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"A New Description of Carolina," map of the proprietary English colony of Carolina, from John Speed,
The Theater of the Empire of Great Britain
, 1676.
"A new & correct map of the trading part of the West Indies : including the seat of war between Gr. Britain and Spain : likewise the British Empire in America, with the French and Spanish settlements adjacent thereto : adorn'd with prospects of ye most considerable towns, ports, harbours &c. therein contained from the latest & best observations," printed for and sold by Henry Overton, London, England, 1741.
"A Negro Funeral," from Harper's Monthly Magainze, New York, New York, 1859, courtesy of The Library Company of Philadelphia.
"A Negro Festival drawn from Nature in the Island of St Vincent," engraving by Audinet, 1801, courtesy of the © National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, UK. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, enslaved Africans in Barbados sometimes escaped by boat to nearby islands such as St. Vincent. On this mountainous island, Amerindian Kalinagos allowed Africans to become a part of their social structure and intermarry after 1660, when Kalinago relations soured with European allies. Many of St. Vincent's current inhabitants are descendants of these escaped Africans and Amerindians.
"A compleat description of the province of Carolina in three parts," London, 1711, published by Edward Crisp, courtesy of Library of Congress Geography and Map Division.
"89th General Assembly May Pass Sales Tax Law," Evening Post, Charleston, South Carolina, 1951, courtesy of Readex: America's Historical Newspapers.
"33 Negroes Seek Admission to College Here," Charleston News and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, June 11, 1944, courtesy of NewsBank.
"33 Negroes Seek Admission to College Here," Charleston News and Courier, Charleston, South Carolina, June 11, 1944, courtesy of NewsBank.
"20 Years Ago," newspaper clipping in volume 1 of John Henry Dick's Journals, 1959, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
"20 Years Ago," newspaper clipping in volume 1 of John Henry Dick's Journals, 1959, courtesy of the South Carolina Historical Society.
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