No Longer Yours: Aspects of Slavery and Freedom Seeking in North CarolinaMain MenuCreative Commons LicensePreface and AcknowledgementsArcOnline Maps and ArcStory MapsAdditional Project ComponentsIntroductionEarthWoodFireWaterWindEscapingNetwork to Freedom Underground Railroad LocationsMaps and Additional ResourcesResourcesBrian Robinson351175f8b63e375b96b75c26edde5534c94e8162Torren Gatson9cd3f098d43ed240801c35d1d0fd0737b5602944Rhonda Jones4c7a2610c10c17f5b487bcebc8abbbf64c221aa6Arwin Smallwood329b2d587e93ceaac77a3b3e316b5ce377128ac0Self-Publish
Carolina rice planter banjo
1media/carolina rice planter banjo copy_thumb.jpg2021-10-29T01:51:16+00:00Brian Robinson351175f8b63e375b96b75c26edde5534c94e816232plain2021-12-14T18:07:53+00:00"A Carolina Rice Planter", Slavery Images: A Visual Record of the African Slave Trade and Slave Life in the Early African Diaspora, accessed December 14, 2021, http://www.slaveryimages.org/s/slaveryimages/item/1007 This image depicts a rice planter playing a banjo standing up with one leg on a log in Carolina. It accompanies an article by T. Addison Richards called "The Rice Lands of the South" (pp. 721-38). Thomas Addison Richards (1820–1900) was a British landscape artist, who migrated with his family to the United States in 1831. The family first settled in New York, then South Carolina and finally Georgia by 1837. Richards made a career of sketching Georgia’s scenery. Harper's Magazine (also called Harper's) is a monthly magazine of literature, politics, culture, finance and the arts. IIIF Manifest Download20060803141756-0400Brian Robinson351175f8b63e375b96b75c26edde5534c94e8162