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
Colored Funeral
1media/Colored Funeral copy_thumb.jpg2021-10-29T02:47:17+00:00Brian Robinson351175f8b63e375b96b75c26edde5534c94e816233plain2021-12-15T02:17:29+00:00Painting by John Antrobus, ca. 1860, held by Historical New Orleans Collection. Published in James Oliver Horton & Lois E. Horton, A History of the African American People (Wayne State University Press, 1997), p. 58; Hugh Honour, The Image of the Black in Western Art (Menil Foundation, Harvard University Press, 1989), vol. 4, pt. 1, p. 213, fig. 134); and E.D.C. Campbell and K.S. Rice, eds., Before Freedom Came: African-American Life in the Antebellum South (Univ. Press of Virginia, 1991), p. 72.20060803143111-0400Brian Robinson351175f8b63e375b96b75c26edde5534c94e8162