Cart 0

COMING SOON!

Honoring the First 12 Generations of Africans in America, America’s Biggest Investment

America's MVP is not just another book, but a national call to honor the first twelve generations of Africans in America for their indispensable contribution to the birth, growth and survival of the United States of America.

America's MVP, reveals the history that takes African Unpaid Laborers (slaves) who have been confined to the obscure edges of American history and places them at the very forefront of the American success story. Without the collective labor of the first twelve generations of Africans in America, the chances of having a United States of America would be unlikely.

Without their valor, we may not have won our independence in the Revolutionary War, or survived as a sovereign nation in the Civil War. Yet the story of ten million Unpaid Laborers who were indispensable in building this country is often unknown, unacknowledged, or even worse disregarded.

In America's MVP; human rights advocate and unpaid labor researcher Mathew Foggy, Jr. shares raw facts and powerful images that provide an enlightening perspective and divergent national story rarely embraced. This is history through a different lens. With stark truths, undeniable realities, and remarkable anecdotes, Mathew reveals the indispensable collective contribution, hope, perseverance, and valor of our nation's largest group of unsung heroes. Step back in time with this must-read for every citizen interested in preserving the real past and utilizing new insight to honor America's MVP.

Get Our Newsletter

vintage-paper-background.png
 
 
 

About The Author

In 1995, Mathew Foggy, Jr. began his research into the role of Unpaid Laborers and the Unpaid Labor system in pre-colonialAmerica, colonial America, and the United States of America.That research focusing primarily on the period 1607-1865 yielded the incontrovertible fact that no decision of social, political,military, or economic import was taken by our nation without havingto first consider the reciprocal impact on Unpaid Laborers and theUnpaid Labor System. It also revealed that African Unpaid Laborersmade the founding and perpetuation of the United States possible,enabling it to become the greatest nation in modern history. That revelation led in turn to a profound sense of responsibility to ensurethat the millions of people who gave their whole lifetimes for 12 Generations be honored permanently in the nation’s history for theirindispensable contribution. Mathew is the great-grandson of an American slave and the 3rd freegeneration in his family. His grandfather, Elige Foggy, was born in1866, just a few months after the 13th Amendment to the U.S.Constitution, which abolished slavery. Elige became the first freegeneration of the Foggy family.

Mathew is a native of East St. Louis, Illinois. As a teen, Mathew’s life was profoundly impacted when he attended the March on Washington and heard Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. give his famous “I Have a Dream’’ speech. Martin Luther King Jr. greatly influenced the direction of Mathew’s life.