Hidden History: African American Women During Reconstruction
with Rebecca Czuchry
Explore responses by Black Texan women to racial violence in the wake of the Civil War.
Hidden History: Celebrating That Freedom Day
with Michael Hurd
Take a deep dive into the first Juneteenth celebrations where it all began, in Galveston, Texas.
“Why Sit Ye Here and Die”
1832
Read a speech by Maria W. Stewart, the first Black woman to publish a political manifesto.
“How the Sisters Are Hindered from Helping”
1900
Read Nannie Helen Burroughs’s address casting light on the importance of women organizing in Black institutions.
“Treatment of Slaves on Lloyd’s Plantation”
1855
Read Frederick Douglass’s recollection of plantation life in Maryland from his second autobiography.
Study Aid: Slavery and the Law in Seventeenth-Century Virginia
1662–1691
Explore a timeline of laws pertaining to slavery in Virginia from 1662 to 1691.
A Journal of the Proceedings in the Detection of the Conspiracy
1744
Read an excerpt from a 1741 revolt of enslaved people, free Black people, and “Some White People” in colonial New York.
Slave Revolt in the West Indies
1733
This newspaper article recalls a revolt of enslaved people on the Caribbean island of St. John.
Phillis Wheatley’s poem on tyranny and slavery
1772
Take a deep dive into one of Wheatley's best-known poems.
An African American soldier’s pay warrant
1780
Learn more about this pay warrant issued to soldier Sharp Liberty for his service in the Continental Army.
Nelson Allyn to Joseph Allyn
1831
Read a firsthand account of the retaliation against African Americans in North Carolina after Nat Turner’s Rebellion.
Slave Patrol Contract
1856
Explore an effort to enforce North Carolina’s slave codes in 1856.
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