The Freedom-seekers: Blacks in Early CanadaBook Society of Canada, 1981 - 242 էջ Black Loyalists and their families were among the first settlers in Nova Scotia and Upper Canada. As abolitiion movements and the Underground Railroad gained support, Black slaves and refugees flooded into Canada determined to build new lives for themselves and their children. The Freedom-Seekers chronicles the phenomenal success story of their struggle to break the chains of slavery and gain the full rights of citizenship in their adopted country. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 89–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 54
Blacks in Early Canada Daniel G. Hill. Black families , most of them farmers . The many Black churches , schools , missions and colonization schemes that developed in Windsor and Sandwich through the 1850s and the early ' 60s reflected ...
Blacks in Early Canada Daniel G. Hill. Black families , most of them farmers . The many Black churches , schools , missions and colonization schemes that developed in Windsor and Sandwich through the 1850s and the early ' 60s reflected ...
Էջ 102
... Black parents did not give up the struggle for their children's education . When Black pupils were excluded from the common schools , they sometimes hired private teachers ; more often abolitionist and Christian groups funded mission ...
... Black parents did not give up the struggle for their children's education . When Black pupils were excluded from the common schools , they sometimes hired private teachers ; more often abolitionist and Christian groups funded mission ...
Էջ 105
... Black homes . Charges were laid , and the court ordered the white rioters to pay for all the repairs . Some hotels refused to serve Blacks , particularly in towns such as Chatham and St. Catharines , where there was a sizeable Black ...
... Black homes . Charges were laid , and the court ordered the white rioters to pay for all the repairs . Some hotels refused to serve Blacks , particularly in towns such as Chatham and St. Catharines , where there was a sizeable Black ...
Բովանդակություն
John Graves Simcoe | 15 |
The Road to Freedom | 24 |
Refugees and Their Havens | 44 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
10 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
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abolitionist American Amherstburg Anderson Anderson Ruffin Abbott anti-slavery arrived Baptist Church became began BENJAMIN DREW Black children Black community Black families Black population Black refugees Black settlers Black slaves Board bought Brant Brantford British Brown building built Butler Buxton Canada West Captain Catharines Chatham Collingwood colored common school Company congregation County Detroit district Elgin escaped slaves farm free Blacks freedom fugitive slaves George grants Hall Hamilton Henry Bibb Henson Ibid Isaac Riley James John Josiah Henson King Street labourers Lake land later lived London Loyalists Mary Ann Shadd meeting Methodist Mission Negro Niagara North Nova Scotia Ontario Owen Sound owners Peter Presbyterian province Provincial Freeman pupils Queen's Bush Reverend River runaways Sandwich school for Black settled Simcoe Simcoe County slave-owners slavery Society sold teacher Toronto town town's Township Underground Railroad Upper Canada Wilberforce William Windsor York