Justinian Cartwright was one of ten individuals emancipated in 1819 by their slave-owning Shaker families who were part of the South Union Village in Auburn, Kentucky. This article traces Cartwright\u27s activities from 1813, when he began working in the community\u27s blacksmith shop until his death in Racine, Wisconsin, in 1862
Among those Marylanders who owned slaves during the colonial and early federal periods of United Sta...
M.J. MorganTheodore Brown traces the origins of the little-studied Hodgeman County Exoduster settlem...
This paper focuses on how representations of the religious lives of slaves, specifically their abili...
Lynching became a visible tool for slaveowners to deal with community regulatory issues, as Zachary ...
MS/146 Slavery Papers, Speeches & Manuscripts. Original page size: 4.5" x 7.75", Fragile conditio...
Western North Carolina is often seen as a region where African-American slavery was uncommon, and no...
By the late eighteenth century, enslaved children and young adults had become vital components in th...
After the Civil War, many recently freed African Americans found themselves in a position of new eco...
When the crisis in Kansas over allowing—or banning—slavery in the territory erupted in 1854, it beca...
This dissertation is a broad examination of black Baptist cultures within biracial churches in Virgi...
Race based slavery in North America had its origins in seventeenth-century Virginia. Initially, the ...
Most pre-twentieth-century European-language sources contain few, if any, voices of the enslaved. Wh...
This article describes the life and struggles of Jermain W. Loguen (originally named Jarm Logue), bo...
During the nineteenth century, slave traders conveyed nearly one million enslaved persons from the U...
Born in Africa, shipped to the West Indies, enslaved in the American colonies, and promised freedom ...
Among those Marylanders who owned slaves during the colonial and early federal periods of United Sta...
M.J. MorganTheodore Brown traces the origins of the little-studied Hodgeman County Exoduster settlem...
This paper focuses on how representations of the religious lives of slaves, specifically their abili...
Lynching became a visible tool for slaveowners to deal with community regulatory issues, as Zachary ...
MS/146 Slavery Papers, Speeches & Manuscripts. Original page size: 4.5" x 7.75", Fragile conditio...
Western North Carolina is often seen as a region where African-American slavery was uncommon, and no...
By the late eighteenth century, enslaved children and young adults had become vital components in th...
After the Civil War, many recently freed African Americans found themselves in a position of new eco...
When the crisis in Kansas over allowing—or banning—slavery in the territory erupted in 1854, it beca...
This dissertation is a broad examination of black Baptist cultures within biracial churches in Virgi...
Race based slavery in North America had its origins in seventeenth-century Virginia. Initially, the ...
Most pre-twentieth-century European-language sources contain few, if any, voices of the enslaved. Wh...
This article describes the life and struggles of Jermain W. Loguen (originally named Jarm Logue), bo...
During the nineteenth century, slave traders conveyed nearly one million enslaved persons from the U...
Born in Africa, shipped to the West Indies, enslaved in the American colonies, and promised freedom ...
Among those Marylanders who owned slaves during the colonial and early federal periods of United Sta...
M.J. MorganTheodore Brown traces the origins of the little-studied Hodgeman County Exoduster settlem...
This paper focuses on how representations of the religious lives of slaves, specifically their abili...