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Title PBS NewsHour. How a Kansas town became one of the nation's first majority-Black farming communities / [NewsHour Productions]
Published [Arlington, Virginia] : NewsHour Productions LLC, 2022

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Description 1 online resource (5 minutes)
Summary The wave of migration across the U.S. in the mid-1800's included people looking to live in open spaces, with land to grow crops and the opportunity to have a better life. After the Civil War, that included freed slaves and their families. Fred de Sam Lazaro reports on one Kansas town that was established as a result as part of our Black History Month coverage and ongoing series, "Race Matters."
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed August 15, 2022)
Performer Reporter: Fred de Sam Lazaro
Notes In English
Subject African American farmers -- Kansas -- Nicodemus -- Social conditions -- 19th century
African Americans -- Kansas -- Nicodemus -- Social conditions -- 19th century
Farm life -- Kansas -- Nicodemus -- History -- 19th century
African American farmers -- Social conditions.
African Americans -- Social conditions.
Farm life.
Rural conditions.
SUBJECT Nicodemus (Kan.) -- History -- 19th century
Nicodemus (Kan.) -- Rural conditions -- History -- 19th century
Subject Kansas -- Nicodemus.
Genre/Form History.
Television news programs.
Television news programs.
Form Streaming video
Author Sam Lazaro, Fred de, on-screen presenter
NewsHour Productions, film distributor, production company
Other Titles PBS NewsHour. Race matters. How a Kansas town became one of the nation's first majority-Black farming communities
Race matters. How a Kansas town became one of the nation's first majority-Black farming communities
OTHER TI In series: PBS newshour