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| CHAPTER 15 | THE OLD SOUTH | MULTIMEDIA RESOURCES |
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DOCUMENTS |
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- Read: Review of a First Rate Cotton Plantation (1845), Frederick Law Olmstead - Document Overview
- Read: Uncle Tom's Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Read: Thomas R. Dew Defends Slavery (1852)
- Read: Declaration of Sentiments of the American Anti-Slavery Society, William Lloyd Garrison (1833)
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IMAGES |
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- View: Slave quarters, a South Carolina plantation
- View: The Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond, Virginia
- View: Photograph of front of the Stirrup Branch plantation, Bishopville, South Carolina, June 1857
- View: Rear of the Stirrup Branch plantation
- View: The offices of Price, Birch & Co., slave dealers, Alexandria, Virginia
- View: Louisville, 1846
- View: Anti-slavery advertisement
- View: Suffering in the South
- View: Frederick Douglass listened to William Lloyd Garrison denounce slavery
- View: Frederick Douglass at an antislavery convention
- View: Frederick Douglass edited the first Negro paper, "The North Star"
- View: Frederick Douglass argues against John Brown's plan to attack the arsenal at Harpers Ferry
- View: Frederick Douglass argues against poor Negroes leaving the South
- View: The Masthead from The Liberator
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MAPS |
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- View: Cotton Production, 1821
- View: Population Growth and Cotton Production, 1821–1859
- View: Slave Population, 1820
- View: Slave Population, 1860
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