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Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in African American Studies
Register Of Complaints: 1865-1868, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Register Of Complaints: 1865-1868, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Freedmen's Bureau: Arkansas Field Office Records
No abstract provided.
Register Of Marriages: 1865-1867, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Register Of Marriages: 1865-1867, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Freedmen's Bureau: Arkansas Field Office Records
No abstract provided.
Letters Sent, Letters And Orders Received, Endorsements Sent And Received: 1865-1868, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Letters Sent, Letters And Orders Received, Endorsements Sent And Received: 1865-1868, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Freedmen's Bureau: Arkansas Field Office Records
No abstract provided.
Indentures Of Apprenticeship: 1866, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Indentures Of Apprenticeship: 1866, Bureau Of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands
Freedmen's Bureau: Arkansas Field Office Records
No abstract provided.
Slave Unrest In Arkansas, Carol Linville
Slave Unrest In Arkansas, Carol Linville
Honors Theses
Arkansas, unlike some slave holding states, was never the scene for actual mass uprisings or armed revolts by slaves. Actual acts of resistance and rumors of insurrections did occur in the state. The universal fear of insurrection that was present throughout the South also plagued the mind of the Arkansas slave owner. The fear was not new; since the beginning of slavery, the fear was present and as early as 1672, fear was expressed by the colonists of a slave uprising. Part of the fear was stemmed from conditions of slavery in Arkansas that were inducible to slave unrest.