Charity Folks is a ghost of slavery who refuses to be silenced. Folks finds herself in the company of Margaret Garner’s beloved daughter, the young girl known only as “Cecelia, a slave,” Sara Baartman, Sally Hemmings, Sojourner Truth, Queen Nannie and countless unnamed others who haunt historical memory precisely because they carry the weight of the Diaspora’s traumatic past. Collectively and individually, their lives testify to the multifaceted legacies of enslavement, attempts by captives to dismantle it, as well as attempts to suppress its most violent and horrific truths. Their recovered pasts underscore the competing interests involved in remembering, constructing, and commemorating the lives of enslaved women specifically and black w...
In genealogy, tracing names and dates is often the initial goal, but, for many, desire soon turns to...
This dissertation focuses on the lives and experiences of a small group of affluent free mulatto wom...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
Charity Folks is a ghost of slavery who refuses to be silenced. Folks finds herself in the company o...
Redefining Opportunity: Charity Folk’s Life in Slavery and Freedom The life of a woman named Charity...
Growing up in a slave-holding family in South Carolina, sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimké had first ...
Jessica Millward discussed her book, "Finding Charity's Folk: Enslaved and Free Black Women in Maryl...
In 1838 Thomas Mulledy, S.J. signed his name to an agreement selling the 275 enslaved persons who re...
Molly Welsh, oral tradition captured in the nineteenth century tells us, was a white Englishwoman wh...
When white men exploited enslaved women's sexuality and sexual reproduction, enslaved men and slaveh...
The passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 in the United States made even the free territory of t...
How do you uncover the life of a slave who left no paper trail? What can her everyday life tell us ...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
Margaret Haughery (1813-1882), a widowed, illiterate Irish immigrant who became known as “the Bread ...
In genealogy, tracing names and dates is often the initial goal, but, for many, desire soon turns to...
This dissertation focuses on the lives and experiences of a small group of affluent free mulatto wom...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...
Charity Folks is a ghost of slavery who refuses to be silenced. Folks finds herself in the company o...
Redefining Opportunity: Charity Folk’s Life in Slavery and Freedom The life of a woman named Charity...
Growing up in a slave-holding family in South Carolina, sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimké had first ...
Jessica Millward discussed her book, "Finding Charity's Folk: Enslaved and Free Black Women in Maryl...
In 1838 Thomas Mulledy, S.J. signed his name to an agreement selling the 275 enslaved persons who re...
Molly Welsh, oral tradition captured in the nineteenth century tells us, was a white Englishwoman wh...
When white men exploited enslaved women's sexuality and sexual reproduction, enslaved men and slaveh...
The passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 in the United States made even the free territory of t...
How do you uncover the life of a slave who left no paper trail? What can her everyday life tell us ...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
Margaret Haughery (1813-1882), a widowed, illiterate Irish immigrant who became known as “the Bread ...
In genealogy, tracing names and dates is often the initial goal, but, for many, desire soon turns to...
This dissertation focuses on the lives and experiences of a small group of affluent free mulatto wom...
At the time of the American Revolution, there were a significant number of Quakers living in North C...