a near­by one-room school­house as a boy. Wit­ness­es recalled that his ‘only delight’ was to ‘dive into his books. I will post a PDF to that source on my web­site at mathsciencehistory.com.

He was an inquis­i­tive young man, and when he was in his ear­ly 20s, he dis­as­sem­bled a bor­rowed pock­et watch to under­stand how it worked. Using that watch as a tem­plate, he then cre­at­ed a wood­en clock that struck every hour.  That clock con­tin­ued to work until after he had died, mean­ing it last­ed for 50 years.[2] [3]

This clock was not a small thing. In the eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry, pre­ci­sion was pow­er. It was social stand­ing made vis­i­ble. A pre­cise object could draw wit­ness­es, and wit­ness­es could lend to rep­u­ta­tion. Banneker’s clock did not erase racism. It did not dis­solve bar­ri­ers. But it did force a local com­mu­ni­ty to face a fact: the clock worked.

It also estab­lished a pat­tern that would repeat in his life. Ban­nek­er often built cred­i­bil­i­ty through some­thing that could be checked. He did not ask peo­ple to believe in him as an idea. He gave them an arti­fact that kept time, and lat­er he gave them pre­dic­tions that matched the sky.

It is like­ly that as he became a teenag­er, he had to put his stud­ies aside and work on the farm. In the 1770s, when Ban­nek­er was in his ear­ly for­ties, a Quak­er fam­i­ly named Elli­cott moved into the area along the Pat­ap­sco Riv­er and built grist­mills. The Elli­cotts were build­ing grist­mills, which are build­ings and grinders that crush or pul­ver­ize wheat, rye, or corn into flour or feed.

The Elli­cotts mat­tered in Banneker’s life because they removed some of the bar­ri­ers that made bril­liance impos­si­ble to demon­strate. The Elli­cotts were Quak­ers, mem­bers of the Soci­ety of Friends. They believed in human dig­ni­ty and account­abil­i­ty, even in a soci­ety struc­tured by inequal­i­ty.  This con­text mat­ters. In eigh­teenth-cen­tu­ry Amer­i­ca, being wel­comed into intel­lec­tu­al con­ver­sa­tion was not neu­tral. It was a form of per­mis­sion. And in the Elli­cotts’ orbit, Ban­nek­er was not treat­ed as an anom­aly or a curios­i­ty. He was treat­ed as a thinker.

After the Elli­cotts estab­lished their milling com­mu­ni­ty along the Pat­ap­sco Riv­er in the 1770s, Ban­nek­er came into reg­u­lar con­tact with them as a neigh­bor. Decades lat­er, that prox­im­i­ty became piv­otal. PBS reports that in 1788, George Elli­cott loaned Ban­nek­er astron­o­my books and instru­ments, which allowed him to move from infor­mal curios­i­ty into seri­ous astro­nom­i­cal cal­cu­la­tion.[4]

Those loans mat­tered because advanced astron­o­my was not some­thing you could impro­vise. It requires tables, texts, and tools. An 1863 arti­cle in The Atlantic lat­er list­ed some of the works Ban­nek­er used, includ­ing astro­nom­i­cal tables and trea­tis­es that were stan­dard ref­er­ences for seri­ous prac­ti­tion­ers of the time.[5]

This is where empow­er­ment becomes visible.

The Elli­cotts did not sup­ply ideas. They sup­plied access. They did not val­i­date Banneker’s intel­lect by prais­ing it. They val­i­dat­ed it by let­ting him test it. With those books and instru­ments, Ban­nek­er could cal­cu­late, pre­dict, and pub­lish results that could be checked by any­one will­ing to look at the sky. And once Banneker’s work entered pub­lic cir­cu­la­tion, it could be eval­u­at­ed by the same stan­dards applied to any astronomer. That is how pri­vate abil­i­ty became pub­lic authority.

But what about the 20 years that led up to his meet­ing with the Elli­cotts? Well, dur­ing that time, Ban­nek­er kept learn­ing. He obtained knowl­edge wher­ev­er he could and was pre­dom­i­nant­ly self-edu­cat­ed. That phrase, “self-edu­cat­ed,” often sound­ed like soli­tary genius. In prac­tice, it usu­al­ly requires an ecosys­tem. Peo­ple learned on their own, but they learned with bor­rowed tools, bor­rowed books, and bor­rowed time. They learned because some­one encour­aged it.

The con­di­tions that made Ban­nek­er pos­si­ble had been rare but authentic.

First, he had lived in a house­hold where lit­er­a­cy took root ear­ly. Once he could read, the world had not been lim­it­ed to what he could see. It also includ­ed what oth­ers had record­ed, cal­cu­lat­ed, and published.

Sec­ond, he lived in an age and place where prac­ti­cal math­e­mat­ics mat­tered. It was an age when almanacs were being print­ed and cir­cu­lat­ed every­where. It was a place where essen­tial sur­vey­ing was being con­duct­ed around DC as the new country’s offi­cial­ly estab­lished cap­i­tal grew and expand­ed. As a result, land plot­ting and time­keep­ing were not abstract games; they were seri­ous busi­ness. Thus, Ban­nek­er was able to wit­ness first­hand the essen­tial appli­ca­tions of math­e­mat­ics and astronomy.

Third, he had crossed paths with the Elli­cotts, and that rela­tion­ship became the cat­a­lyst for Banneker’s oppor­tu­ni­ties. The Elli­cotts built a world where num­bers mat­tered in ordi­nary life. Their milling com­mu­ni­ty depend­ed on care­ful mea­sure­ment, and their work brought them into con­stant con­tact with maps, prop­er­ty lines, and the instru­ments that trans­lat­ed land­scape into order. In that set­ting, Banneker’s tal­ent had some­where to go. His pre­ci­sion fit the envi­ron­ment, and his mind fit the conversations.

The rela­tion­ship did not hand him a title. It opened doors to work where math­e­mat­ics was not a hob­by; it was a neces­si­ty. As Banneker’s astro­nom­i­cal skill matured and his name became asso­ci­at­ed with seri­ous cal­cu­la­tion, he became con­nect­ed to sur­vey­ing work along­side Andrew Ellicott’s team in 1791, when the new fed­er­al dis­trict was being laid out.[6]  The Nation­al Park Ser­vice lat­er described him as spend­ing about three months at Jones Point mak­ing astro­nom­i­cal obser­va­tions that sup­port­ed the bound­ary work.[7]

What changed Banneker’s life was not a sud­den mir­a­cle. It was a steady tran­si­tion from pri­vate study to pub­lic respon­si­bil­i­ty, shaped by time, access, and the seri­ous­ness of the work itself.

By the late 1780s, Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er had moved beyond read­ing about math­e­mat­ics and astron­o­my. He had begun doing the work. He had per­formed seri­ous astro­nom­i­cal cal­cu­la­tions and accu­rate­ly pre­dict­ed the solar eclipse of 1789.

That achieve­ment mat­tered because it placed him in a tra­di­tion that val­ued rig­or and patience. In an Amer­i­ca where Black intel­lec­tu­al author­i­ty was rou­tine­ly doubt­ed, Banneker’s mas­tery did not come from rhetoric. It came from the long dis­ci­pline of learn­ing how the heav­ens moved, and then learn­ing how to express that motion in numbers.

This was also where the Elli­cotts’ role became con­crete. Their influ­ence did not oper­ate through speech­es or sym­bol­ism. It oper­at­ed through prox­im­i­ty, encour­age­ment, and the prac­ti­cal world of mea­sure­ment that sur­round­ed their milling com­mu­ni­ty. The Nation­al Park Ser­vice described Banneker’s life in terms that con­nect­ed his astro­nom­i­cal labor to sur­vey­ing and tech­ni­cal work, sit­u­at­ing him in the realm of obser­va­tion, cal­cu­la­tion, and field prac­tice rather than in legend.

And here is where the leg­end becomes pro­found­ly tan­gi­ble. Once Banneker’s cal­cu­la­tions became advanced, the next step was the one that car­ried his name beyond his neigh­bor­hood: publication.

He had stud­ied tables and learned how to pro­duce them. He had treat­ed time as some­thing mea­sur­able, and the sky as some­thing that could be trans­lat­ed into cal­cu­la­tion. At the cen­ter of that work was the ephemeris that he had pub­lished inside an almanac.

An ephemeris is a set of tables (or a dataset) that lists pre­dict­ed posi­tions of celes­tial objects, most com­mon­ly the Sun, Moon, plan­ets, and some­times bright stars, at spe­cif­ic times and dates. Think of it as a sched­ule of the sky.

Why it mattered inside an almanac

In the 1700s and 1800s, an almanac was a prac­ti­cal hand­book for the year. The ephemeris was the part that made the almanac use­ful and trust­wor­thy:

  • Cal­en­dar accu­ra­cy: It told you when lunar phas­es occurred, when eclipses might hap­pen, and how the length of day changed through the year.
  • Time­keep­ing and nav­i­ga­tion: Sky posi­tions helped peo­ple keep time and, for nav­i­ga­tors, sup­port­ed celes­tial nav­i­ga­tion (espe­cial­ly with lunar data).
  • Farm­ing and dai­ly plan­ning: Many read­ers used sunrise/sunset, sea­sons, and lunar cycles for plan­ning work and travel.
  • Pub­lic cred­i­bil­i­ty: Pro­duc­ing an ephemeris required real math­e­mat­i­cal astron­o­my. If your tables con­sis­tent­ly matched what peo­ple saw over the year, it estab­lished your rep­u­ta­tion as a seri­ous calculator.

Why it mattered for Banneker

When Ban­nek­er pro­duced an ephemeris for an almanac, he wasn’t just shar­ing opin­ions or essays. He was pub­lish­ing pre­cise pre­dic­tions about the sky’s tim­ing and motions, exact­ly the kind of work that built his stand­ing as a math­e­mati­cian and astronomer.

Pub­lish­ing expands the radius of a person’s rep­u­ta­tion. A com­mu­ni­ty can admire your skills and still keep you con­tained. How­ev­er, print did the oppo­site. Print car­ries one’s body of work into oth­er hands, into oth­er rooms, and into a wider pub­lic conversations.

Banneker’s almanacs began with the issue for 1792, first pub­lished the year pri­or in 1791.[8]
He then con­tin­ued pub­lish­ing his ephemeris annu­al­ly through 1797.

Those dates mat­tered because they showed sus­tained work over mul­ti­ple years, not a sin­gle moment of atten­tion. The almanacs also car­ried more than cal­cu­la­tions. They car­ried a voice. The Nation­al Park Ser­vice not­ed that Ban­nek­er includ­ed quo­ta­tions and say­ings that chal­lenged racist assump­tions about Black capability.

So his writ­ings did two things at once. They demon­strat­ed tech­ni­cal mas­tery, and they assert­ed a moral claim about who belonged in the world of intel­lect and pub­lic life.

As Smith­son­ian Mag­a­zine described it, Banneker’s almanacs took on broad­er cul­tur­al sig­nif­i­cance pre­cise­ly because they con­front­ed racist assump­tions about Black intel­lec­tu­al infe­ri­or­i­ty.[9]

The almanac was pub­lished by William God­dard and James Angell, the own­er of the printshop that made it. As they began pub­lish­ing Banneker’s works in 1791, Banneker’s sto­ry moved from the pages to the field.

In 1791, Ban­nek­er assist­ed Andrew Ellicott’s sur­vey­ing team in the ear­ly work of estab­lish­ing the bound­aries of the new fed­er­al dis­trict. The Nation­al Park Ser­vice described him as con­duct­ing obser­va­tions for about three months at Jones Point, mak­ing astro­nom­i­cal obser­va­tions that sup­port­ed the bound­ary work.

Bound­ary work depend­ed on pre­ci­sion and endurance. The job required some­one who could keep care­ful records and sus­tain atten­tion in uncom­fort­able con­di­tions. Ban­nek­er had been there because his skills fit the work.

At the same time, his name lat­er became tan­gled in sto­ries that grew beyond what the record sup­port­ed. Some pop­u­lar retellings exag­ger­at­ed his role in the city’s design, includ­ing claims that he recre­at­ed L’Enfant’s plan from memory.

The Smith­son­ian Libraries and Archives dis­cussed how myths about Ban­nek­er accu­mu­lat­ed over time and how his­to­ri­ans worked to sep­a­rate doc­u­men­ta­tion from lat­er embell­ish­ment.[10]
The Amer­i­can Philo­soph­i­cal Soci­ety also empha­sized the impor­tance of dis­tin­guish­ing the his­tor­i­cal record from lat­er leg­end, par­tic­u­lar­ly around the bound­ary sur­vey and its par­tic­i­pants.[11]

That dis­tinc­tion did not dimin­ish Ban­nek­er. It clar­i­fied him.

Because the ver­i­fied arc of his life remained remark­able: he had moved from local study to pub­lished work that estab­lished his name, to tech­ni­cal par­tic­i­pa­tion in the found­ing bound­ary work of the nation’s capital.

In August 1791, Ban­nek­er wrote a let­ter that became one of the most famous polit­i­cal doc­u­ments pro­duced by an ear­ly Black Amer­i­can sci­en­tist. Ban­nek­er wrote to Thomas Jef­fer­son in 1791, appeal­ing for jus­tice for African Amer­i­cans and enclos­ing the man­u­script of his almanac as evi­dence of Black intel­lec­tu­al abil­i­ty. The let­ter, dat­ed August 19, 1791, was pre­served as a pri­ma­ry doc­u­ment.[12]

Banneker’s strat­e­gy was direct and dis­ci­plined. He did not write as a sup­pli­cant. He wrote as a man address­ing a con­tra­dic­tion. He invoked Jefferson’s own ideals, espe­cial­ly the lan­guage of equal­i­ty and lib­er­ty, and set them along­side the real­i­ty of slav­ery. Ban­nek­er calls it “pitiable” that Jef­fer­son could speak of equal­i­ty while “detain­ing by fraud and vio­lence so numer­ous a part of my brethren under groan­ing cap­tiv­i­ty and cru­el oppres­sion, that you should at the Same time be found guilty of that most crim­i­nal act, which you pro­fess­ed­ly detest­ed in oth­ers, with respect to yourselves.

Ban­nek­er then goes on to ask Jef­fer­son and his men to “wean your­selves from these nar­row prej­u­dices which you have imbibed with respect to them, and as Job pro­posed to his friends “Put your Souls in their Souls stead,” thus shall your hearts be enlarged with kind­ness and benev­o­lence toward them, and thus shall you need nei­ther the direc­tion of myself or oth­ers in what man­ner to pro­ceed herein.”

It’s a com­pelling let­ter, but the pow­er of the let­ter also came from what he enclosed. He enclosed his work so that Jef­fer­son could ver­i­fy. He enclosed cal­cu­la­tions as evi­dence. He treat­ed sci­en­tif­ic com­pe­tence as a form of argu­ment and forced an influ­en­tial pub­lic fig­ure to respond.

Jef­fer­son did respond.

Jefferson’s reply was dat­ed August 30, 1791, and it was pre­served by the Library of Con­gress. In that reply, Jef­fer­son acknowl­edged Banneker’s work as evi­dence of Black tal­ent, even though Jefferson’s broad­er actions and beliefs did not elim­i­nate the nation’s con­tra­dic­tion. Jef­fer­son wrote that Banneker’s work pro­vid­ed “proofs” of tal­ents equal to those of oth­er “colours of men.”

What did the exchange change?

Sad­ly, Banneker’s let­ter did not dis­man­tle slav­ery. It did not trans­form the law. But it did cre­ate a pub­lic, doc­u­ment­ed con­fronta­tion between a Black sci­en­tif­ic mind and one of the nation’s most influ­en­tial polit­i­cal the­o­rists. It also left a paper trail that lat­er gen­er­a­tions could point to when peo­ple tried to deny that Black intel­lec­tu­al author­i­ty had exist­ed at the nation’s beginning.

When Banneker’s life is told care­ful­ly, it can be sum­ma­rized through three “author­i­ty objects,” each one hard­er to dis­miss than the last.

First, there is the clock. It rep­re­sents pre­ci­sion made visible.

Sec­ond, there are the cal­cu­la­tions. They rep­re­sent pre­ci­sion extend­ed into prediction.

Third, there are the pub­li­ca­tions, espe­cial­ly the almanacs and the Jef­fer­son let­ter. They rep­re­sent pre­ci­sion that traveled.

The record also includes lim­its. The archive was uneven, and lat­er retellings often ampli­fied Banneker’s role because peo­ple want­ed a hero large enough to stand against cen­turies of denial.

The Amer­i­can Philo­soph­i­cal Soci­ety describes how the lim­it­ed doc­u­men­tary trail and the appetite for inspir­ing nar­ra­tives con­tributed to the growth of myths around his sto­ry.[13]

Still, even with­out exag­ger­a­tion, his doc­u­ment­ed life remains extra­or­di­nary. He was born free in Mary­land in 1731 and edu­cat­ed him­self over the decades. He built a pre­cise clock that made him local­ly renowned. He con­duct­ed seri­ous astro­nom­i­cal cal­cu­la­tions by the late 1780s and pre­dict­ed the 1789 solar eclipse. He had pub­lished almanacs begin­ning with the 1792 issue, first issued in 1791, and con­tin­ued through 1797.[14] He had assist­ed Andrew Ellicott’s 1791 bound­ary work with astro­nom­i­cal obser­va­tions, includ­ing time spent at Jones Point. And he had writ­ten to Jef­fer­son in August 1791 with a moral argu­ment backed by sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence, leav­ing a his­toric exchange that lat­er gen­er­a­tions could study.

For Black His­to­ry Month, Banneker’s sto­ry does not need exag­ger­a­tion to car­ry weight. His life already shows what hap­pens when intel­lect met oppor­tu­ni­ty, when pre­ci­sion becomes proof, and when a Black man in the ear­ly repub­lic insists that the nation’s ideals should apply to everyone.

Ban­nek­er built author­i­ty the hard way: in wood, in num­bers, and in words sharp enough to hold a coun­try account­able. Ban­nek­er did more than map the stars and tan­gi­bly estab­lish our cap­i­tal; he stepped up to the country’s lead­ers and asked that they, like­wise, shoul­der the same cul­pa­bil­i­ty for imple­ment­ing mea­sures to pro­tect his peo­ple. Like Ban­nek­er, may we meet our dif­fi­cult moments the way he did, with dis­ci­plined learn­ing, pub­lic truth-telling, and direct pres­sure on lead­ers to pro­tect human dignity.


Fur­ther Reading


[1] Bedi­ni, Sil­vio A. The Life of Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er. With Inter­net Archive. New York, Scrib­n­er, 1971. http://archive.org/details/lifeofbenjaminba00silv.

[2] John Hazle­hurst Boneval Latrobe, Mary­land His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety. Mem­oir of Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er: Read Before the Mary­land His­tor­i­cal Soci­ety, At … With Har­vard Uni­ver­si­ty. Print­ed by John D. Toy, 1845. http://archive.org/details/memoirbenjaminb00socigoog.

[3] “NAMA Note­book: Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er (U.S. Nation­al Park Ser­vice).” Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/nama-notebook-benjamin-banneker.htm.

[4] “Africans in America/Part 2/Benjamin Ban­nek­er.” Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p84.html.

[5] Con­way, M.D. “Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er, the Negro Astronomer — The Atlantic.” Accessed Feb­ru­ary 5, 2026. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1863/01/benjamin-banneker-the-negro-astronomer/629300/?utm_source=chatgpt.com.

[6] “Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er | Let­ter to Jef­fer­son, Clock, Almanac, & Facts | Bri­tan­ni­ca.” Accessed Feb­ru­ary 5, 2026. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Benjamin-Banneker?utm_source=chatgpt.com.

[7] “NAMA Note­book: Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er (U.S. Nation­al Park Ser­vice).” Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/nama-notebook-benjamin-banneker.htm.

[8] Library of Con­gress, Wash­ing­ton, D.C. 20540 USA. “Ben­jamin Banneker’s Penn­syl­va­nia, Delaware, Mary­land, and Vir­ginia Almanack and Ephemeris, for the Year of Our Lord.” Pdf. Accessed Feb­ru­ary 5, 2026. https://www.loc.gov/item/98650590/.

[9] Aghapour, Andrew Ali, and Peter Manseau. “Ben­jamin Banneker’s Almanac of Strange Dreams.” Smith­son­ian Mag­a­zine, Jan­u­ary 4, 2024. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/blogs/smithsonian-books/2024/01/04/benjamin-bannekers-almanac-of-strange-dreams/.

[10] Blake­ly, Julia. “America’s First Known African Amer­i­can Sci­en­tist and Math­e­mati­cian – Smith­son­ian Libraries and Archives / Unbound.” Smith­son­ian — Unbound, Feb­ru­ary 15, 2017. https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2017/02/15/americas-first-known-african-american-scientist-mathematician/.

[11] Femia, Vin­cent. “The Sur­vey­ors: Andrew Elli­cott, Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er, and the Bound­aries of Nation and Knowl­edge.” Amer­i­can Philo­soph­i­cal Soci­ety, Decem­ber 22, 2025. https://www.amphilsoc.org/news/surveyors-andrew-ellicott-benjamin-banneker-and-boundaries-nation-and-knowledge.

[12] Ban­nek­er, Ben­jamin. “Let­ter from Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er to Thomas Jef­fer­son (August 19, 1791).” Ency­clo­pe­dia Vir­ginia, n.d. Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://encyclopediavirginia.org/primary-documents/letter-from-benjamin-banneker-to-thomas-jefferson-august-19–1791/.

[13] Femia, Vin­cent. The Sur­vey­ors: Andrew Elli­cott, Ben­jamin Ban­nek­er, and the Bound­aries of Nation and Knowl­edge. n.d. Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://www.amphilsoc.org/news/surveyors-andrew-ellicott-benjamin-banneker-and-boundaries-nation-and-knowledge.

[14] Library of Con­gress, Wash­ing­ton, D.C. 20540 USA. “Ben­jamin Banneker’s Penn­syl­va­nia, Delaware, Mary­land, and Vir­ginia Almanack and Ephemeris, for the Year of Our Lord.” Pdf. Accessed Jan­u­ary 16, 2026. https://www.loc.gov/resource/rbc0001.2019amal50590/?st=gallery.

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