The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925, Volume 10This book provides an exhaustively researched history of black families in America from the days of slavery until just after the Civil War. |
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Page 444
... slaves had been without a norm that prized the completed immediate family , large numbers of southern blacks in 1880 should have lived in disorganized house- holds . That was not the case . The manuscript pages of the 1880 federal ...
... slaves had been without a norm that prized the completed immediate family , large numbers of southern blacks in 1880 should have lived in disorganized house- holds . That was not the case . The manuscript pages of the 1880 federal ...
Page 456
... black middle - class elite ) . It was just as common among farm laborers , sharecroppers , tenants , and northern and southern urban unskilled laborers and service workers . It accompanied the southern blacks in the great migration to ...
... black middle - class elite ) . It was just as common among farm laborers , sharecroppers , tenants , and northern and southern urban unskilled laborers and service workers . It accompanied the southern blacks in the great migration to ...
Page 633
... southern blacks . In the post - Civil War decades and for still another generation , Frazier argued that the " matriarchate❞— " the House of the Mother " -flourished among southern blacks . A narrow " class " analysis allowed him to ...
... southern blacks . In the post - Civil War decades and for still another generation , Frazier argued that the " matriarchate❞— " the House of the Mother " -flourished among southern blacks . A narrow " class " analysis allowed him to ...
Contents
Because She Was My Cousin | 45 |
1 ΙΟΙ | 144 |
Aunts and Uncles and SwapDog Kin | 185 |
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 Cohoon colored County culture daughter Davis Bend dead destitution emancipation enslavement Ethiopia evidence ex-slaves 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 land 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 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 Stanley Engerman Stirling slaves surnames tion twenty uncle Union Army urban Virginia wife William wives woman York City young