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
"Modern Medea - the story of Margaret Garner", Thomas Noble, 1867, courtesy of the Library of Congress.
"Modern Plants are Planned for City Schools" The News and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, 1952, courtesy of Readex: America's Historical Newspapers.
"Modern Plants are Planned for City Schools" The News and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, 1952, courtesy of Readex: America's Historical Newspapers.
"Monument to Gen. John A. Wagener, Magnolia Cemetery," from
Charleston, S.C.: Indelible Photographs
, ca. 1890-1899, courtesy of the Historic Charleston Foundation Monographs and Photographs Collection, Historic Charleston Foundation.
"Mrs. Auld teaching him to read," From
Life and Times of Frederick Douglass
, 1881, courtesy of Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
"Negro Cabins on a Rice Plantation," illustration from
The Great South; A Record of Journeys in Louisiana, Texas, the Indian Territory, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland
, 1875, courtesy of Documenting the American South, UNC-Chapel Hill. Under the task system, slaves could complete a set assignment and then spend any extra time cultivating their own subsistance gardens or hunting for game.
"Negro Expulsion from Railway," Philadelphia, 1856, courtesy of Library of Congress.
"Negro Labor A Failure,"
Boston Evening Transcript
, January 25, 1901, courtesy of Google News.
"Negro recruits at Charleston," Charleston, South Carolina, April 1865,
Harper's Monthly Magazine
,
courtesy of New York Public Library Digital Gallery.
"Negro Students Make Inquires at Local College,"
Charleston Evening Post
, June 12, 1944, Charleston, South Carolina, courtesy of the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture
Previous Page
Page
of 377
Next Page
Output Formats
atom
,
dcmes-xml
,
json
,
omeka-xml
,
rss2
TEST