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Category Archives: Slavery
spreading the news
As the American Civil War ended, federal troops took control of Galveston, Texas. On June 19, 1865 General Gordon Granger used a military order to announce that more than two years earlier President Abraham freed the slaves in Texas and … Continue reading
Posted in Aftermath, American Culture, Postbellum Politics, Postbellum Society, Reconstruction, Slavery, Southern Society
Tagged Francis Richard Lubbock, Galveston, Gordon Granger, John Bankhead Magruder, Juneteenth, Louis Hébert, Navasota Texas, Robert Ward Johnson, United States Military Telegraph Corps
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temple tussle
The day before the 1860 U.S. presidential election the governor of South Carolina advised secession in the event of Abraham Lincoln’s probable victory. Thanks to the telegraph, that news got up North very quickly. On Election Day, November 6, 1860, … Continue reading
Posted in 160 Years Ago, Secession and the Interregnum, Slavery, The election of 1860
Tagged abolitionists, Boston, Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Frederick Douglass, James Redpath, John Brown, John Sella Martin, Nathan Hale, Robert E. Lee, Storer College, Tremont Temple, William Fisher Packer, William Jasper, William Lloyd Garrison
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white lion, black cargo
400 years ago this month the first Africans arrived in the colony of Virginia in what is now the United States. According to Encyclopedia Virginia, in the summer of 1619 two English privateers, the White Lion and the Treasurer attacked … Continue reading
Posted in 400 Years Ago, American History, Slavery, Southern Society
Tagged 400 Years Ago, Fort Monroe, Jamestown, John Rolfe, Poiint Comfort, Slavery, Virginia Colony
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