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Claiming Freedom: Race, Kinship, and Land in Nineteenth-Century Georgia: List of Illustrations

Claiming Freedom: Race, Kinship, and Land in Nineteenth-Century Georgia
List of Illustrations
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table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Introduction: Claiming Freedom in the Lowcountry
  9. 1: The Slave’s Dream
    1. The Hurt of this Hurt World
    2. The Illusion of Isolation
    3. Memory and (DIS)Remembering
  10. 2: War and Freedom
    1. Marginal Spaces of Freedom
    2. Gender, War, and Freedom
    3. Less than Forty Acres
    4. The Ogeechee Troubles
  11. 3: “Full and Fair Compensation”
    1. Free Labor Ideology and Liminal Spaces of Freedom
    2. Women of Freedom
    3. Claiming Freedom for Themselves
  12. 4: The State of Freedom is the State of Self-Reliance
    1. Kinship and Land in the Lowcountry
    2. Landownership and Women’s Community Networks
    3. The Town of Burroughs
  13. Conclusion
  14. Appendix
  15. Notes
  16. Bibliography
  17. Index

Page ix →Illustrations

Figures

  1. Plantation districts, Savannah-Chatham County
  2. Subdivision of William Miller’s plantation, Ogeechee district, 1883
  3. Articles Authorizing the Election of Corporate Officers, Burroughs, Georgia, 1898
  4. Rice cultivation on the Ogeechee, January 5, 1867

Tables

  1. Table 1. Rice Production in Lowcountry Georgia, 1860
  2. Table 2. Population of Lowcountry Georgia, 1860
  3. Table 3. Families Who Received Land Titles in 1865, Grove Point Plantation, John R. Cheves
  4. Table 4. Families Who Received Land Titles in 1865, Grove Hill Plantation, William Habersham
  5. Table 5. Families Who Also Received Land Titles in 1865, Grove Hill Plantation, William Habersham
  6. Table 6. Landowners and Renters, Burroughs, Georgia, 1910–1920
  7. Table 7. Age of Landowners, Burroughs, Georgia, 1910–1920
  8. Table 8. Gender Analysis of Landowners, Burroughs, Georgia, 1910–1920
  9. Table A.1. Savannah Planter Merchants Who Received and Sold West Africans from Rice Growing Regions, 1765–1798
  10. Table A.2. Slaves Imported into Savannah by Origin and Time Period, Early Period, 1755–1767
  11. Table A.3. Slaves Imported into Savannah by Origin and Time Period, Middle Period, 1768–1771
  12. Page x →Table A.4. Slaves Imported into Savannah by Origin and Time Period, Final Period, 1784–1798
  13. Table A.5. Institutional Property Owned by Selected Mutual Associations, Savannah
  14. Table A.6. Leadership of African American Women in Selected Benevolent Associations, Savannah, 1867–1868
  15. Table A.7. Summary of Cultivation, Landowners
  16. Table A.8. African American Farms Classified by Size, Chatham County, 1910
  17. Table A.9. Occupation of Landowners, Burroughs, Georgia, 1910
  18. Table A.10. Occupation of Landowners, Burroughs, Georgia, 1920
  19. Table A.11. Occupation and Real Estate Value, Ogeechee District, 1870
  20. Table A.12. Average Daily Wages in Selected Occupations in Savannah, 1874
  21. Table A.13. African American Women Landowners, Chatham County, 1876
  22. Table A.14. Self-Help Societies in the Lowcountry with Accounts Established in the Freedmen’s Bank, 1867–1871

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