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Title Africans in America. Part 3, Brotherly love. Interview with Emma Lapsansky, professor of history, Haverford College / [produced by WGBH]
Published Boston, MA : WGBH Educational Foundation, [1998]

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Description 1 online resource (64 min.)
Summary Emma Lapsansky is interviewed about 1790 as a turning point for African Americans, opportunities in Philadelphia, the Yellow Fever epidemic, Richard Allen, the American Society of Free Persons of Color, Edward Clay cartoons, Pavel Svinin's portraits of African American life in Philadelphia, the 1830 National Negro Convention in Philadelphia, kidnapping of free people, changes from 1825-1840, unrest in cities, African Americans come together, Freedom's Journal, Nat Turner's Rebellion part of a bigger movement
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed September 12, 2017)
Performer Interviewee: Emma Lapsansky
Notes In English
Subject Lapsansky-Werner, Emma J. (Emma Jones), 1945- -- Interviews
African Americans -- History -- To 1863.
Antislavery movements -- United States -- History -- 19th century
Slave rebellions -- United States
African Americans
Antislavery movements
Slave rebellions
United States
Genre/Form interviews.
History
Interviews
Unedited footage
Interviews.
Unedited footage.
Interviews.
Form Streaming video
Author Jones, Jacquie, 1965- producer.
Lapsansky-Werner, Emma J. (Emma Jones), 1945- interviewee.
WGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.), production company.