Published online: September 2022Viola Franziska Müller examines runaways who camouflaged themselves among the free Black populations in Baltimore, Charleston, New Orleans, and Richmond. In the urban South, they found shelter, work, and other survival networks that enabled them to live in slaveholding territory, shielded and supported by their host communities in an act of collective resistance to slavery. While all fugitives risked their lives to escape slavery, those who fled to southern cities were perhaps the most vulnerable of all. Not dissimilar to modern-day refugees and illegal migrants, runaway slaves that sought refuge in the urban South were antebellum America's undocumented people, forging lives free from bondage but without the ...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
For runaway women, the rejection of the American slavery system required them to work within the gen...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
Published online: September 2022Viola Franziska Müller examines runaways who camouflaged themselves ...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
First published online: 13 March 2020The starting point of this article is the observation that thou...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
© 2004 SAGE PublicationsThe Mississippi River system was an important site of African American resis...
While working on a project collecting runaway slave ads called “Documenting Runaway Slaves in the De...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
Between the American Revolutionary War and the US Civil War (roughly 1775-1861), thousands of enslav...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
While working on a project collecting runaway slave ads, it became apparent that women slaves were l...
In the antebellum period Richmond, Virginia newspapers ran advertisements for runaway slaves. Most o...
Marks shows that when Black people attempted to better their lives, they challenged extant racialize...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
For runaway women, the rejection of the American slavery system required them to work within the gen...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...
Published online: September 2022Viola Franziska Müller examines runaways who camouflaged themselves ...
International audienceContrary to common assumptions that self-emancipation by flight was only possi...
First published online: 13 March 2020The starting point of this article is the observation that thou...
In the antebellum period (1800–1860), thousands of enslaved people attempted to escape slavery by ma...
© 2004 SAGE PublicationsThe Mississippi River system was an important site of African American resis...
While working on a project collecting runaway slave ads called “Documenting Runaway Slaves in the De...
Kidnapping was perhaps the greatest fear of free blacks in pre-Civil War America. Though they may ha...
Between the American Revolutionary War and the US Civil War (roughly 1775-1861), thousands of enslav...
This project investigates the enslaved runaways of colonial Georgia and their impact on the Atlantic...
While working on a project collecting runaway slave ads, it became apparent that women slaves were l...
In the antebellum period Richmond, Virginia newspapers ran advertisements for runaway slaves. Most o...
Marks shows that when Black people attempted to better their lives, they challenged extant racialize...
Forging New Ground in Antebellum Charleston Sophie Mauncaut, once enslaved in French Saint Domingue,...
For runaway women, the rejection of the American slavery system required them to work within the gen...
In the decades before the Civil War, St. Louis sat on a border between slave and free states. Jesse ...