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Title The African American heritage of Florida / edited by David R. Colburn and Jane L. Landers
Published Gainesville : University Press of Florida, ©1995

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Description 1 online resource (x, 392 pages) : illustrations, maps
Contents Introduction / by David Colburn -- Traditions of African American freedom and community in Spanish Colonial Florida / by Jane Landers -- African religious retentions in Florida / by Robert L. Hall -- "Yellow silk ferret tied round their wrists": African Americans in British East Florida, 1763-1784 / by Daniel Schafer -- A troublesome property: master-slave relations in Florida, 1821-1865 / by Larry Rivers -- Blacks and the Seminole removal debate, 1821-1835 / by George Klos -- Freedom was as close as the river: African Americans and the Civil War in northeast Florida / by Daniel Schafer -- LaVilla, Florida, 1866-1887: reconstruction dreams and the formation of a Black community / by Patricia Kenney -- Black violence in the new south: patterns of conflict in late-nineteenth-century Tampa / by Jeffrey Adler -- No longer denied: Black women in Florida, 1920-1950 / by Maxine Jones -- Under a double burden: Florida's Black feeble-minded, 1920-1957 / by Steven Noll -- Groveland: Florida's Little Scottsboro / by Steven Lawson, David Colburn, and Darryl Paulson -- The pattern of race relations in Miami since the 1920s / by Raymond Mohl
Summary Africans participated in all the Spanish explorations and settlements in Florida, as they did throughout the Spanish Americas. In Florida they helped establish St. Augustine and the free black community of Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose. Africans and African Americans fought in the many conflicts that wracked Florida, including the three Seminole Wars and the Civil War. Despite the oppressions of slavery and segregation, black Floridians struggled to establish their own communities, combat racism and economic deprivation, and negotiate the terms of their labor. Against overwhelming odds, they helped develop communities like Jacksonville, Tampa, and Miami, and they served as the critical labor force for the state's citrus, agricultural, and timber industries. For centuries, however, their heritage has been ignored. These twelve essays examine the rich and substantial African American heritage of Florida, documenting African American contributions to the state's history from the colonial era to the late twentieth century
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject African Americans -- Florida -- History
HISTORY -- State & Local.
African Americans
Gender & Ethnic Studies.
Social Sciences.
Ethnic & Race Studies.
SUBJECT Florida -- History. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85049224
Subject Florida
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Colburn, David R.
Landers, Jane.
LC no. 94040977
ISBN 0813022304
9780813022307