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Map video of Theodore Adams was one of the first Black students to integrate Orangburg High School, Orangeburg, South Carolina in 1964.
Map Video for Ruth Carter and her siblings integrated their local schools in the Drew School District in Drew, Mississippi in 1965.
Map Video for Millicent Brown integrated Rivers High School in Charleston, South Carolina in 1963.
Map Video for Emma Harvin integrated Sumter High School, Sumter, South Carolina in 1971.
Map showing the raw cotton trade between the American South and Great Britain in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, courtesy of Revealing Histories: Remembering Slavery.
Map showing the distribution of the enslaved population of the southern states of the United States, compiled from the Census of 1860, E. Hergesheimer (cartographer), Th. Leonhardt (engraver), 1861, courtesy of the Library of Congress. Map showing the distribution of the enslaved population of the southern states of the United States, compiled from the Census of 1860, E. Hergesheimer (cartographer), Th. Leonhardt (engraver), 1861, courtesy of the Library of Congress. Though only around 470,000 enslaved Africans were sent to North American through the trans-Atlantic slave trade, by 1860, over four million African Americans lived in bondage in the United States.
Map showing the concentration of enslaved people in the South, 1860.
Map overview of the Yamassee War, 2007.
Map of Windsor, Vermont, January 3. 1887, courtesy of Library of Congress.
Map of Western Europe, 1700, courtesy of the University of Texas Libraries, University of Texas at Austin.
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