View allAll Photos Tagged SlaveHouse
Antebellum Southern plantation, Mississippi; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Franklin, TN (Williamson County)
Carter House - It was here that the Confederate soldiers broke through the Union lines before finally being repulsed. Also, it was here that a desperate man-to-man struggle raged in the yard and garden. As the Union command post, it was the center of the fighting. (1)
There are two non-contributing structures located on the property. One is a log house that has been moved to the property. (1)
Enslaved men and women were the backbone of large farms across the pre-war South, both in growth and continued production. In 1860 alone, the Carter slaves helped grow and harvest 4,000 bushels of corn, nearly 500 bushels of wheat and oats, and 12,000 pounds of cotton. This 1840s slave cabin was moved to the property in the 1960s from another farmstead in Williamson County. According to the 1860 Census, seven slave dwellings existed on the Carter property and most, if not all of them, were torn down on November 30, 1864 and the wood was used to strengthen the Federal earthworks. (from local brochure)
References (1) NRHP Nomination Form npgallery.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/66000734.pdf
Exterior view of a slave house at Horton Grove at Historic Stagville, North Carolina.
Photo by Dan Kelo for LEARN NC.
Interior view of the lower floor of a slave house at Horton Grove at Historic Stagville, North Carolina.
Photo by Dan Kelo for LEARN NC.
Door of a slave house at Horton Grove at Historic Stagville, North Carolina.
Photo by Dan Kelo for LEARN NC.
All Images © 2017 Paul Diming - All Rights Reserved - Unauthorized Use Prohibited. Please visit www.pauldiming.com!
Antebellum plantation, Charleston, South Carolina; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Image taken by: Ivion
Windlight setting: [Tor] Midday Londonisk
Images were not enhanced in Photoshop except for the frame and info.
Graphic settings are Ultra with shaders and ambient occlusion.
This plaque hangs inside the slave house on Goree island and reads as follows:
Millions and millions of men, women, and children, today say no to the misery and the shame because of the men yesterday treated as slaves by the powerful have affirmed in their hearts that they were men.
And many died during three centuries so that no one ever forgets it.
Father Joseph Wresinski
Founder of the Movement International ATD Quart Monde
27 November 1987
Stone Mountain, Georgia; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Photograph labeled "Slavehouse nearby Bolton Manor." For more information, visit mht.maryland.gov/secure/medusa/PDF/Wicomico/WI-92.pdf
This photograph is part of a series that documents the historic homes and buildings in Wicomico County, Maryland, which were taken and collected by the Preservation Trust of Wicomico (2007.065). For more information about the PTW, visit their website at: www.preservationtrustwicomico.org/home.html
Great Hopes Plantation - SHE WAS AWESOME. Brings you back into reality, says she has been working at Colonial Williamsburg for 30 years.
Antebellum plantation, Charleston, South Carolina; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Antebellum plantation, Charleston, South Carolina; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Antebellum plantation, Charleston, South Carolina; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Antebellum plantation, Charleston, South Carolina; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.