183 items have been found that match your search request.
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Account Book of Elijah Williams, Ledger B, Vol. 3
1751-1757
L00.084
Storekeeper (Elijah Williams) accounts with Abijah Prince. This is a page from the account book of Deerfield, Massachusetts, storekeeper Elijah Williams (1712-1771) that includes purchases and payments from the free black man, Abijah Prince. |
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Account Book of Elijah Williams, Ledger C, Vol. 4
1755-1759
L00.085
Storekeeper (Elijah Williams) accounts with Abijah Prince. This is a page from the account book of Elijah Williams (1712-1771) describing the purchases and payments of Abijah Prince (b.c.1715), a free black in Deerfield, Massachusetts, in the years 1756 and 1757. |
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Mary: Lamson family servant
c. 1867
2000.19.22.01
African American women like Mary experienced only limited economic opportunity after the Civil War. |
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"Negroes waiting at the depot"
1856-1858
1994.20.03.24
George Fuller of Deerfield, Massachusetts, made this sketch, "Negroes Waiting at the depot," in Mobile, Alabama in 1857. |
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"Ellis, Field hand"
1856-1858
1994.20.03.33
George Fuller drew "Ellis, Field Hand" on his travels through the slave states in the 1850s. |
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Woman washing
1857
1994.20.03.35
George Fuller (1822-1884) sought to highlight in his sketches of southern slaves what he called "the expressions of what we call lowly or everyday life." |
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"Our page, Harry"
1858
1994.20.03.48
George Fuller (1822-1884) of Deerfield, Massachusetts, sketched "Our Page Harry" while working in the Deep South as an itinerant portrait painter in the 1850s. |
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African-American woman sewing
1856-1858
1994.20.03.54
Like his other drawings of slave and southern plantation life, this interior sketch of slave quarters by George Fuller (1822-1884) of Deerfield, Massachusetts, carefully details the spaces in which slaves worked and lived. |
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"Negro Funeral"
1856-1858
1994.20.03.55
George Fuller drew this sketch after witnessing an African American funeral procession in March, 1858. |
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"Learning By Doing At Hampton"
1900
L01.005
Boarding schools like the Hampton Institute sought not merely to educate but also to indoctrinate young Native and African American students in the values and customs of white society. |