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MARC Record from marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy

Record ID marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy/PANO_FOR_IA_05072019.mrc:31387786:9980
Source marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy
Download Link /show-records/marc_openlibraries_phillipsacademy/PANO_FOR_IA_05072019.mrc:31387786:9980?format=raw

LEADER: 09980cam a2200529Ia 4500
001 3588107
003 NOBLE
005 20141219110942.0
008 070125s2008 maua b 000 0 eng d
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020 $a9780495092780 (v. 2)
020 $a0495092789 (v. 2)
020 $a9780495092773 (v. 1)
020 $a0495092770 (v. 1)
035 $a(OCoLC)150378276
043 $an-us---
050 14 $aE184.6$b.T395 2008
049 $aNOGA
100 1 $aTaylor, Quintard.
245 10 $aFrom Timbuktu to Katrina :$breadings in African-American history /$cQuintard Taylor.
260 $aBoston, Mass. :$bThomson Wadsworth,$cc2008.
300 $a2 v. :$bill. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 $a1. AFRICAN ORIGINS. The "Golden Age" of African history -- Ibn Battuta describes The Sultan of Mali, Ca. 1354 -- Leo Africanus describes Timbucktu, Ca. 1515 -- John Barbot on The Government of Benin, 1682 -- Table: The slave trade over four centuries -- Slavery In global perspective -- The slave trade: A slaver's account -- The enslavement of Venture Smith -- Olaudah Equiano describes The Middle Passage -- The Middle Passage: A slave Mutiny, 1704 -- Omar Ibn Seid: From Senegal to North Carolina -- A defense of the African slave trade -- 2. THE EVOLUTION OF BLACK SOCIETY. Color consciousness In 16th century England -- Esteban, The Black Katsina -- Isabel De Olvera arrives In New Mexico -- Virginia's first arrivals: The Anthony Johnson saga -- A Quaker resolution against slavery, 1652 -- A New Netherlands peition for freedom, 1661 -- Marriage In colonial New Mexico: The Rodriguez saga -- African Vs. Indian slavery -- Of captains and kings: Slavery In colonial New York -- Eighteenth century black slave codes -- African slaves and the development of rice cultivation -- Darien, Georgia protest against slavery, 1739 -- The Stono Rebellion, 1739 -- The New York City slave plot, 1741: Statement of a condemned man -- 3. SLAVERY AND FREEDOM IN THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA. A funeral for Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick and James Caldwell -- Massachusetts slaves petition for freedom, 1773 -- The Silver Bluff Baptist Church, 1773 -- Caesar Sarter's essay on slavery, 1774 -- Lord Dunmore's Proclamation -- Colonel Tye: Black loyalist leader -- Rhode Island enlists slaves In Its Militia, 1778 -- Petition of New Hampshire slaves -- A Massachusetts tax protest petition, 1780 -- The founding of Los Angeles -- The end of slavery In Massachusetts, 1783 -- Document: George Washington signs discharge papers for Pvt. Brister Baker -- A North Carolina soldier's freedom petition 1784 -- The debate over the black mind -- The poetry of Phillis Wheatley -- Founding the African Methodist Episcopal Church -- The Free African society -- Benjamin Banneker writes Thomas Jefferson -- Prince Hall speaks to black Masons, 179. 4. AMERICAN SLAVERY. The plantation complex -- Haiti and the fears of slaveholders -- A Northerner's description of slavery -- Two views of slavery -- An Alabama lynching, 1827 -- The importance of "breeding." Table: African American slavery in the United States, 1790-1820 -- Moses Grandy on slavery and social control -- A North Carolina Act prohibiting the teaching of slaves to read -- Slavery and sexual abuse: The saga of Louisa Picquet -- The letters of enslaved women, 1840 to 1859 -- Solomon Northup describes a slave auction -- Anti- slavery cartoon: Carrying slavery -- African survivals: Slave religious music -- Gabriel Prosser's conspiracy -- Nat Turner's confession -- Turner's revolt: The impact in the Slave Quarters -- Slavery and freedom in Indian Territory -- Harriet Elgin and Rebecca Jones on the Underground Railroad -- Table: African American slavery in the United States, 1860 -- Two fugitive slaves respond to their former owners -- Fanny Perry's letter to her husband -- 5. FREE BLACKS IN A SLAVE SOCIETY. Life in the shadows -- Louisiana's free people of color pledge their loyalty to the United States, 1804 -- General Andrew Jackson praises a New Orleans Militia, 1815 -- African Americans and the American colonization Society -- Grace Douglass calls for frugal living, 1819 -- Two Antebellum black women's Organizations -- Freedom's Journal's first editorial -- A black woman speaks on the education of women, 1827 -- David Walker's appeal, 1829 -- The Liberator: The first editorial, 1831 -- A library for New York' s people of color -- Black Cincinnati children speak of slavery, 1834 -- Santa Anna and black freedom -- Slavery and freedom in Indian Territory -- "Let your motto be resistance." Celebrating West Indian emancipation Day -- The North Star: The first editorial -- The Fugitive Slave Act in practice: Rachel Parker's kidnapping -- Harriet Tubman rescues a fugitive slave -- Mary Ann Shad teaches in Canada -- "A Nation within a Nation." Black self-esteem: The 19th century debate -- Address to the people of California -- An early history of African Americans -- Celebrating the end of a segregated school -- Sara G. Stanley addresses the Convention of disfranchised citizens of Ohio -- The Dred Scott Decision -- Philadephia African Americans protest the Dred Scott Decision -- Wisconsin African Americans demand the vote -- Supporting the New Republican party -- A plea against mere money making -- Osborne Anderson describes John Brown's Raid -- John A. Copeland awaits his execution -- 6. THE CIVIL WAR. We are Americans -- Seeking the right to fight, 1861-1862 -- Black "Contraband." The Victoria Club Ball, 1862 -- Robert Smalls commandeers the planter -- David Hunter organizes African American troops in South Carolina -- Charlotte Forten teaches the freedpeople -- Susie King Taylor and black freedom -- The Emancipation Proclamation -- Table: A chronology of emancipation, 1772 1888 -- Men of color: To arms -- The New York Draft Riot: eyewitness accounts -- Lewis Douglass's letter to his sweetheart, 1863 -- Memphis African American proclaim the meaning of freedom, 1864 -- The Fort Pillow Massacre, 1864 -- The Second Kansas colored infantry at war -- Sojourner Truth meets President Lincoln -- A proposal to enlist blacks in the Confederate Army -- A black soldier describes the fall of Richmond, 1865 -- Elizabeth Keckley and Mary Todd Lincoln at the White House -- Frederick Douglass: What the black man wants -- 7. RECONSTRUCTION. Reconstruction amendments, 1865 1870 -- Felix Haywood remembers the Day of Jublio -- The black codes in Louisiana -- The Memphis Riot, 1866 -- "Send me some of the children's hair." President Johnson and black leaders -- Cartoon: The Freedman's Bureau sharecropping emerges in the post Civil War South -- Thaddeus Stevens demands black suffrage -- Black voting rights: Two views from the far west -- The rise of independent Black Churches -- Hampton Institute: The founding of a black college -- An anxious aunt writes to Nashville's Colored High School -- Klan violence in the Reconstruction South: Three testimonies -- The ordeal of Amanda Redmond -- Frederick Douglass: The composite Nation -- Helena citizens celebrate their New rights -- Black women and work in Philadelphia, 1871 -- Table: Black Reconstruction office holders -- Francis Cardoza urges the dissolution of the plantation system -- Senator Hiram Revels calls for the end of segregated schools -- "All we ask is equal laws, equal legislation and equal rights." Francis Rollin diary -- Ben Tillman justifies Reconstruction violence -- 8. INTO THE 20TH CENTURY. Black women, Louisiana politics and the Kansas exodus -- Willianna Hickman, bound for Nicodemus -- A Mississippi teacher writes to the Governor of Kansas -- Buffalo Soldiers rescue a New Mexico town -- A washerwomen's strike in Atlanta, 1881 -- Della Irving Hayden, a teacher in rural Virginia -- Lucy Parsons: "I am an anarchist." William Hannibal Thomas on reperations, 1887 -- A black worker calls for racial fairness and then worker solidarity -- "Organized resistance is our best remedy." Eliza Grier: From enslaved woman to medical doctor -- The Afro-American League, 1890 -- Labor and race: Strikebreaking black coal miners defend -- Their actions -- Ida B. Wells: Crusader for Justice -- "Woman's cause is one and universal." Frederick Douglass & Anna J. Cooper on gender equality -- In the 1890s -- The Atlanta Compromise Speech -- Plessy V. Ferguson, 1896 -- Jim Crow laws -- The conservation of races -- The lynching of a postmaster, 1898.
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650 0 $aAfrican Americans$xHistory$vSources.
650 0 $aAfrican Americans$xHistory.$0(NOBLE)1067
650 0 $aReconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877)$vSources.
651 0 $aUnited States$xRace relations$vSources.
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611 27 $aReconstruction (United States : 1865-1877)$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01754987
650 7 $aAfrican Americans.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00799558$0(NOBLE)1052
650 7 $aRace relations.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01086509$0(NOBLE)13594
650 7 $aSlavery.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01120426$0(NOBLE)15034
651 7 $aAfrica.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01239509$0(NOBLE)22492
651 7 $aUnited States.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01204155$0(NOBLE)26325
648 7 $a1861 - 1877$2fast
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990 $anobbc 12-19-2014
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