The Role of Fugitive Slaves in the Workings of the Underground Railroad Based on a series of lectures at the Ann Richards Civil War Center at Penn State University in 2012, this short study furthers the serious analysis of fugitive slaves in the antebellum United States and the legendary n...
The seeds for the Civil War were first planted at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...
The Underground Railroad, Black Agency, and the Coming of the Civil War The momentum toward uncoveri...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
A New Study on the Importance of the Fugitive Slave Issue Most historians view slavery’s role in the...
Review of: Making Freedom: The Underground Railroad and the Politics of Slavery, by Galin Berrier
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
The past several years have seen a new energy and heightened scholarly attention to many diverse asp...
Ferrying across the river Forgotten conductors rediscovered For generations, white Quaker activist...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
This dissertation examines the construction of historical memory of the abolitionist movement in the...
By 1854, when the Kansas-Nebraska Territories were opened for settlement, underground railroads had ...
"On the Edge of Freedom" is an interdisciplinary study of five free black communities that functione...
The seeds for the Civil War were first planted at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...
The Underground Railroad, Black Agency, and the Coming of the Civil War The momentum toward uncoveri...
Outside the Lecture Hall The Underground Railroad and Organized Abolitionism Fergus Bordewich\u27...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
A New Study on the Importance of the Fugitive Slave Issue Most historians view slavery’s role in the...
Review of: Making Freedom: The Underground Railroad and the Politics of Slavery, by Galin Berrier
The Underground Railroad in an Important Juncture State Last month, at a Fourth of July barbeque, a ...
The past several years have seen a new energy and heightened scholarly attention to many diverse asp...
Ferrying across the river Forgotten conductors rediscovered For generations, white Quaker activist...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
This dissertation examines the construction of historical memory of the abolitionist movement in the...
By 1854, when the Kansas-Nebraska Territories were opened for settlement, underground railroads had ...
"On the Edge of Freedom" is an interdisciplinary study of five free black communities that functione...
The seeds for the Civil War were first planted at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...