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Free Negroes
Information about Free Negros in Richmond, VA during the Civil War
Written Accounts
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1847-05-26, Original manuscript (ALS) of J. R. Anderson; Letter from J. R. Anderson of Tredegar responding to workers who declined to work unless Negro workers dismissed and wages increased
1854-07-25, Richmond Dispatch; breakdown of interments and those due to Cholera in Shockoe Cemetery
1854-09-12, Richmond Dispatch; report of interments at Shockoe Cemetery, with particular attention to those due to cholera
1859-09-30, Richmond Dispatch; negores are visiting Capitol Square, despite city ordinance prohibiting it
1861-03-18, Richmond Dispatch; drowned man found in the canal near the corner of 20th and Dock.
1861-07-02, Richmond Whig; laborers needed for the Richmond defenses
1861-07-18, Richmond Dispatch; notes that negro workers on the fortifications seem to happy to be aiding "their native state"
1861-08-14, Richmond Whig; recommendation that negroes be employed as hospital assistants and that Yankees be moved out of the Alms House
1861-08-21, Richmond Whig; gratuitous praise of the nearly complete Richmond fortifications
1861-08-30, Richmond Dispatch; 5 negroes caught having a party at Lancastrian Schoolhouse
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