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  • Topic
    • Slavery 38 [-]
    • Business 36 [-]
    • Trans Atlantic slave trade 35 [-]
    • Antislavery 16 [-]
    • Clothing and dress 16 [-]
    • U.S. History, 1815-1861 15 [-]
    • U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865 15 [-]
    • Abolitionist movement 13 [-]
    • Beauty culture 12 [-]
    • Free communities of color 9 [-]
    • Military 9 [-]
    • Emancipation 8 [-]
    • Caricature and cartoons 7 [-]
    • Domestic slave trade 7 [-]
    • American South 6 [-]
    • Literature 6 [-]
    • Photography 6 [-]
    • Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877 6 [-]
    • United States Colored Troops 6 [-]
    • Violence 6 [-]
    • African diaspora 5 [-]
    • Anti-slavery movements 5 [-]
    • Children 5 [-]
    • Craftsmanship 5 [-]
    • Finance 5 [-]
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    • Middle Passage 5 [-]
    • Politics 5 [-]
    • Social reform 5 [-]
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    • Men 3 [-]
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    • Agriculture 2 [-]
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    • American West 1 [-]
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  • Name
    • Douglass, Frederick 4 [-]
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    • Dunn, Oscar J. 1 [-]
    • Durr Whiddon Graham, Hattie J. 1 [-]
    • Forbes, John Murray 1 [-]
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    • Frank Leslie's Illustrirte Zeitung 1 [-]
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  • Object Type
    • Money 28 [-]
    • manillas 15 [-]
    • Portraits 8 [-]
    • Photographs 7 [-]
    • trade beads 6 [-]
    • beads 5 [-]
    • Buttons 4 [-]
    • Buttons (fasteners) 4 [-]
    • Buttons (information artifacts) 4 [-]
    • Badges 3 [-]
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    • Books 3 [-]
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    • Broadsides (notices) 2 [-]
    • Financial records 2 [-]
    • whips (slavery artifacts) 2 [-]
    • Account books 1 [-]
    • Almanacs 1 [-]
    • Bows (chordophone components) 1 [-]
    • Buckles (strap accessories) 1 [-]
    • Deeds 1 [-]
    • Diaries 1 [-]
    • Indentures 1 [-]
    • Maps 1 [-]
    • Medallions (medals) 1 [-]
    • Medals 1 [-]
    • Memebership cards 1 [-]
    • Models (representations) 1 [-]
    • Neckwear 1 [-]
    • Newspapers 1 [-]
    • Pamphlets 1 [-]
    • Pedestals 1 [-]
    • Petitions 1 [-]
    • Plaques (flat objects) 1 [-]
    • Prints 1 [-]
    • Quilts 1 [-]
    • Receipts 1 [-]
    • Reports 1 [-]
    • Sales records 1 [-]
    • Shell (animal material) 1 [-]
    • Stock certificates 1 [-]
    • Tables (support furniture) 1 [-]
    • Teapots 1 [-]
    • Trade cards (advertising) 1 [-]
    • Violins 1 [-]
    • Workbooks 1 [-]
    • banjos 1 [-]
    • bowls (vessels) 1 [-]
    • cabins (houses) 1 [-]
    • cradles (children's beds) 1 [-]
    • drums (membranophones) 1 [-]
    • jars 1 [-]
    • keys (hardware) 1 [-]
    • petticoats 1 [-]
    • pocket watches 1 [-]
    • ships' manifests 1 [-]
    • spelling books 1 [-]
    • structural elements and structural element components 1 [-]
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  • Date
    • 1500s 2 [-]
    • 1600s 3 [-]
    • 1690s 5 [-]
    • 1700s 13 [-]
    • 1750s 3 [-]
    • 1770s 1 [-]
    • 1780s 1 [-]
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    • 1800s 27 [-]
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    • 1830s 8 [-]
    • 1840s 7 [-]
    • 1850s 16 [-]
    • 1860s 19 [-]
    • 1870s 7 [-]
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    • 1900s 5 [-]
    • 1950s 1 [-]
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  • Place
    • North and Central America 53 [-]
    • United States 51 [-]
    • West Africa 32 [-]
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    • Yes 94 [-]
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    • Images 91 [-]
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  • set-name: "Slavery and Freedom"
Your search found 94 result(s).
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  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Carte-de-visite of Lt. Governor Oscar J. Dunn

    Photograph by
    Unidentified
    Subject of
    Lieutenant Governor Dunn, Oscar J., American, 1826 - 1871
    Owned by
    Old Slave Mart Museum, American, founded 1937
    Date
    1868-1871
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    albumen and silver on photographic paper on card mount
    Dimensions
    H x W (sheet): 4 × 2 1/2 in. (10.2 × 6.4 cm)
    H x W (image): 3 9/16 × 2 in. (9.1 × 5.1 cm)
    H x W x D (mounting board): 13 7/8 × 10 15/16 × 1/16 in. (35.3 × 27.8 × 0.1 cm)
    Description
    An albumen print carte-de-visite portrait of Lt. Governor Oscar J. Dunn. He is photographed standing with his right foot slightly forward than his left and has his left arm resting on a pedestal. He is wearing a dark colored suit, vest and a bowtie. A watch chain is visible on the right side of his vest. He is looking directly at the camera. The photograph is inscribed on at the top and bottom of the front. At the bottom, handwritten in black ink, is: [Lieut Gov. Oscar J. Dunn / of Louisiana].
    Place captured
    Louisiana, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Media Arts-Photography
    Type
    cartes-de-visite
    portraits
    Topic
    American South
    Photography
    Politics
    Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2018.62
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd59a8d81ca-606a-4323-8e89-535cafd439f9
  • Photograph album owned by Emily Howland

    Manufactured by
    James B. Smith & Co., American
    Signed by
    Lacy, Caroline N., American, 1838 - 1898
    Received by
    Howland, Emily, American, 1827 - 1929
    Subject of
    Tubman, Harriet, American, 1822 - 1913
    Menard, John Willis, American, 1838 - 1893
    Sumner, Charles, American, 1811 - 1874
    Child, Lydia Maria, American, 1802 - 1880
    Channing, William Henry, American, 1810 - 1884
    Phillips, Wendell, American, 1811 - 1884
    Freedmen's Bureau, American, 1865 - 1872
    Date
    1864
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    leather, metal, and ink on paper
    Dimensions
    H x W x D (closed): 6 1/4 × 5 1/4 × 2 7/8 in. (15.9 × 13.3 × 7.3 cm)
    H x W (open with clasps): 6 1/4 × 11 in. (15.9 × 27.9 cm)
    H x W (open without clasps): 6 1/4 × 9 in. (15.9 × 22.9 cm)
    H x W x D (Storage container): 5 7/8 × 11 1/4 × 11 7/16 in. (15 × 28.5 × 29 cm)
    Caption
    Caroline “Carrie” Nichols (later Carrie N. Lacy; see 2017.30.13) presented this carte-de-visite album to her friend and fellow teacher Emily Howland on January 1, 1864, at Camp Todd, a freedmen’s camp and school located in Arlington, Virginia. Emily Howland was an abolitionist, educator, philanthropist, and suffragist who founded, financially supported, and taught in numerous schools for African Americans for more than 70 years from 1857 until her death in 1929 at the age of 101.
    Typical of a CDV album during this period, the Howland Album contains photographs of Howland’s family, friends, and colleagues, as well as souvenir images of notable abolitionists and famous figures during the 1860s and 1870s. Based on the photograph dates and later inscriptions, it is clear that Howland added photographs to the album as she collected them throughout the mid- to late 19th century.
    Description
    Black leather photograph album owned by Emily Howland containing photographs of friends, family, and celebrities. The album covers and binding are made from embossed black leather with gold gilt decorations on the covers and spine. Both covers are the same, with a scallop-edged diamond outlined in gold at the center and geometric borders surrounding it, ending in a thin gold gilt geometric border around the edges. Gilt text is stamped on the spine reading "PHOTOGRAPHS". The front and back interior covers have decorative paper with small gold repeating stylized dots on a white ground adhered to them. There are four (4) sheets of paper at the front of the album, followed by twenty-five (25) thicker pages that each feature a window for holding two (2) photographs per page, and one (1) sheet of paper at the back of the album. There is room for fifty (50) photographs, though the album contains only forty-seven (47) photographs plus one (1) loose photograph too large to fit into the windowed pages. Windows 20, 21, and 47 are empty. The windows are rectangular with rounded corners and are surrounded by a gold printed border. The front pages include a page with information about the album publisher and an Index page with two printed columns of numbered lines for identifying the photographs. The Index page is not filled out. There is an inscription written in black ink on the first page that reads "To / Emily Howland / From her friend / Carrie Nichols / Jan 1st, 1864 / Camp Todd / Virginia". All of the interior pages are edged in gilt with a design impressed into the top, right side, and bottom edges of the pages that creates a floral spray when the album is closed. The album fastens on the right side with two (2) metal hinged bars that are attached to the back cover and close over metal pins attached to the front cover. The bars are embellished with a three-dimensional metal design imitating a floral fabric looped through a metal buckle.
    Place used
    Camp Todd, Arlington County, Virginia, United States, North and Central America
    Collection title
    Emily Howland Photograph Album
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Media Arts-Photography
    Movement
    Anti-slavery movements
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    photograph albums
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Education
    Families
    Feminism
    Local and regional
    Military
    Photography
    Politics
    Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877
    Religion
    Social reform
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    United States Colored Troops
    Credit Line
    Collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture shared with the Library of Congress
    Object number
    2017.30
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5ce0a9252-41a1-451e-8201-f95fa8aaf1d8
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Violin played by the enslaved man Jesse Burke

    Manufactured by
    Unidentified
    Owned by
    Burke, Jesse, American, 1834 - 1909
    Date
    1850-1860
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    Violin: wood, steel, and mother of pearl;
    Bow: wood, horsehair, metal, and mother of pearl;
    Case: wood, metal, and wool cotton blend flannel
    Dimensions
    H x W x D (Violin): 3 × 24 × 8 1/4 in. (7.6 × 61 × 21 cm)
    H x W x D (Bow): 1 1/16 × 29 1/4 × 9/16 in. (2.7 × 74.3 × 1.4 cm)
    H x W x D (Case (closed)): 4 1/4 × 30 3/4 × 9 1/2 in. (10.8 × 78.1 × 24.1 cm)
    Caption
    This violin was originally owned by a slaveholder named Elisha Burke, who owned the Mount Pleasant Plantation in Phillips County, Arkansas. Before the slaveholder died in 1860, he gave the violin to an enslaved man on his plantation, Mr. Jesse Burke (b. 1834 – d. 1909). According to the family oral history, during slavery Jesse was charged with playing the violin for entertainment for the slaveholder and his guests.
    Description
    A violin (.1a) with a bow (.1b) stored in a wooden case (.2), all owned and played by Jesse Burke, who used the violin during and after enslavement.
    The violin (.1a) has a reddish-brown stained wooden body, neck, peg box, and scroll. The pegs, fingerboard, and tailpiece are made of wood painted black. A small piece of mother of pearl is attached at the center top of each peg. The strings are made from steel. A paper label is adhered to the interior back of the violin body, which can be seen through the sound holes. Printed on the label in black text are the words: "Antonius Stradiuarius Cremonensis / Faciebat Anno 1726".
    The bow (.1b) has a rod made from a dark-stained wood with a metal tension screw. The frog is made from wood painted black and inlaid with mother of pearl and a metal ferrule. The tip is edged with a panel of an ivory imitation material. The bow hair is made from horsehair, though the horsehair is broken with several strands still attached and extending from the tip in varying lengths.
    The wooden case (.2) is painted black and has a hinged lid that opens with two (2) metal hinges. On the opening side are two (2) metal tension clasps with one (1) locking hinge at the center. There is a metal plate with a keyhole to the right of the center hinged lock. A metal handle is attached at either side of the keyhole plate. The interior of the bottom and the lid is lined with a red wool and cotton blend flannel. There are two flannel-covered wooden pieces at the wide side of the case that correspond to the center bouts on the body of the instrument and secure it in place inside the case. A loop of the flannel is sewn near the thin side of the lid, presumably to hold the bow.
    Place used
    Lexa, Phillips County, Arkansas, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Musical Instruments
    Type
    bows (chordophone components)
    violins
    Topic
    Instrumentalists (Musicians)
    Men
    Music
    Slavery
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Donated by Shirley Burke, Great-Granddaughter, on Behalf of Jesse Burke's Descendants
    Object number
    2014.232.1ab-.2
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5835a516e-26cb-4987-a5c7-af1c4e24e48f
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    The Case of Dred Scott in the United States Supreme Court

    Written by
    Chief Justice Taney, Roger B., American, 1777 - 1964
    Justice Curtis, Benjamin Robbins, American, 1809 - 1874
    Published by
    Greeley, Horace, American, 1811 - 1872
    Subject of
    Scott, Dred, American, ca 1800 - 1858
    Date
    1857
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper (fiber product) with string (fiber product)
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 9 1/16 × 5 13/16 × 5/16 in. (23 × 14.7 × 0.8 cm)
    Description
    A first edition, octavo volume of The Case of Dred Scott in the United States Supreme Court with sewn self-wrappers. The title and publishing information are printed in black ink, centered on the front wrap against a plain background: [The Case / OF / DRED SCOTT / IN THE / UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT. / THE FULL DECISION OF / CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY / AND / JUSTICE CURTIS / AND ABSTRACTS OF THE / OPINIONS OF THE OTHER JUDGES; / WITH ANALYSIS OF THE POINTS RULED, AND SOME / CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS. / NEW YORK / GREELEY & McELRATH, TRIBUNE BUILDINGS / 1857. / Price, 25 Cents; $1 for Five Copies; $2 per Dozen; $15 per Hundred.] There are 104 pages. The text concludes with the sections [RESOLUTIONS] and [AN ACT TO SECURE THE FREEDOM OF ALL PERSONS WITHIN THIS STATE.] on the back. The volume is inscribed to the New York State congressman Robert J. Hale at the top center of the front wrap: [Robt. Hale from R. W. Livingston, July / 57].
    Place printed
    New York City, New York, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Type
    reports
    Topic
    Caricature and cartoons
    Civil rights
    Emancipation
    Government
    Law
    Politics
    Race discrimination
    Slavery
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2015.262
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5c1529cce-9678-43b6-9fc9-8115e1b2df55
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Block of Aquia Creek sandstone removed from the East Front of US Capitol

    Commissioned by
    Architect of the Capitol, American, founded 1793
    Date
    1824-1826
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    sandstone
    Dimensions
    Overall with Weight: 15 3/4 × 21 1/4 × 14 1/2 in., 318 lb. (40 × 54 × 36.8 cm, 144.2 kg)
    Caption
    Enslaved African Americans, leased out by their slave owners, mined sandstone from local quarries and built the United States Capitol, the White House, and the Smithsonian Castle. Congress, the institution that guarded the peoples’ freedom, held sessions in a building constructed by forced labor, and the legislators would have witnessed lines of shackled slaves marching by daily en route to the Deep South. The block was quarried near Aquia Creek, Virginia, by free and enslaved workers and used in the construction of the Capitol building in 1824.
    Source: Nancy Bercaw, Curator, Slavery and Freedom
    Description
    A rectangular block of sandstone. One short side of the block has a smooth, finished surface. The other five sides are rough-hewn and pitted, showing evidence of quarry tool markings, softened by weathering. One of the long sides has mechanical tool markings across the surface, forming a cross-hatch pattern. The block predominantly is beige, with reddish-brown veins of color running lengthwise. The smooth side shows most clearly the variegation of reddish-brown strata. There is a loss at the lower-left corner of the smooth side.
    Place used
    Washington, District of Columbia, United States, North and Central America
    Place collected
    Aquia Creek, Stafford County, Virginia, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Buildings and Structures
    Type
    blocks (shaped masses)
    structural elements and structural element components
    Topic
    Architecture
    Building Arts
    Free communities of color
    Government
    Labor
    Local and regional
    Politics
    Slave hire system
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2013.182
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd591da1639-8f87-43bb-9128-5c8ee6561cac
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Lithographic print of Hiram Revels

    Published by
    Leslie, Frank's Illustrirte Zeitung, American, 1857 - 1894
    Edited by
    Leslie, Frank, American, 1821 - 1880
    Subject of
    Revels, Hiram Rhodes, American, 1827 - 1901
    Date
    ca. 1870
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper
    Dimensions
    H x W: 7 15/16 × 7 7/16 in. (20.2 × 18.9 cm)
    Description
    A lithographic print of Hiram Revels from Frank Leslie’s Illustrirte Zeitung. The print is bordered by printed German text. The print has been hand colored. Hiram Revels is pictured wearing a blue suit with a red necktie. Underneath the image is “Hiram Revels, farbinger Bundes-Senator von Mississippi.” The top of the image says “Frank Leslie’s Illustrirte Zeitung.”
    Place printed
    New York City, New York, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Visual Arts
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Type
    prints
    portraits
    Topic
    Emancipation
    Politics
    Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Joele and Fred Michaud
    Object number
    2013.239.14
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5085ef869-f27e-4bd6-a64a-ff219b7db2ce
  • The Elementary Spelling Book: Being An Improvement On The American Spelling Book

    Written by
    Noah Webster Jr., American, 1758 - 1843
    Published by
    George F. Cooledge & Brother, American, 1829 - 1863
    Date
    1845
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 7 × 4 1/8 × 3/8 in. (17.8 × 10.5 × 1 cm)
    Caption
    Popularly called "the blue-black speller," many African Americans remember Noah Webster's Elementary Spelling Book as the way they learned to read and spell after slavery.
    Description
    A faded blue textbook with black text titled “The Elementary Spelling Book: Being an Improvement on the American Spelling Book” by Noah Webster. Printed at the top of the cover is “THE LAST REVISED EDITION.” The title is at the center of the cover surrounded by a floral design and the author’s name. The publisher’s information is printed at the bottom of the cover. The cover is torn and faded. The book contains 168 pages. The pages are white with black text.
    Place used
    United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Type
    spelling books
    Topic
    Caricature and cartoons
    Education
    Emancipation
    Language
    Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877
    Youth
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Nancy Bercaw
    Object number
    2017.89
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5238a8d20-030b-4e23-ad4d-84e1bd8b8769
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    Twelve Years A Slave

    Written by
    Northup, Solomon, American, 1808 - 1875
    Published by
    Derby and Miller, American, 1848 - 1853
    Date
    1853
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper with gold, cloth, and cardboard
    Dimensions
    H x W x D (Closed): 7 3/4 × 5 1/2 × 1 5/16 in. (19.7 × 14 × 3.4 cm)
    H x W x D (Open): 7 3/4 × 11 1/2 × 4 1/8 in. (19.7 × 29.2 × 10.5 cm)
    H x W x D (open at 90 degrees): 7 3/4 × 6 × 6 1/4 in. (19.7 × 15.2 × 15.9 cm)
    H x W x D (open at 60 degrees): 7 3/4 × 5 3/4 × 5 3/4 in. (19.7 × 14.6 × 14.6 cm)
    Description
    This book is a first edition, seventeenth thousand printing copy of “Twelve Years A Slave Narrative of Solomon Northup, A Citizen of New York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853, and Rescued in 1853, From a Common Plantation Near the Red River, in Louisiana." The book has a brown cloth binding. The exterior spine is embossed with two lines running across the top and bottom of the spine. The title of the book has been embossed in gilt lettering [TWELVE/YEARS/A/SLAVE] across the top third of the spine and is surrounded by engraved flourishes. The name of the publishers [DARBY & MILLER] is embossed in gilt across the bottom of the spine. The front and back cover boards have been embossed with identical designs: two flourishes within two rectangles. The book has yellow end papers, a dedication to Harriet Beecher Stowe, a quote by Cowpee, an editor’s preface, twenty-two chapters and an appendix. The frontispiece is a portrait of Solomon Northup seated on a bench with his arms crossed. A facsimile of his signature is below the picture with a caption that reads, “IN HIS PLANTATION SUIT.” Three hundred and thirty-six pages with seven black and white plates.
    Place printed
    Auburn, Cuyahoga County, New York, United States, North and Central America
    Place depicted
    New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana, United States, North and Central America
    Washington, District of Columbia, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    narratives
    hardcover books
    Topic
    American South
    Antislavery
    Caricature and cartoons
    Domestic slave trade
    Free communities of color
    Law
    Literature
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2014.262
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public Domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd537167978-c6a5-4b5c-8aad-8b8ccdd82f33
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Picture of Slavery in the United States of America

    Written by
    Rev. Bourne, George, British American, 1780 - 1845
    Published by
    Hunt, Edwin, American
    Date
    1834
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 6 x 3 3/4 x 3/4 in. (15.2 x 9.5 x 1.9 cm)
    Description
    This book is entitled "Picture of Slavery in the United States of America," and was written by Reverend George Bourne. It was published by Edwin Hunt in 1834. The text is bound in a plain dark blue paper cover with text on the interior pages printed in black ink. There are ten (10) engravings included, featuring images related to scenes of slavery.
    Place made
    Middletown, Middlesex County, Connecticut, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    books
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Caricature and cartoons
    Literature
    Religion
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2013.46.7
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd526702790-2126-48f2-8e2d-dd385122369b
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    School copy book used by Hannah Amelia Lyons

    Printed by
    Price, Philip Jr., American
    Used by
    Lyons, Hannah Amelia, American
    Date
    1830-1836
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper, string
    Dimensions
    H x W: 13 x 8 in. (33 x 20.3 cm)
    Caption
    Hannah A. Lions’s School Copy Book, 1831
    Attending school in Philadelphia, Hannah Lions copied down her math, history, and poetry lessons in this notebook. Her family saved this book as "proof that there were some educated [black] people way back when."
    Source: Nancy Bercaw, Curator, Slavery and Freedom
    Description
    A school copy book printed by Philip Price in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and used by Hannah Amelia Lyons. The book has paper covers bound on the proper left side. A length of knotted pink string extends from the top edge of the binding, serving as a bookmark. Several engravings are printed on the front and back covers. On the front cover is a portrait of John Adams entitled "Late President of the United States," above an allegorical scene and space for the owner to sign the book, followed by the printer's name. The back cover has an image of an eagle flying over open waters between two ships and clasping a banner reading "SHIPPED" in its beak. Below the eagle is a floral sprig on the left and a grouping of masonic symbols on the right, with a thin scrollwork border below them. Below the border is a shield with an eagle inside it holding a banner reading "E Pluribus Unum". Below the shield are two separate allegorical scenes. The interior pages contain various school exercises including mathematics and poetry.
    Place printed
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Documents and Published Materials
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Type
    workbooks
    Topic
    Caricature and cartoons
    Children
    Education
    Free communities of color
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Hope Evans Boyd
    Object number
    2012.124.2
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd59de47c7b-7578-47eb-99eb-960f8ab39d57
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    Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave

    Written by
    Douglass, Frederick, American, 1818 - 1895
    Published by
    Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, American, founded 1835
    Subject of
    Garrison, William Lloyd, American, 1805 - 1879
    Phillips, Wendell, American, 1811 - 1884
    Date
    1845
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper, cardboard
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 7 x 4 1/2 x 5 in. (17.8 x 11.4 x 12.7 cm)
    H x W x D (open at 90 degrees): 7 × 5 × 4 7/8 in. (17.8 × 12.7 × 12.4 cm)
    H x W x D (open at 60 degrees): 7 × 5 × 4 1/4 in. (17.8 × 12.7 × 10.8 cm)
    Description
    A first edition copy of the memoir and antislavery book Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself. The hardcover book has a brown cover with an imprinted decorative border and scrollwork. The title is stamped in gold lettering in the center: [NARRATIVE OF THE LIFE / OF / FREDERICK DOUGLASS]. The frontispiece illustration is a portrait of Douglass, seated at a table, wearing jacket, vest, and tie, with his hands crossed in his lap. The first page prints the full title in alternating large and small type: [NARRATIVE / OF THE / LIFE / OF / FREDERICK DOUGLASS, / AN / AMERICAN SLAVE. / WRITTEN BY HIMSELF]. The last part of the title appears between two horizontal lines. At the bottom center is the publishing information: [BOSTON: / PUBLISHED AT THE ANTI-SLAVERY OFFICE, / No. 25 CORNHILL / 1845.]. The book has a preface written by William Lloyd Garrison and a prefatory letter by Wendell Phillips. There are 125 pages.
    Place printed
    Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    narratives
    hardcover books
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Caricature and cartoons
    Freedom
    Fugitive enslaved
    Identity
    Literature
    Men
    Resistance
    Self-liberation
    Slavery
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Elizabeth Cassell
    Object number
    2011.43.1
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd591fe36d9-f8c3-463c-9599-d71a955cbcaa
  • My Bondage and My Freedom

    Written by
    Douglass, Frederick, American, 1818 - 1895
    Published by
    Miller, Orton & Co.
    Subject of
    Smith, Gerrit, American, 1794 - 1874
    Date
    1857
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper, cardboard, leather
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 7 1/2 x 5 1/2 x 1 3/4 in. (19.1 x 14 x 4.4 cm)
    H x W x D (IN SPECIALLY MADE STAND): 5 1/8 × 7 5/16 × 7 1/2 in. (13 × 18.6 × 19.1 cm)
    Description
    Hardcover book entitled "My Bondage and My Freedom" with an illustration of Frederick Douglass as frontispiece. This slave narrative is dedicated to Gerrit Smith.
    Place printed
    New York City, New York, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    narratives
    hardcover books
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Caricature and cartoons
    Identity
    Literature
    Slavery
    Social reform
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Elizabeth Cassell
    Object number
    2011.43.2
    Restrictions & Rights
    Public domain
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5915f35e6-54ba-421e-915c-0c65b5491aa1
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Hiring agreement for an enslaved woman named Martha in South Carolina

    Printed by
    Unidentified
    Signed by
    Hunton, William A., American
    Fox, John, American, 1805 - 1884
    Subject of
    Unidentified Woman or Women
    Date
    December 31, 1858
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    ink on paper
    Dimensions
    H x W: 3 15/16 × 5 5/8 in. (10 × 14.3 cm)
    Description
    A hiring agreement for an enslaved woman named Martha in South Carolina. The small, single sheet and page document is on yellowed paper with black preprinted and handwritten text. The document represents the hire of an enslaved woman named Martha to William A. Hunton by John Fox on January 1, 1859 for 1 year. It the top left corner on the front of the document is a printed dollar sign with “17.00/100” handwritten next to it. The document begins “On the 1st day of January, 1860, we bind ourselves and our heirs / to pay unto JOHN FOX the just and full sum of Seventeen dollars / and – cents, for the hire of the Negro Martha, for the year 1859….” The document also notes that Martha will be furnished with summer and winter clothes as well as a bonnet and blanket. The document ends with “Given under our hands ad seals this 31st day of December of 1858. / William A. Hunton.” In the bottom right corner there ar two boxes with “SEAL.” printed inside. William A. Hunton’s signature is next to the top box. The back of the document has an inscription in graphite written in a different hand than the text on the front. The inscription reads “No 24 / WM A. Hunton / $17, Martha / John Fox.”
    Transcription Center Status
    Transcribed by digital volunteers
    Place used
    Lexington County, South Carolina, United States, North and Central America
    Collection title
    Liljenquist Family Collection
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Business and Legal Documents
    Type
    financial records
    receipts
    Topic
    American South
    Business
    Clothing and dress
    Finance
    Slave hire system
    Slavery
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    Women
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of the Liljenquist Family
    Object number
    2018.43.5
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5d9ce66b2-ca13-4d5c-8e60-aab2fef7d7f9
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    Carte de visite of Sgt. Jacob Johns (19th USCT)

    Photograph by
    Unidentified
    Subject of
    Johns, Jacob, American, died 1867
    19th United States Colored Infantry, 1863 - 1867
    Date
    1864-1867
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    silver and photographic gelatin on photographic paper
    Dimensions
    H x W: 3 7/8 × 2 3/8 in. (9.8 × 6 cm)
    Description
    This carte-de-visite has a photographic print depicting Sergeant Jacob Johns seated, facing the viewer with his gloved hands resting on his lap. His right elbow is resting on a small, circular side table, while it appears he is holding his left arm up without support. Johns is wearing an oversized four-button sack coat with an outside slash pocket. His uniform includes sergeant bars sewn onto the sleeves of his coat, pants with a dark stripe down the outer side of each leg, a belt with a rectangular metal belt plate, gloves, a sword and sash, and a medal pinned to his proper left chest. Johns wears a goatee. The carte-de-visite is inscribed and signed in ink along the bottom of the mount, reading "Your Obt. Servt, / Jacob Johns". The reverse of the mount is blank.
    Collection title
    Liljenquist Family Collection
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Media Arts-Photography
    Type
    cartes-de-visite
    gelatin silver prints
    portraits
    Topic
    Military
    Photography
    Slavery
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    United States Colored Troops
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift from the Liljenquist Family Collection
    Object number
    2015.222.8
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd55f900712-f8b5-41ff-9b42-a836c1f11b0e
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    Civil War-era belt buckle from Point of Pines Plantation

    Created by
    Unidentified
    Subject of
    Point of Pines Plantation, American
    Date
    ca. 1860
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    metal
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 2 1/4 × 3 5/16 × 1 1/4 in. (5.7 × 8.4 × 3.2 cm)
    Description
    Union "US" Oval belt buckle. The metal buckle is oval shaped with the raised lettering on the front that reads [US]. There are three hooks on the back. Any backmarks that may have existed were worn away by the elements.
    Place collected
    Edisto Island, Charleston County, South Carolina, United States, Sea Islands, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Clothing-Historical
    Type
    buckles (strap accessories)
    Topic
    Clothing and dress
    Communities
    Emancipation
    Freedom
    Military
    Slavery
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    United States Colored Troops
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Burnet Rhett Maybank, III
    Object number
    2015.92.4
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd53c9d9070-c393-499f-9070-9476d1fd73d9
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    Pocketwatch inscribed to William Lloyd Garrison from George Thompson

    Created by
    Unidentified
    Commissioned by
    George Thompson, English, 1804 - 1878
    Subject of
    The Liberator, American, 1831 - 1865
    Owned by
    Garrison, George Thompson, American, 1836 - 1904
    Garrison, William Lloyd, American, 1805 - 1879
    Date
    1850
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    gold, metal, glass, paint
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 2 11/16 × 1 7/8 × 9/16 in. (6.8 × 4.8 × 1.4 cm)
    Description
    An inscribed gold pocket watch presented to William Lloyd Garrison. The watch has a half hunter case, with spring hinged glass cover over the dial and a hinged gold lid over the back, protecting the inscription and winding square. The dial is painted white with roman numerals and fleur de lis shaped watch hands. There is a smaller 60-second dial partly obscuring the "VI" of the larger dial. The two hinged covers open via a button on the crown and bow, positioned above the "XII" of the dial. The engraved inscription on the back of the watch is decorative and reads [Presented by / GEORGE THOMPSON, M.P. / on behalf of him / self and others / to / WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON, / intrepid and uncompromising / Friend of the Slave: / in commemoration of the / TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF / THE LIBERATOR / Boston / January 1st, 1851] in several text sizes and fonts. Production and identification marks are stamped and scratched on the inside of the back cover.
    Transcription Center Status
    Transcribed by digital volunteers
    Place made
    London, England, Europe
    Place depicted
    Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Tools and Equipment-Personal use
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    pocket watches
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Social reform
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of the Garrison Family in memory of George Thompson Garrison
    Object number
    2014.115.6.1
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5e0215bd0-3401-45dd-a961-97d312b03270
  • Banneker’s Almanack and Ephemeris for the Year of Our Lord 1793

    Written by
    Banneker, Benjamin, American, 1731 - 1806
    Printed by
    Krukshank, Joseph, active 1790s
    Date
    1793
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    printing ink on paper with thread
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 7 × 4 7/16 × 3/16 in. (17.8 × 11.3 × 0.5 cm)
    Description
    This Banneker's Almanack is a 48-page printed booklet printed in 1793. The almanac is a booklet comprised of 8 segments of folded paper, bound together by two stitches of cream-colored thread on the left-hand side that are knotted at the back. The top edge of the booklet is trimmed, but the side and bottom edges are not. The pages are unnumbered. Pages 37-40 are uncut along the top edge.
    Banneker's Almanack contains a varied assortment of information. Primarily an annual calendar, each month is listed along with important dates, statistical information, phases of the moon, astronomical data, and tide tables. The Almanack also includes political and social commentary most notably on anti-slavery issues. Banneker included abstracts such as, “A Plan of a Peace-Office, for the United States”, “Extracts from the Debates in the Last Session of the British Parliament, Apr. 1792”, “Extract from Jefferson’s Notes on Virginia”, “Extract from Wilkinson’s Appeal to England on Behalf of the Abused Africans”, poetry, Census data, tables of interest at 5% and 7%, currency exchanges, roads and mileage from various starting points to nearby towns and cities, and information about Federal, State and Local courts.
    Transcription Center Status
    Transcribed by digital volunteers
    Place printed
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Documents and Published Materials-Published Works
    Movement
    Anti-slavery movements
    Type
    almanacs
    Topic
    Agriculture
    Antislavery
    Literature
    Science
    U.S. History, 1783-1815
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
    Object number
    2014.63.31
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd542a4090e-a9f0-447f-8654-148c6c9a9ad4
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Cabin from Point of Pines Plantation in Charleston County, South Carolina

    Created by
    Point of Pines Plantation, American
    Date
    1853
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    yellow pine, lath, and cypress shingles
    Dimensions
    H x W x D: 73 x 246 x 186 in. (185.4 x 624.8 x 472.4 cm)
    Caption
    The cabin was originally a two room, hall-and-parlor cabin with a loft accessible by ladder. The cabin had one door and three windows. A back door and an extra room were added after emancipation.
    The Point of Pines Plantation Slave Cabin was one of two remaining slave dwellings on Edisto Island in 2013. The cabin was built on Charles Bailey's Point of Pines plantation in 1853 along with approximately nine other cabins of identical type. The lumber used to build the cabin was machine cut and shipped to the island. At this point, the cabins were assembled most likely by enslaved carpenters. The cabin is a one-story, rectangular, weatherboard clad building with a side gable roof which also acts as the overhanging porch roof. There is a single, exterior brick chimney on the west elevation.It was listed in the National Register November 28, 1986.
    Description
    The cabin is a one-story, two-room, rectangular, weatherboard clad building with an extended side gable roof which acts as the overhanging porch roof and a brick /masonry fireplace on the west elevation. The structure is a timber frame, meaning a heavy timber mortise and tenon, structure. It is composed of 6”x 6” sills of Southern Yellow Pine, 3” x 4” studs with 4” x 6” braces, topped with 4” x 6” plates and 3” x 4” rafters all of Southern Yellow Pine. Rafters are covered with lath and the structure originally had a cypress shingle roof; some pieces of shingles survive in the roof frame. The exterior was covered by Southern Yellow pine lap siding and painted with whitewash.
    Place collected
    Edisto Island, Charleston County, South Carolina, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Buildings and Structures
    Type
    cabins (houses)
    Topic
    American South
    Architecture
    Building Arts
    Communities
    Domestic life
    Emancipation
    Housing
    Reconstruction, U.S. History, 1865-1877
    Slavery
    U.S. History, 1815-1861
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of The Edisto Island Historic Preservation Society
    Object number
    2013.57
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd549eeb381-fb49-44be-8743-e05c70cb74c2
  • CC0 Creative Commons - No Rights Reserved icon

    Charleston slave badge from 1801 for Mechanic No. 108

    Created by
    Prince, Charles, American
    Date
    1801
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    copper
    Dimensions
    Diameter: 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm)
    Description
    A circular copper slave badge. The front of the badge reads "*Charleston* / No. 108 / Mechanic / 1801." The back of the badge reads “C.Prince.” All lettering is die stamped into the metal except the number “108”, which is engraved. There is a puncture hole at the top of the badge. The metal is dark in color with a green patina.
    Place used
    Charleston, South Carolina, United States, North and Central America
    Collection title
    Liljenquist Family Collection
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Tools and Equipment-Occupational
    Type
    badges
    Topic
    Labor
    Slavery
    U.S. History, 1783-1815
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift from the Liljenquist Family Collection
    Object number
    2014.118.2
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd55711a3b9-0458-4089-9215-b06f65e474b9
  • Civil war shelter tent half owned by George Thompson Garrison

    Manufactured by
    H. S. McComb, American
    Owned by
    Garrison, George Thompson, American, 1836 - 1904
    Subject of
    55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, American, 1863 - 1865
    Date
    circa 1863
    On View
    Concourse 3, C3 053
    Exhibition
    Slavery and Freedom
    Medium
    cotton (textile), bone, thread
    Dimensions
    H x W: 59 × 66 in. (149.9 × 167.6 cm)
    Description
    One half of a U.S. Military issued tent owned by G.T. Garrison. The tent is a flat, nearly square piece of cotton cloth. Along the two sides and the upper edge there are button holes, above each of these notches are white circular bone buttons sewn to the cotton, several of which are missing. One edge has neither buttons nor notches. The side on which the buttons are stitched has [Co. I / 55th] stamped in black pigment in the lower-right quadrant. At the top in small, faded letters [H.S. McCOMB / WILMINGTON] is stamped in red pigment. The opposite side of the tent is undecorated.
    Place made
    Wilmington, New Castle County, Delaware, United States, North and Central America
    Classification
    Slavery and Freedom Objects
    Tools and Equipment-Military
    Movement
    Abolitionist movement
    Type
    tents
    Topic
    Antislavery
    Military
    U.S. History, Civil War, 1861-1865
    Credit Line
    Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of the Garrison Family in memory of George Thompson Garrison
    Object number
    2014.115.2
    Restrictions & Rights
    No Known Copyright Restrictions
    Usage
    CC0
    GUID
    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd54b88b80f-bacf-44f8-a5ef-0c24812968c8

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