This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the late antebellum era. Enslavers brought free people of colour into forms of informal quasi-slavery that differed little from enslavement despite their free legal status. Despite a lack of evidence, piecing together free blacks’ experiences through surviving sources reveals much about the porous boundary between slavery and freedom where enslavers manipulated marginality for financial gain. There was no sharp delineation between slavery and freedom but instead a continuum of oppression characterized by varying degrees of persecution and fragile freedoms
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
As the abolitionist minister\u27s observation suggests, enslaved African Americans were neither cont...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
Warren Milteer Jr. traces the trajectory of free people of colors\u27 experience from the colonial e...
For free black women in the pre-Civil War American South, the status offered by ‘freedom’ was uncert...
The purpose of this article is to explore how music provided the U.S. plantation-slaves with a space...
While the majority of enslaved people lived on large plantations, there were a significant minority ...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
This article re-examines the 1860 census for Savannah Georgia. It melds the free and slave census to...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
Fragile Freedom Lawsuits illuminate struggle to maintain liberty Legal historian Judith Kelleher ...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
As the abolitionist minister\u27s observation suggests, enslaved African Americans were neither cont...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
Warren Milteer Jr. traces the trajectory of free people of colors\u27 experience from the colonial e...
For free black women in the pre-Civil War American South, the status offered by ‘freedom’ was uncert...
The purpose of this article is to explore how music provided the U.S. plantation-slaves with a space...
While the majority of enslaved people lived on large plantations, there were a significant minority ...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
Contrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possible to regions outside...
Only a few decades ago, it was possible to write accounts of the culture or economy of the antebellu...
This article re-examines the 1860 census for Savannah Georgia. It melds the free and slave census to...
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
Fragile Freedom Lawsuits illuminate struggle to maintain liberty Legal historian Judith Kelleher ...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
As the abolitionist minister\u27s observation suggests, enslaved African Americans were neither cont...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...