Break Those Chains at Last Break Those Chains at Last
Volume 5 - The Young Oxford History of African Americans

Break Those Chains at Last

African Americans 1860-1880

    • USD 28.99
    • USD 28.99

Descripción editorial

"We thought we'd break those chains at last," sang the slaves, hoping such spirituals would sustain them until the Confederacy surrendered and slavery was gone forever. During the Civil War, blacks served in the Union army and navy (although some fought for the South) and in Union-controlled camps, which harbored fleeing slaves. Not all slaves escaped, but even those who remained with their masters began to imagine a new life.
After the war, amendments to the Constitution abolished slavery, granted citizenship to freed people, and gave African-American men the right to vote. Freedom, blacks hoped, would also mean political equality and economic well-being. Some moved from rural areas to cities in the South or North; others looked to the West, where many African-American men became farmers or found work as cattle-drive cooks and cowboys.
But many whites viewed freedom for African Americans as a threat, and they responded by establishing white supremacy organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan. Organized violence against blacks, along with poor agricultural conditions, discrimination, and worsening economic times, guaranteed poverty for most Southern blacks.
Although the tightly knit slave communities on the larger plantations began to disperse, a sense of having shared interests and goals actually widened freed people's vision of the meaning of community. Despite fierce white opposition, African Americans established their own churches, schools, and other associations and began to participate actively in government. Break Those Chains at Last tells the story of these turbulent and complicated years, as African Americans created the communities and organizations that survive to this day.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
1996
25 de abril
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
144
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Oxford University Press
VENDEDOR
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholar s of the University of Oxford tradi ng as Oxford University Press
TAMAÑO
24.4
MB
Though Justice Sleeps Though Justice Sleeps
1997
A Chance to Make Good A Chance to Make Good
1997
From a Raw Deal to a New Deal From a Raw Deal to a New Deal
1996
We Changed the World We Changed the World
1997
Into the Fire Into the Fire
1996
Biographical Supplement and Index Biographical Supplement and Index
1997