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
Browse Items (3761 total)
Browse All
Browse by Tag
Search Items
Previous Page
Page
of 377
Next Page
Sort by:
Title
Creator
Date Added
Front page of
American Tobacco Worker
, newpaper printed by the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural & Allied Workers Union (FTA-CIO), the parent organization of the Cigar Factory workers' Local 15 union, June 1948, courtesy of South Carolina Historical Society.
Front page of FTA News, March 1948, newpaper distributed by the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural & Allied Workers Union, the governing body of the Cigar Factory workers' Local 15 union, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
Front page of FTA News, March 1948, newpaper distributed by the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural & Allied Workers Union, the governing body of the Cigar Factory workers' Local 15 union, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
Front Page of the Daybook of James Poyas, 1760, Charles Town, South Carolina, The James Poyas Daybook Collection, Lowcountry Digital Library, courtesy of the Charleston Museum Archives.
Frontier Painting, early trading in Colonial America
Frontispiece for
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
, Written by Herself, by Harriet Ann Jacobs, 1861, courtesy of Documenting the American South, UNC-Chapel Hill. Harriet Ann Jacobs(February 11, 1813 – March 7, 1897) was an African American writer who escaped from slavery in North Carolina. Her autobiography was one of the first published accounts of the struggles of female slaves and the sexual abuse they frequently endured under slavery.
FTA-CIO Local 15 union meeting, Charleston, South Carolina, detail image from FTA News, March 1948, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
FTA-CIO Local 15 union members at the Cigar Factory, Charleston, South Carolina, detail image from FTA News, March 1948, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
Full-length portrait of an African American woman seated holding an African American infant, photograph by A. D. Jaynes, Corning, N. Y., 1860s.
Funding for white versus Black schools, South Carolina, 2021, courtesy of Abigail Rice.
Previous Page
Page
of 377
Next Page
Output Formats
atom
,
dcmes-xml
,
json
,
omeka-xml
,
rss2
TEST