“Harbour provides us with a finely tuned multilayered exploration of black women’s activism in the antebellum and Civil War eras.
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
During the processes of emancipation and Reconstruction, black women’s legal, socio-political, and e...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
Review of: Organizing Freedom: Black Emancipation Activism in the Civil War Midwest, by Jennifer R. ...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
Agency and Survival over Slavery and Oppression This is an important, inspiring, and at times a rath...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Those familiar with Thavolia Glymph’s Out of the House of Bondage (2008) know how she expertly craft...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
From Slavery to Citizenship In May 1864, Jane Ciss walked into a provost marshal’s office in St. Lou...
CWBR interview with Dr. Jennifer Harbour, associate professor of Black Studies and Women\u27s and Ge...
The Role of Fugitive Slaves in the Workings of the Underground Railroad Based on a series of lecture...
How Citizenship was Defined and Defended by African American Boston In More Than Freedom: Fighting f...
Following World War I, a new, militant spirit of resistance and activism burgeoned among African-Ame...
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
During the processes of emancipation and Reconstruction, black women’s legal, socio-political, and e...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
Review of: Organizing Freedom: Black Emancipation Activism in the Civil War Midwest, by Jennifer R. ...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
Agency and Survival over Slavery and Oppression This is an important, inspiring, and at times a rath...
Review of: Embattled Freedom: Journeys through the Civil War’s Slave Refugee Camps, by Amy Murrell T...
Those familiar with Thavolia Glymph’s Out of the House of Bondage (2008) know how she expertly craft...
Ideas and reality The formation of the Republican Party In 1860, less than a decade after having b...
From Slavery to Citizenship In May 1864, Jane Ciss walked into a provost marshal’s office in St. Lou...
CWBR interview with Dr. Jennifer Harbour, associate professor of Black Studies and Women\u27s and Ge...
The Role of Fugitive Slaves in the Workings of the Underground Railroad Based on a series of lecture...
How Citizenship was Defined and Defended by African American Boston In More Than Freedom: Fighting f...
Following World War I, a new, militant spirit of resistance and activism burgeoned among African-Ame...
Free Black Communities and Resistance In Free Black Communities and the Underground Railroad, Americ...
The Underground Railroad, an often misunderstood antebellum institution, has been viewed as a simple...
During the processes of emancipation and Reconstruction, black women’s legal, socio-political, and e...