Tuesday, April 3, 2012

South Carolina Genealogy Database

South Carolina – African Americans – 1525 to 1865


South Carolina SC African American History, Resources SC Slavery, Civil War



Skip to: Slaves | Freedmen | Soldiers, Sailors | Related Resources

Slaves

  • Buying and selling human beings - examines slave trade from the shores of Africa to the markets of Charleston, including capture, the Middle Passage, auctions and cost, and the separation of families

  • Everyday life - labor and living conditions ... describes work loads, accountability systems, rice cultivation, slave quarters, clothing, and diet

  • Everyday death - talks about the constant presence of disease and death in South Carolina's slave community ... also gives info about African-American cemeteries and burial traditions

  • In their own words - first-person narratives and histories of South Carolina slaves and ex-slaves

  • Black revolts
    Stono Rebellion - 1739 - the largest slave uprising in America prior to the Revolution - scroll down for additional resources
    Denmark Vessey's Conspiracy - 1822 - recounts details surrounding Vessey's plot to overtake Charleston ... includes terms of Gullah Jack's sentence and record of Monday Gell's confessions

  • South Carolina's slave population - includes breakdowns by year and explains the relationship between SC's high slave population and the lowcountry's unique suitablity to rice culture ... also looks at our slave population compared to other Southern states

  • Slavery at South Carolina College, 1801-1865 - documenting the role slaves played in the early years of the college that became the University of South Carolina

  • White opinion - collection of online letters, diaries, and books written by nineteenth-century white South Carolinians documenting their attitudes toward slavery

Freedmen

  • What was a freedman? - meanings of the word "freedmen" before and after the Civil War

  • Free Persons of Color in Charleston, SC, before the Civil War - everything from where they worked to where they lived ... also explains how they obtained their freedom, the competition they faced from white laborers, and the increasing limits imposed on them by South Carolina's fearful white government

  • Mitchelville: Experiment in Freedom - begun on Hilton Head Island in 1862 as part of the Port Royal Experiment ... Mitchelville has been called "the place where freedom began" for South Carolina's Sea Island slaves

  • A freedman testifies - 1863 - Harry McMillan speaks about black people's lives in bondage and their aspirations in freedom - emphasizes their desire for land

  • The Freed Men of South Carolina - 1862 - conditions of Sea Island freedmen according to Port Royal Relief Committee's J. Miller M'Kim

  • Brown Fellowship Society - Charleston social club - established 1790 - renamed Century Fellowship Society in 1890 or 1892 - scroll to bottom
    Additional info - explains the Society's role in securing a burial site (photograph) for its members as well as the subsequent desecration of this site (called Macphelah) by the Catholic Diocese ... also mentions the Society for Free Blacks of Dark Complexion (later called the Brotherly Society), a similar organization which established the Ephrath cemetery for people of pure African descent

  • Freedmen's Bureau Records - reports that include information on conditions, laws, land grants, and more

Soldiers, Sailors

Related Resources


Thanks for using SCIway's SC African American history & resources guide!
MOST POPULAR

New SC Websites
Read SCIWAY News

SC Hotels
Charleston Hotels
Columbia Hotels
Greenville Hotels

SC Real Estate
Charleston Real Estate
Columbia Real Estate
Greenville Real Estate

SC Jobs
Charleston Jobs
Columbia Jobs
Greenville Jobs

ALL CATEGORIES

SC Addresses
SC African-Americans
SC Arts & Entertainment
SC Bed & Breakfasts
SC Blogs
SC Businesses
SC Calendar of Events
SC Churches
SC Cities, Towns
SC Colleges, Universities
SC Consumer Help Desk
SC Counties
SC Directories, Lists
SC Economic Development
SC Education
SC Elections
SC Facts & Firsts
SC Genealogy
SC Gifts
SC Government, Politics
SC Health, Medicine
SC History
SC Hotels
SC Jobs
SC Libraries, Museums
SC Maps
SC News
SC Movies
SC Organizations
SC Photo Gallery
SC Plantations
SC Pronunciations
SC Real Estate
SC Restaurants
SC Schools
SC Sports, Recreation
SC Statistics
SC Tax Guide
SC Tides
SC Tourism
SC Vacation Rentals
SC Weather
SC Web Cams

Lowcountry Africana

Lowcountry Africana has built many Footnote Pages from the new, FREE Footnote collection SC Estate Inventories and Bills of Sale, 1732-1872. Read about South Carolina plantations and learn the names of enslaved ancestors on the plantations. Anyone may contribute pictures, more...

Search for images on Fold3 matching Lowcountry Africana: South Carolina Slave Records on Fold3

Places mentioned on this page

About this page

This page is locked. Want to contribute to this page? Contact Lowcountry_Africana

  • Original author: Lowcountry_Africana
  • Created Date: 12 Aug 2010
  • Modified Date:
  • Page views: 94,047 total (194 this week)

Lowcountry Africana: South Carolina Slave Records on Fold3

South Carolina

Lowcountry Africana, sponsored by the Magnolia Plantation Foundation of Charleston, SC has built many Footnote Pages from the new, FREE Footnote collection SC Estate Inventories and Bills of Sale, 1732-1872.

Visit this page often to see new pages we're building each week!

Read about South Carolina plantations and learn the names of enslaved ancestors on the plantations.

http://www.fold3.com/page/282783107_lowcountry_africana_south_carolina/