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After Slavery: Educator Resources
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Unit One Documents: Giving Meaning to Freedom
1. A White Piedmont Farmer Reflects on Black Freedom
2. President Johnson offers Amnesty to Former Confederates
3. President Andrew Johnson Appoints William W. Holden Provisional Governor of North Carolina
4. A Northern Military Officer Advises Former Slaves on Freedom
5. A Planter's Vision of Freedom and Free Labor
6. Two North Carolina Freedwomen Testify Against Their Former Owner
7. A Committee of Freedmen on Edisto Island Reveal their Expectations
8. Former Slaves Describe Conditions on a Georgia Plantation
9. A Charleston Freedwoman Opens A Bank Account
Unit Two Documents: Freed Slaves Mobilize
1. A Wartime Encounter Between Two South Carolina Slaves
2. Rev. Henry McNeal Turner Reports on Organizing among Freedpeople in Georgia
3. An Unnamed Black Organizer Reports on the Reception for Republican Speakers among Freedpeople in South Carolina
4. A Destitute Local Union League President Seeks Aid from the Governor of North Carolina
5. John T. Costin Reports on the Difficulties of Organizing
6. A Union League Organizer Seeks permission to Bargain on the Behalf of Women and Children
7. A Federal Officer Reports that Freedpeople are Organizing Military Companies on the South Carolina Sea Islands
8. White Conservatives Complain that the Union Leagues are Organizing Labor Strikes South of Charleston
9. A Charleston Newspaper on the 1868 Municipal Elections
Unit Three Documents: Land and Labor
1. Rufus Saxton Argues That Land Should Be Set Aside for Freedpeople
2. Freedmen's Bureau Report on the Treatment of Plantation Laborers in Gates County, North Carolina
3. A Freedpeople's Colony on Roanoke Island, North Carolina
4. Rufus Saxton's Letter to Northern Planter Edward S. Philbrick
5. General William T. Sherman's Special Field Order No. 15
6. Freedpeople React to the Restoration of Land to their Former Masters
7. Planter-Attorney William Whaley Wants to Exclude Blacks from the Land Board
8. South Carolina's 'Black Code'
9. A Desperate North Carolina Republican Appeals to Governor Holden for Land
10. White Confederate Veterans Appeal to South Carolina's Land Commission
11. A Freedpeople's 'Co-operative' in Colleton County, South Carolina
Unit Four Documents: Freedom, Black Soldiers, and the Union Military
1. General Rufus Saxton's Report on an Early Engagement by Black Troops
2. New Bern's Black Community Negotiates their Terms for Military Service
3. North Carolina's 'African Brigade' Raids the State's Interior
4. General Saxton Protests against the Forced Enlistment of Freed Slaves
5. Clashes between White and Black Union Troops in Charleston
6. Georgetown (S. C.) Whites Petition for the Removal of Black Troops
7. Contrasting Attitudes toward Union Troops in the South Carolina Upcountry
8. Black Troops, White Hostility, and Radicalization in the Upcountry
9. Petition from Union County Republicans against Removal of Troops
Unit Five Documents: Conservatives Respond to Emancipation
1. A White Texas Farmer Shoots a Freedman
2. "The War is Not Over"
3. D. F. Caldwell's Ideas for Economic Development in North Carolina
4. 1865 North Carolina Constitutional Convention Responds to Freedpeople
5. Wade Hampton's Advice to Confederate Veterans
6. Judge A. P. Aldrich Removed from the Bench
7. Wade Hampton's Advice to Freedpeople
8. A Conservative Realizes the Mistakes of Earlier Policies
9. Governor Jonathan Worth Argues Against 1867 Call for a Constitutional Convention
10. Plato Durham Argues Against the Reconstruction Acts in the 1868 Constitutional Convention
11. Dr. Pride Jones Agrees to Help Stop the Ku Klux Klan
Unit Six Documents: Pursuing Citizenship, Justice, and Equality
1. N.C. Planter Denying Schoolchildren Use of the Public Roads
2. Whites Reclaim an Edisto Church from Freedpeople
3. Report on Conditions in a North Carolina Jail
4. Charleston Protests against Streetcar Segregation
5. Harassment of Freedpeople in the Vicinity of Wilmington
6. Columbia Democrats Debate Black Suffrage
7. Sawmill Operator Tries to Prevent Employees from Voting the Radical Ticket
8. The Difficulty of Obtaining Justice from Local Authorities
9. North Carolina Conservatives Attempt to Frame a Union League Official
10. Freedpeople Petition for the Removal of a Trial Justice
11. Black Workers Petition Governor Scott against Extortion
Unit Seven Documents: Gender and the Politics of Freedom
1. The Social and Domestic Price of Free Labor
2. A Black Woman Imagines a Differently Gendered Working Class
3. A Virginia Freedwoman Critiques the Gendered Nature of Freedom and Free Labor
4. A Freedwoman's Civil and Domestic Expectations
5. A Husband Shoulders a New, Free-Labor Duty
6. The Problems of Family-based Labor
7. Soldiering Men
8. Clashing Ideas about Gender and Political Rights
9. Playing Politics with Gender
10. A Black Minister Proposes a Collective Solution to Freedom's Gendered Problems
11. A Southern White Woman Reflects on New Circumstances, a New Identity
Unit Eight Documents: Planters, Poor Whites and White Supremacy
1. Sidney Andrews on Attitudes among North Carolina's Poor Whites
2. J. B. Sitton's Petition for a Presidential Pardon
3. North Carolina Constitutional Convention Protects Homesteads
4. The Ku Klux Klan Attacks a White Man Assisting Blacks
5. Matthew C. Butler - Planters React to Being Ignored by Government
6. Belton O'Neall Townsend on 1876 Strategy
7. A Description of Wade Hampton's Campaign
8. T. D. Gwyn Argues Against the Fence Law
9. South Carolina Greenbacker Explains His Opposition to Democrats
Unit Nine Documents: Coercion, Paramilitary Terror, and Resistance
1. Ex-Confederate Soldiers Terrorizing Union Men and Freedpeople in North Carolina
2. Early Outrages against Freedpeople in South Carolina
3. Hostility to Freedpeople and Federal Authorities in the South Carolina Upcountry
4. Former Freedmen's Bureau Official Rufus B. Saxton on Freedpeople's Desire to Acquire Arms
5. North Carolina Freedmen Seek Protection from Governor Holden
6. Governor Scott is Warned of Impending Clashes in the South Carolina Upcountry
7. A. M. E. Pastor S. B. Williams Reports Atrocities to Governor Holden
8. Albion W. Tourgée Reports on KKK Violence in North Carolina
9. Freedpeople's Testimony on the Effects of Klan Violence
10. A Spartanburg Republican Offers President Grant Advice on How to Suppress Paramilitary Violence
11. Martin W. Gary's Plan for the Conservative Campaign of 1876
Unit Ten Documents: Freedpeople and the Republican Party
1. Black Charleston Reacts to News of the Confederate Surrender
2. An Appeal for Resources to Organize the South
3. A North Carolina Republican Seeks to Clear his Name
4. White Moderates Maneuver to Prevent Radical Domination of the Republican Party
5. A South Carolina Agitator Falls Foul of Military Authorities
6. Blacks Organize against Discrimination in the Republican Party
7. North Carolina Conservatives Refuse to Seat a Black Republican Appointee
8. Republicans in Tallyho, North Carolina, Protest against Democratic Fraud
9. Illiteracy, Competence and the Difficulty of Building a Bi-Racial Party
10. Pressures on Freedmen to Vote the Conservative Ticket
11. Election Day Street Confrontations in Charleston
12. A White Schoolteacher on the 1876 Elections in the South Carolina Lowcountry
13. Freedpeople Confront a Black Politician for Having 'Sold Out his Race'
South Carolina Curriculum Standards
USHC Indicator 3.2
USHC Indicator 3.3
USHC Indicator 3.4
Recommended Reading
Black Political Mobilization and Demobilization
Reconstruction and Redemption in the Carolinas
Redemption and Beyond: Race and Labor
Digital Resources
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Unit One Documents: Giving Meaning to Freedom →