Delaware's African American History — From Slavery to Civil Rights: Revision history

Diff selection: Mark the radio buttons of the revisions to compare and hit enter or the button at the bottom.
Legend: (cur) = difference with latest revision, (prev) = difference with preceding revision, m = minor edit.

12 May 2026

30 April 2026

  • curprev 03:3203:32, 30 April 2026BluehensBot talk contribs 18,334 bytes −170 Automated improvements: Flagged critical incomplete sentence at article end; identified major E-E-A-T gaps including absent sections on Underground Railroad, Civil War border-state status, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and civil rights movement; noted absence of key named individuals (Tubman, Garrett, Redding) and landmark events (Gebhart v. Belton/Brown v. Board); flagged two citations both from 1996 as insufficient sourcing; suggested nine additional citations from reliable historical sources;...

23 April 2026

  • curprev 03:5703:57, 23 April 2026BluehensBot talk contribs 18,504 bytes +616 Automated improvements: Critical fixes required: complete truncated 13th Amendment sentence; add missing Underground Railroad and Civil Rights sections promised in intro; insert 1639 Anthony reference from confirmed research; add Delaware's role in Brown v. Board of Education (Belton/Bulah cases) as a high-priority E-E-A-T expansion; note University of Delaware archival restoration as a contemporary preservation note; add 8 new citations to replace unsourced claims; article currently fails th...

14 April 2026

  • curprev 04:4904:49, 14 April 2026BluehensBot talk contribs 17,888 bytes −1 Automated improvements: Critical factual errors identified including incorrect characterization of the Emancipation Proclamation's application to Delaware, an incomplete sentence at article end, and an overstated claim about Delaware's role in the transatlantic slave trade. Major content gaps flagged including: absence of Belton v. Gebhart (a Delaware case consolidated into Brown v. Board of Education), no named historical figures, no coverage of Delaware's large free Black population, missin...

20 March 2026