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Beef a la mode, photograph by Jonathan Boncek, Charleston, South Carolina, April 19, 2015.
Before the War and After the Union book cover, Sam Aleckson, 1929, courtesy of Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Belvedere Elementary School, photograph by Rebekah Dobrasko, Columbia, South Carolina, 2014.
Bench by the Road at the Fort Moultrie Visitor Center, photograph by Emily Pigott, Charleston, South Carolina, November 2015.
Benjamin F. Cox (principal 1915-1936), Charleston, South Carolina, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
Benjamin Tillman, ca. 1905, courtesy of the Library of Congress. Tillman participated in one of the most prominent paramilitary skirmishes that took place in South Carolina during reconstruction, the Hamburg Massacre (1876), which resulted in the death of seven African Americans. No whites were prosecuted for the killings, and Tillman later boasted about his role in these events during his successful 1890 campaign for governor of South Carolina.
Benjamin Tillman, governor of South Carolina from 1890-1894, 1895, courtesy of South Caroliniana Library.
Benjamin Tillman, South Carolina governor when the hurricane hit, circa 1895, courtesy of the South Caroliniana Library.
Bernice Robinson (standing left) and Septima Clark (standing right) lead a Citizenship School teacher training workshop, ca. 1961, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
Bernice Robinson teaching, Bernice Robinson Papers, courtesy of the Avery Research Center.
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