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Fact sheet created by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) to circulate information about the protests and shooting that occurred February 1968 in Orangeburg, South Carolina, Cleveland L. Sellers Papers, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
Fact sheet created by the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee relating the events of February 5-8, 1968 at Orangeburg.
Faculty at Avery, Charleston, South Carolina, ca. 1916, courtesy of the Avery Research Center. This photograph includes Principal Cox (seated middle row, far right) and his wife Jeannette Cox (seated first row, left). Other faculty pictured: A. W. Murrell, H. L. Green, E. B. Spencer, S. E. Hamilton, F. A. Clyde, E. P. Morrison, A. E. Hill, H. W. McLennan, and A. L. Demond.
Faculty member Linda Harvey leading an African Dance class, 2023, courtesy of College of Charleston.
Fairfield County Training School, photograph by Rebekah Dobrasko, Fairfield County, South Carolina, 2011.
Family of African Americans on Smith's Plantation, Beaufort, South Carolina, ca. 1862, courtesy of the Library of Congress.
Family Worship in a Plantation in South Carolina
Famous Last Names, photograph by Rick Rhodes, Charleston, South Carolina, 2009, courtesy of Gibbes Museum of Art.
Fanner baskets, used for winnowing rice, courtesy of Drayton Hall. In October, enslaved workers on Lowcountry rice plantations fanned the threshed grain in wide, flat baskets made by African basket-makers. These three baskets look strikingly similar, and demonstrate the continuation of this agricultural technique and art form from West Africa to the Lowcountry. The light brown basket on the left is from Senegal; the dark brown basket on the right belongs to the Drayton family and was made before the U.S. Civil War; the white basket at the top of the picture was made by an African American sweetgrass basket maker in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina in the early 2000s.
Farm near Yemassee, South Carolina, 1902, courtesy of the Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Federal Judge J. Waties Warings, Charleston, South Carolina, ca. 1950, photograph in
Collier’s
magazine article entitled “The Lonesomest Man in the World,” courtesy of
Collier’s
Magazine.
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