Search using this query type:

Advanced Search (Items only)

Browse Items (916 total)

Address Delivered before the Wake County Workingmen's Association, February 6, 1860

Title Page.jpg

RALEIGH, N. C., February 7, 1860. FRANK. I. WILSON, ESQ.: Dear Sir:--The undersigned, a portion of the members of the "Wake County Workingmen's Association," beg that you will permit us to publish the Address delivered by you before our Association…

Address of Thomas Ruffin: Delivered Before the State Agricultural Society of North Carolina, October 18, 1855

image (1).jpeg

... My purpose now, however, is merely to maintain that slavery here is favorable to the interests of agriculture in point of economy and profit, and not unwholesome to the moral and social condition of each race. In support of the first part of the…

Tags:

Affair at Chicamacomico, Loggerhead Inlet, October 4, 1861

Affair at Chicamacomico, Loggerhead Inlet.

African Americans in the Military

Thousands of African Americans wanted to fight against the institution of slavery by joining the U.S. military, but were prohibited from doing so by federal law passed in 1792. Only after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on…

Alan W. Trelease, White Terror: The Ku Klux Klan Conspiracy and Southern Reconstruction (1971)

9780807119532.jpg

Holden, despairing of a fair trial in the civil courts, had resolved to try them by military commission. He therefore wrote Pearson a lengthy public letter on July 26, justifying his proclamations of insurrection and politely declining to surrender…

Albion Tourgée on African American enfranchisement as a means to degrade the South in An Appeal to Caesar, 1884

To the Southern white man, anything that looked toward the elevation of the negro beyond the mere fact of his liberty, — which as a rule he was willing to concede, — any other civil or political right which it was proposed to confer upon…

Albion Tourgée on African Americans not being able to testify in court in A Fool's Errand, 1879

”It was for the discussion of questions thus arising that the meeting we have now in hand was called. The great subject of contention between the opposing factions was as to whether the recently freed people ought to be allowed to testify in…

Albion Tourgée on African Americans not being granted even the most minimal rights in A Fool's Errand, 1879

So it must havebeen well understood by the wise men who devised this short-sighted plan ofelecting a President beyond a peradventure of defeat, that they were giving thepower of the re-organized, subordinate republics, into the hands of a…

Albion Tourgée on Christianity as a northern motivation for abolition in Bricks Without Straw, 1880

“ Perhaps there has been no grander thing in our history than the eager generosity with which the Christian men and women of the North gave and wrought, to bring the boon of knowledge to the recently-enslaved. As the North gave, willingly and…