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David Hilton

South Carolina Digital Library | South Carolina's Central Resource for Digital Collections - 2 views

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    An interesting collection of primary sources on South Carolina. Seems to have quite a few maps and posters and other images.
Bob Maloy

A Port of Entry for Enslaved Africans - 10 views

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    The South Carolina Lowcountry has been called the "Ellis Island for Africans" notes this website focusing on Charleston, South Carolina's African American heritage. It has been estimated that as many as 40 to 60 percent of the Africans who were brought to America during the slave trade entered through ports in the Lowcountry.
Lisa M Lane

The South's Secession Commemoration - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart - 12/09/10 - Vide... - 8 views

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    Daily Show with Larry Wilmore equating Nat Turner Cotillion with celebration of succession in South Carolina. Message that you can't pick and choose which part of the Civil War you want to remember. Heritage or hate?
David Hilton

Documenting the American South homepage - 0 views

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    "Documenting the American South (DocSouth) is a digital publishing initiative that provides Internet access to texts, images, and audio files related to southern history, literature, and culture. Currently DocSouth includes twelve thematic collections of books, diaries, posters, artifacts, letters, oral history interviews, and songs." That's what they say. Run by the University of North Carolina.
Annabel Astbury

Digital Library on American Slavery - 7 views

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    'Underwritten by a "We the People" grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, The Digital Library on American Slavery is a cooperative venture between the Race and Slavery Petitions Project and the Electronic Resources and Information Technology Department of University Libraries at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro. The Digital Library offers a searchable database of detailed personal information about slaves, slaveholders, and free people of color. Designed as a tool for scholars, historians, teachers, students, genealogists, and interested citizens, the site provides access to information gathered and analyzed over an eighteen-year period from petitions to southern legislatures and country courts filed between 1775 and 1867 in the fifteen slaveholding states in the United States and the District of Columbia.'
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