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J.M.W. Turner's "The Slave Ship," depicts slavers throwing overboard the dead and dying. Oil on Canvas. 1840. Original located at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
J.S. Wright High School was an African American school that opened in 1953.
Jacqueline Ford and classmates,
Tide,
Rivers High School Yearbook, 1965, courtesy of the South Carolina Room, Charleston County Public Library.
James Edward Oglethorpe, painting by Alfred Edmund Dyer, ca. 1735-1736, courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London, England. James Oglethorpe, the first governor of Georgia, established this colony as an egalitarian settlement for the worthy poor from England. At that time, Georgia was the only North American colony where slavery was prohibited, before Georgia leaders overturned the ban in 1749.
James Island High School, Charleston County, South Carolina, 1956.
James Louis Petigru Office, located at 8 St. Michaels Alley, Charleston, South Carolina. Courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
James Norman, professor in the Department of Languages, The Comet, Charleston, South Carolina, 1975, courtesy of College of Charleston Special Collections.
James Simmons House, photograph by Daniel Seyffer, 37 Meeting Street, Charleston, South Carolina, February 2015.
James Simons Elementary School Marker, photograph by Emily Pigott, Charleston, South Carolina, November 2015.
Jametta White as winner of the Miss Avery contest, Charleston, South Carolina, 1939, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
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