LDHI Menu
Home
About
About LDHI
Staff
Partners
Authors
Collaborate
Browse
LCDL Home
Search
menu
Home
About
arrow_drop_down
About LDHI
Staff
Partners
Authors
Collaborate
Browse
LCDL Home
Search
Search LDHI
After Slavery: Race, Labor, and Politics in the Post-Emancipation Carolinas
Menu
Exhibit Home
Introduction
An Important Chapter in the History of Working People
A Bitter Struggle Convulses the South
The Varied Experience of Emancipation
About
Reviews
Contributors
Contact
After Slavery Blog
Educator Resources
Unit One: Giving Meaning to Freedom
Unit Two: Freed Slaves Mobilize
Unit Three: Land and Labor
Unit Four: Freedom, Black Soldiers, and the Union Military
Unit Five: Conservatives Respond to Emancipation
Unit Six: Pursuing Citizenship, Justice, and Equality
Unit Seven: Gender and the Politics of Freedom
Unit Eight: Planters, Poor Whites, and White Supremacy
Unit Nine: Coercion, Paramilitary Terror, and Resistance
Unit Ten: Freedpeople and the Republican Party
Interactive Timelines: Civil War to Reconstruction
Reconstruction in South Carolina: 1861-1876
Reconstruction in North Carolina: 1862-1876
Interactive Maps
Recommended Reading
Black Political Mobilization and Demobilization
Reconstruction and Redemption in the Carolinas
Redemption and Beyond: Race and Labor
Digital Resources
Interactive Maps
Click here to view the Cainhoy Riot Interactive Map
Click here to view the Hamburg Massacre Interactive Map
← Reconstruction in North Carolina: 1862-1876
Recommended Reading →