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
South Carolina Expansion Program, July 1951-September 1954, Columbia, South Carolina, published 1955, South Carolina State Educational Finance Commission report, "South Carolina's educational revolution: a report of progress in South Carolina," courtesy of the South Carolina State Library.
South Carolina Leader
South Carolina leaders established a slave code in 1712, based on the 1688 English slave code in Barbados. The South Carolina slave code served as the model for other colonies in North America. It included provisions listed in this document. It included provisions listed in this document, based on Charles M. Christian and Sari Bennet, Black Saga: The African American Experience: A Chronology.
South Carolina NAACP Leaders, Arthur D. Greene, Roy Wilkins, and J. Arthur Brown (left to right), Charleston, South Carolina, ca. XXXX, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
South Carolina National Guard troops marching in the streets of Orangeburg, South Carolina, February 1968, image by Bill Barley, courtesy of South Carolina Political Collections, University of South Carolina.
South Carolina National Guard Troops march through the city of Orangeburg at night during the Orangeburg Massacre of February 1968.
South Carolina School Equalization Map
South Carolina School Expansion Map, 1955, courtesy of the South Carolina State Library.
South Carolina State Senator Ronnie Sabb in attendance at the prayer vigil at St. Stephen AME Church, photograph by Max Hrenda, June 22, 2015, Georgetown, South Carolina, courtesy of
South Strand News
.
South Carolina State Troopers on duty at the South Carolina State House grounds for a Ku Klux Klan (KKK) rally in support of the Confederate flag after its removal on July 10th, photograph by Zach NeSmith, July 18, 2015, Columbia, South Carolina.
South Carolina's African American Reconstruction-Era Politicians, 1895, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
Previous Page
Page
of 377
Next Page
Output Formats
atom
,
dcmes-xml
,
json
,
omeka-xml
,
rss2
TEST