Black Women in American History: From colonial times through the nineteenth century, Volume 1Darlene Clark Hine |
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Page 50
... Granville and Orange both produced tobacco and some cotton for market , but only Granville was a major slaveholding area . In 1860 almost 50 percent of Granville's population were slaves , while free blacks constituted 4 percent of the ...
... Granville and Orange both produced tobacco and some cotton for market , but only Granville was a major slaveholding area . In 1860 almost 50 percent of Granville's population were slaves , while free blacks constituted 4 percent of the ...
Page 2
... Granville . That difference reflected the fact that Montgomery County had far less disparity of wealth , fewer blacks , and less tenancy - but not necessarily a higher incidence of illegitimate births . Both mothers and fathers of ...
... Granville . That difference reflected the fact that Montgomery County had far less disparity of wealth , fewer blacks , and less tenancy - but not necessarily a higher incidence of illegitimate births . Both mothers and fathers of ...
Page 7
... Granville County by comparing criminal cases with apprenticeship contracts . 18. Ibid . , 1860-65 . One attack on a flour mill by Martha Briggs , Sally Fuller , and Lucy Fuller , tried in Granville County during the May Term , 1864 , is ...
... Granville County by comparing criminal cases with apprenticeship contracts . 18. Ibid . , 1860-65 . One attack on a flour mill by Martha Briggs , Sally Fuller , and Lucy Fuller , tried in Granville County during the May Term , 1864 , is ...
Contents
Editors Preface | 391 |
Alexander Adele L How I Discovered My Grandmother and the Truth | 79 |
Newman Debra L Black Women in the Era of the American | 57 |
Copyright | |
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A.M.E. Church abolitionists activities Adella African Afro-American ANBC antebellum Anti-Slavery Advocate Association Baptist women Black Baptist black community Black Family black female black women Booker Boston brother Broughton Census Charles Charles Francis Adams Charles Lenox Remond Charleston child Christian Civil Colored Women Cook County daughter emancipation father feminine feminist theology former slaves free black free Negroes Freedmen's Bureau freedom girls graduated Harriet Harriet Tubman History husband Ibid Institute Journal labor leaders Lectures letter lived male marriage Mary master Memphis minister mother mulatto NACW National Baptist Convention North nurses Olivia owners percent Phillis Phillis Wheatley plantation population preaching Press race records religious role Salem Sarah Parker Remond Sarah Remond sexual Sims sister slave women slavery social South Carolina Southern suffrage tion Tuskegee United University Virginia W. E. B. Du Bois Washington Wheatley white women wife William woman York