Co-Chair, Program Committee at Society for American City and Regional Planning HIstory à Michigan State University
17 Jul 2017•0 j'aime•233 vues
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A Black Social World: Post Civil War Black Townships
17 Jul 2017•0 j'aime•233 vues
Signaler
Formation
A presentation on the development of African-American communities after the Civil War in the United States presented to the Florida Humanities Council Teacher Workshop.
A Black Social World: Post Civil War Black Townships
1. A Black Social World
Black Townships and Settlements in the United
Julian Chambliss
Professor of History
Coordinator of Africa and African American Studies
Rollins College
12. • In 1874 Benjamin Singleton and his associates formed the Edgefield Real Estate
and Homestead Association in Tennessee.
Benjamin Singleton, and S.A. McClure, leaders of the Exodus, leaving Nashville,
Tennessee.
(Library of Congress)
15. Aerial view of Nicodemus from the Northeast, 1953
http://www.nps.gov/features/nicodemus/buildings.htm
16. WHAT CAN THIS PRIMARY
SOURCE TELL ME?
Why was the item created?
What is it purpose?
Who was the intended audience for the item?
What factors suggest the audience?
What questions about the creator, content, or context are generated from
this item?
What issues of race, gender, and/or class are reflected in the item?
How does the item fit within a larger historical narrative?
What historical issues are reflected in the item?
21. Edward P. McCabe
• Former State Auditor for
Kansas. In 1889 started
promoting Oklahoma as potential
haven for African-Americans.
Langston City, the settlement he
created has 200 residents by
1891.
• “the… paradise of Eden and the
garden of the Gods.”
• “Here the Negro can rest from
mob law, here he can be secure
from every ill of the southern
policies.”
37. This volume represents
Washington’s attempt to explain
how well African-American self-
help is succeeding in the United
States. Published 1904.
Working With The Hands_ Google Books
39. Eatonville
On August 15, 1887 27 registered voters, all black men, voted to
incorporate the town of Eatonville. This act created the first
incorporated African-American community in the nation.
41. View of the Robert Hungerford Normal and Industrial School campus, 19??