The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925An exhaustively researched history of black families in America from the days of slavery until just after the Civil War. |
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Page 442
... urban places . Except in the predominantly black Beaufort , most urban blacks shared a uni- formly depressed lower - class status . Three in five black Beaufort The tables referred to in this chapter appear in Appendix A , pages 477-519 ...
... urban places . Except in the predominantly black Beaufort , most urban blacks shared a uni- formly depressed lower - class status . Three in five black Beaufort The tables referred to in this chapter appear in Appendix A , pages 477-519 ...
Page 444
... urban than a rural extended black house- hold to contain a mother or a mother - in - law . But the typical kin living in extended black households were not elderly persons . They were grandchildren , nephews and nieces , and brothers ...
... urban than a rural extended black house- hold to contain a mother or a mother - in - law . But the typical kin living in extended black households were not elderly persons . They were grandchildren , nephews and nieces , and brothers ...
Page 447
... Urban Household in 1900 Important changes in the composition of the urban and rural southern black household occurred between 1880 and 1900. That is made clear in the 1900 federal manuscript census , a historical source that permits ...
... Urban Household in 1900 Important changes in the composition of the urban and rural southern black household occurred between 1880 and 1900. That is made clear in the 1900 federal manuscript census , a historical source that permits ...
Contents
The Birthpangs of a World | 1 |
Because She Was My Cousin | 45 |
I ΙΟΙ | 101 |
Copyright | |
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Adams County adult African Afro-American Afro-American slaves Alabama American Slave aunt Beaufort beliefs and behavior black households black women brother Cedar Vale Charles child Civil Cohoon colored County culture daughter Davis Bend dead emancipation enslavement ex-slaves family of origin Fanny Franklin Frazier Freedmen's Bureau Freedmen's Bureau Mss Georgia Helena's Island Henry History Hope slaves households and subfamilies Huldah husband immediate families Jackson Ward John Kentucky kin networks labor letter listed Louisiana Lucy male male-absent households marital married Mary Maryland Mississippi Mobile mother Nansemond County Natchez nearly Negro North occupations older owners parents percent percentage planter Ralph Ellison residents Richmond rural Sarah Sea Island sexual sister slave behavior slave beliefs slave community slave family slave marriages Slavery slaves lived social sold soldiers South Carolina southern blacks Stirling slaves surnames TABLE tion twenty uncle Union Army urban Virginia wife William wives woman York City