National Museum of African American History and Culture

Records of the Field Offices for the State of Kentucky, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865–1872

Summary

Collection ID:
NMAAHC.FB.M1904
Dates:
1865–1872
Languages:
English
.
Physical Description:
133 Reels
Repository:
This collection is comprised of digital surrogates previously available on the 133 rolls of microfilm described in the NARA publication M1904. These digital surrogates reproduced the records of the Kentucky headquarters for the Assistant Commissioner and his staff officers and the subordinate field offices of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1865–1872. These records consist of bound volumes and unbound records, containing materials that include letters sent and received, monthly reports, registers of complaints, labor contracts, and other records relating to freedmen's claims and bounty payments.

Records Description

Records Description
These records consist of volumes and unbound records. The volumes reproduced in this publication were originally arranged by type of record and thereunder by volume number. No numbers were assigned to series consisting of single volumes. Years later, all volumes were arbitrarily assigned numbers by the Adjutant General's Office (AGO) of the War Department after the records came into its custody. In this publication, AGO numbers are shown in parentheses to aid in identifying the volumes. The National Archives assigned the volume numbers that are not in parentheses. In some volumes, particularly in indexes and alphabetical headings of registers, there are blank numbered pages that have not been filmed.
The volumes consist of letters and endorsements sent and received, press copies of letters sent, registers of letters received, letters and orders received, registers of freedmen court cases, special orders and circulars issued, registers of claimants, registers of complaints, marriage certificates, and monthly reports forwarded to the Assistant Commissioner. The unbound documents consist of letters and orders received, unregistered letters and narrative reports received, special orders and circulars issued, and general orders and circulars received. The unbound records also contain monthly reports; labor contracts; marriage certificates, and records relating to claims.
Some of the volumes contain more than one type of record, reflecting a common recording practice of clerks and staff officers of that period. In Series 4.6, for example, the volume of contracts for the Columbus field office also contains a register of marriages. Some other examples of additional series within volumes can be found in records of Series 4.18, 4.20, and 4.29. Researchers should read carefully the records descriptions and arrangements in the Table of Contents to make full use of these documents.

Historical Note

Historical Note
[The following is reproduced from the original NARA descriptive pamphlet for M1904.]
HISTORY AND ORGANIZATION
The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, also known as the Freedmen's Bureau, was established in the War Department by an act of Congress on March 3, 1865 (13 Stat. 507). The life of the Bureau was extended twice by acts of July 16, 1866 (14 Stat. 173), and July 6, 1868 (15 Stat. 83). The Bureau was responsible for the supervision and management of all matters relating to refugees and freedmen, and of lands abandoned or seized during the Civil War. In May 1865, President Andrew Johnson appointed Maj. Gen. Oliver Otis Howard as Commissioner of the Bureau, and Howard served in that position until June 30, 1872, when activities of the Bureau were terminated in accordance with an act of June 10, 1872 (17 Stat. 366). While a major part of the Bureau's early activities involved the supervision of abandoned and confiscated property, its mission was to provide relief and help freedmen become self-sufficient. Bureau officials issued rations and clothing, operated hospitals and refugee camps, and supervised labor contracts. In addition, the Bureau managed apprenticeship disputes and complaints, assisted benevolent societies in the establishment of schools, helped freedmen in legalizing marriages entered into during slavery, and provided transportation to refugees and freedmen who were attempting to reunite with their family or relocate to other parts of the country. The Bureau also helped black soldiers, sailors, and their heirs collect bounty claims, pensions, and back pay.
The act of March 3, 1865, authorized the appointment of Assistant Commissioners to aid the Commissioner in supervising the work of the Bureau in the former Confederate states, the border states, and the District of Columbia. While the work performed by Assistant Commissioners in each state was similar, the organizational structure of staff officers varied from state to state. At various times, the staff could consist of a superintendent of education, an assistant adjutant general, an assistant inspector general, a disbursing officer, a chief medical officer, a chief quartermaster, and a commissary of subsistence. Subordinate to these officers were the assistant superintendents, or subassistant commissioners as they later became known, who commanded the subdistricts.
The Assistant Commissioner corresponded extensively with both his superior in the Washington Bureau headquarters and his subordinate officers in the subdistricts. Based upon reports submitted to him by the subassistant commissioners and other subordinate staff officers, he prepared reports that he sent to the Commissioner concerning Bureau activities in areas under his jurisdiction. The Assistant Commissioner also received letters from freedmen, local white citizens, state officials, and other non–Bureau personnel. These letters varied in nature from complaints to applications for jobs in the Bureau. Because the assistant adjutant general handled much of the mail for the Assistant Commissioner's office, it was often addressed to him instead of to the Assistant Commissioner.
In a circular issued by Commissioner Howard in July 1865, the Assistant Commissioners were instructed to designate one officer in each state to serve as "General Superintendents of Schools." These officials were to "take cognizance of all that is being done to educate refugees and freedmen, secure proper protection to schools and teachers, promote method and efficiency, correspond with the benevolent agencies which are supplying his field, and aid the Assistant Commissioner in making his required reports." In October 1865, a degree of centralized control was established over Bureau educational activities in the states when Rev. John W. Alvord was appointed Inspector of Finances and Schools. In January 1867, Alvord was divested of his financial responsibilities, and he was appointed General Superintendent of Education.
An act of Congress, approved July 25, 1868 (15 Stat. 193), ordered that the Commissioner of the Bureau "shall, on the first day of January next, cause the said bureau to be withdrawn from the several States within which said bureau has acted and its operation shall be discontinued." Consequently, in early 1869, with the exception of the superintendents of education and the claims agents, the Assistant Commissioners and their subordinate officers were withdrawn from the states. For the next year and a half the Bureau continued to pursue its education work and to process claims. In the summer of 1870, the superintendents of education were withdrawn from the states, and the headquarters staff was greatly reduced. From that time until the Bureau was abolished by an act of Congress approved June 10, 1872 (17 Stat. 366), effective June 30, 1872, the Bureau's functions related almost exclusively to the disposition of claims. The Bureau's records and remaining functions were then transferred to the Freedmen's Branch in the office of the Adjutant General. The records of this branch are among the Bureau's files.
THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU IN KENTUCKY
ORGANIZATION
From July 1865 until June 1866, Maj. Gen. C. B. Fisk served as Assistant Commissioner for both Kentucky and Tennessee. Fisk appointed Bvt. Brig. Gen. John Ely to serve as chief superintendent for the Bureau at Kentucky (from March to June 1866). Ely established his headquarters at Louisville, Kentucky, and divided his operations into five subdistricts: Lexington, Louisville, Northwestern, Southern, and Central. Records relating to Kentucky created prior to Ely's tenure may be included among the files of the Assistant Commissioner for Tennessee.
In June 1866, Maj. Gen. Jeff C. Davis was appointed as the first Assistant Commissioner for Kentucky. Superintendents (or subassistant commissioners) employed under Davis were generally responsible for from 3 to 11 counties, and agents (civilian and military) from 1 to 3 counties. Agents received their orders directly from superintendents, and all superintendents were required to submit monthly reports of their activities to the Assistant Commissioner. Brig. Gen. Sidney Burbank succeeded Davis in March 1867 and was replaced by Maj. Benjamin Runkle, who served from January 1869 to May 1869 as Assistant Commissioner and superintendent of education. In August 1870, when superintendents of education were withdrawn from the states, Runkle served as claims agent for Kentucky until July 1871. H. H. Ray succeeded Runkle as claims agent, and served in this capacity until December 1871. P. J. Overley became the claims agent in January 1872 and remained in this position until the Bureau's operations in Kentucky were discontinued in April. The major subordinate field offices for the Bureau at Kentucky included those with headquarters at Bowling Green, Lebanon, Lexington, Louisville, and Paducah. For a list of known Kentucky subordinate field office personnel and their dates of service, see the Appendix.
ACTIVITIES
While the Freedmen's Bureau did not begin full operations in Kentucky until June 1866, its activities in the state generally resembled those conducted in other Southern states. The Bureau supervised labor contracts between planters and freedmen, administered justice, assisted freedmen in the establishment of schools, helped freedmen legalize marriages, and worked with black soldiers and their heirs in processing claims relating to military service.
The regulation of written labor agreements between planters and freedmen was a major concern of the Freedmen's Bureau. In a circular issued on July 24, 1865 (Circular Number 2), Assistant Commissioner Fisk told his subordinates that for both Kentucky and Tennessee freedmen must be free to choose their own employers and that wages were to be based on supply and demand rather than a fixed rate. Bureau officials were to negotiate and approve labor contracts and enforce violations by either party. Compulsory unpaid labor was strictly prohibited. In some areas of Kentucky, planters refused to enter into written agreements with freedmen, and freedmen themselves were reluctant to enter into annual agreements for fear of being reduced to slavery. However, with strong reservations, Bureau officers negotiated monthly agreements for them but encouraged freedmen to sign annual contracts that offered yearlong employment. Wages for monthly contracts ranged from $8 to $10 a month for adult male field hands, well below the state's average wage of $15 a month for men. However by the summer of 1866, with the Bureau's insistence, adult laborers in the tobacco region of the state received $25 per month and laborers in the farm belt areas earned $12 per month. In some Kentucky counties, freedmen received a third of the crops rather than wages. However, because of the shortage of laborers in the state, freedmen were able to demand higher wages, and thus over time the sharecropping system became less attractive.1
The Bureau worked to protect the rights and legal status of freedmen, which, despite the ending of slavery by the 13th Amendment, were still endangered by the persistence of the old slave codes. On May 30, 1865, Commissioner Howard issued Circular Number 5, authorizing Assistant Commissioners to establish courts in states where the old codes existed and the right of blacks to testify against whites was prohibited. Gen. Fisk subsequently announced to the citizens of Kentucky that freedmen courts would operate in the state as long as freedmen weren't given the same rights as whites. By 1867, as a result of several Federal court rulings, Bureau courts ceased to operate in Kentucky. When state courts denied black testimony, the agency, under provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, took cases involving freedmen to the U. S. District Court of Kentucky. In instances where freedmen lacked resources to pursue their cases in Federal court, the Bureau provided transportation for witnesses and other forms of assistance. Despite the Bureau's efforts to safeguard rights and secure justice for freedmen in Kentucky, admitting the testimony of blacks against whites still remained an issue in 1869 when Bureau Assistant Commissioners and their subordinates were withdrawn from the states. However, in January 1872, with a change in public opinion and pressure from the courts, the Kentucky State Legislature amended state law and allowed blacks to testify.
When Gen. John Ely began his duties as chief superintendent for Kentucky under Gen. Fisk's supervision, there were 30 freedmen schools and more than 2,000 students. The schools were organized and maintained by black churches, with black clergy as instructors. Freedmen schools faced widespread violence and white opposition, and in many cases, teachers and students were forced to abandon efforts to maintain school buildings. Ely and his subordinate assisted freedmen in reopening schools that had been forced to close.2 Under Maj. Gen. Jeff C. Davis, who replaced Ely in the summer of 1866, the number of freedmen schools increased to 54, with some 67 teachers and more than 3,200 students. Excluding the schools established at Lexington and Covington under the auspices of the Cincinnati Branch of the Western Freedmen's Aid Society and the Cincinnati Branch of the American Missionary Association, the freedmen schools were taught by black teachers who were supported by subscriptions from parents and black religious institutions. The Bureau, however, rented the building for the school at Lexington. Under Brig. Gen. Sidney Burbank, who succeeded Davis in March 1867, the number of freedmen schools increased to 96, accommodating about 5,000 students aged 6 – 18. By September 1868, in spite of continued violence and opposition, the Bureau had provided support for 135 day schools and 1 night school, serving more than 6,000 students.3
On February 14, 1866, the Kentucky State Legislature passed an act legalizing marriages freedmen had entered into during slavery and authorizing black ministers to solemnize such marriages. Nearly 2 weeks later, on February 26, 1866, Assistant Commissioner Fisk issued Circular Number 5, in accordance with the Kentucky law, directing those freedmen who sought to solemnize a marriage to the county clerk for a marriage license. If the county clerk refused to issue a license, Bureau officials in the subdistricts were authorized to solemnize marriages and issue marriage certificates. Local Bureau officers were required to maintain a register of freedmen marriages and forward a report of such marriages to the Assistant Commissioner at the end of each month. Subordinate Bureau officers were also told to notify persons living as man and wife who had not legalized their marriage, to report to the Bureau to take the necessary steps to do so. Persons who failed to comply were guilty of a misdemeanor and were to be punished by a fine and imprisonment.4 This publication reproduces marriage licenses, certificates, and registers of marriages for the Kentucky subdistricts at Augusta, Bowling Green, Columbus, Cynthiana, Owensboro, Paducah, Mt. Sterling, and Winchester. A single freedmen marriage license and a marriage certificate from Kentucky, filed in the Bureau's headquarters records, has been reproduced on roll 1 of National Archives Microfilm Publication M1875, Marriage Records of the Office of the Commissioner, Washington Headquarters of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, 1861–1869.
In addition to assisting freedmen in solemnizing slave marriages and efforts to sustain the black family, the Bureau helped discharged soldiers, sailors, marines, and their heirs in claims for back pay, bounty payments, and pensions. In accordance with a law passed by Congress on March 29, 1867 (15 Stat. 26), making the Bureau the sole agent for payment of claims relating to black veterans, Bureau disbursing officers assisted freedmen in the preparation and settlement of military claims. In November 1866, in spite of the difficulties in locating veterans who fled the state for fear of violence, Assistant Commissioner Davis reported that he had forwarded more than 260 black soldiers' claims for back pay and bounty payments to Commissioner Howard's office in Washington, DC. In the following year, Assistant Commissioner Burbank reported that his office had assisted nearly 500 veterans with military claims, and in the fall of 1868, for the year ending October 10, 1868, that more than 1,100 received bounty payments through his office.5
ENDNOTES
1 House Ex. Doc. 70, 39th Cong., 1st Sess., Serial Vol. 1256, p. 48. See also Victor B. Howard, Black Liberation in Kentucky: Emancipation and Freedom, 1862–1884 (Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky, 1983), pp. 96 – 97.
2 See report of Maj. J. C. Davis, August 23, 1866, "Synopses of Letters and Reports Relating to Conditions of Freedmen and Bureau Activities in the States, January 1866–March 1869," Vol. 135, Records of the Commissioner, Record Group 105, NARA, pp. 294 – 395.
3 Ross A. Webb, "The Past Is Never Dead, It's Not Even Past: Benjamin P. Runkle and the Freedmen's Bureau in Kentucky, 1866–1870," The Register of Kentucky Historical Society Vol. 84, No. 4 (Autumn 1986), pp. 348 – 350.
4 See Victor B. Howard, Black Liberation in Kentucky, pp. 121 – 125.
5 Senate Ex. Doc. No. 6, 39th Cong., 2nd Sess., Serial Vol. 1276, p. 67; See also Annual Reports of the Assistant Commissioners, Kentucky, 1867 and 1868, Records of the Office of the Commissioner, Record Group 105, NARA.

Administration

Immediate Source of Acquisition
Acquired from FamilySearch International in 2015.

Digital Content

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Using the Collection

Conditions Governing Access
Freedmen's Bureau Digital Collection, 1865–1872, is a product of and owned by the National Museum of African American History and Culture, Smithsonian Institution. Copyright for digital images is retained by the donor, FamilySearch International; permission for commercial use of the digital images may be requested from FamilySearch International, Intellectual Property Office, at: cor-intellectualproperty@ldschurch.org.
Preferred Citation
Courtesy of the U. S. National Archives and Records Administration, FamilySearch International, and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Related Materials

More Information

Freedmen's Bureau Personnel in Kentucky

Freedmen's Bureau Personnel in Kentucky
This list provides the names and dates of service of chief medical officers and known Freedmen's Bureau personnel at selected subordinate field offices in Kentucky. Additional information regarding persons assigned to various field offices might be found among the Bureau's Washington headquarters station books and rosters of military officers and civilians on duty in the states and other appointment-related records.
LOUISVILLE
July 1866–Mar. 1867
Chief Medical Officer F. S. Town
Mar.–Nov. 1867
Chief Medical Officer W. R. De Witt, Jr.
Nov. 1867–June 1869
Chief Medical Officer R. A. Bell
BOWLING GREEN
July 1866–July 1867
Chief Subassistant Commissioner Charles F. Johnson
July–Dec. 1867
Chief Subassistant Commissioner Joseph C. Rodriguez
Jan.–Feb. 1868
Chief Subassistant Commissioner Louis A. Reynolds
Feb.–June 1868
Chief Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown
BOWLING GREEN
Jan.–Mar. 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner R. W. Thing (Superintendent)
Sept. 1866–July 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Joseph C. Rodriguez (Subassistant Comm.)
July–Dec. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner James A. Shepley (Subassistant Commissioner)
BRANDENBURG
Sept. 1866–June 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner York A. Woodward (Superintendent)
May–June 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner James A. Bolton (Subassistant Commissioner)
BURKSVILLE
Oct. 1866–July 1868
Subassistant Commissioner George W. Kingsbury
COLUMBUS
Mar.–Apr. 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Lt. James F. Bolton (Superintendent, Paducah)
Apr. 1866–Mar. 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Lt. James F. Bolton (Superintendent)
Mar.–Apr. 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Lt. James F. Bolton (Subassistant)
Apr.–July 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Capt. Emerson H. Liscum (Subassistant)
COVINGTON
Jan. 1866–July 1868
Superintendent John L. Graham
DANVILLE
Jan.–May 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner William Goodloe (Superintendent)
June 1866–Apr. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner W. R. Roume (Superintendent)
Apr.–Aug. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner W. R. Roume (Subassistant)
Aug.–Dec. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown (Subassistant)
Dec. 1867–Apr. 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Martin Norton (Subassistant)
Feb.–June 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner H. G. Thomas (Chief Subassistant)
GREENSBURG
Oct. 1866–Nov. 1866
Superintendent and Chief Agent George Duff (Superintendent)
Mar. 1867–Feb. 1868
Superintendent and Chief Agent P. S. Reeves (Chief Agent)
HENDERSON
Feb.–May 1868
Chief Subassistant Commissioner James McCleery
May 1868
Chief Subassistant Commissioner V. H. Echorn
June–July 1868
Chief Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown
HENDERSON
Jan.–Dec. 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant F. F. Cheaney (Superintendent)
Apr.–Sept. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Wells Bailey (Subassistant)
Jan.–July 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant V. H. Echorn (Subassistant)
LEXINGTON
Feb.–Mar. 1866
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant John Ely (Chief)
Apr.–June 1866
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant James H. Rice (Chief Superintendent)
June 1866–Feb. 1867
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant R. E. Johnson (Chief Superintendent)
Aug.–Oct. 1866
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant James H. Rice (Acting Chief Superintendent)
Oct. 1866–Apr. 1867
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant R. E. Johnson (Acting Chief Superintendent)
Apr. 1867–Dec. 1868
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant R. E. Johnson (Chief Subassistant)
LEXINGTON
June 1866–Apr. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant James H. Rice (Superintendent)
Apr.–June 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant James H. Rice (Subassistant)
June–July 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant W. R. Montmolin (Acting Subassistant)
July–Oct. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Patrick H. Flood (Subassistant)
LOUISVILLE
July–Aug. 1865
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner S. A. Porter (Superintendent)
Aug.–Nov. 1865
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner H. A. McCaleb (Superintendent)
Nov. 1865
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner E. D. Kennedy (Acting Superintendent)
Mar.–Apr. 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner Walter Babcock (Superintendent)
Apr. 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown (Superintendent)
Apr. 1866–June 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner C. H. Frederick (Superintendent)
June 1866
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown (Acting Superintendent)
July 1866–Apr. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner C. H. Frederick (Superintendent)
July 1866–Apr. 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown (Assistant Superintendent)
Apr.–July 1867
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner R. W. Roberts (Subassistant)
July 1867–July 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner J. Catlin (Subassistant)
July–Dec. 1868
Superintendent and Subassistant Commissioner J. Catlin (Chief Subassistant)
PADUCAH
Apr.–Dec. 1866
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner John H. Donovan (Chief Superintendent)
Aug. 1866
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner John F. Smith (Acting Chief Superintendent)
Dec. 1866–Apr. 1867
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner W. James Kay (Chief Superintendent)
Apr.–June 1867
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner W. James Kay (Chief Subassistant)
June 1867–Mar. 1868
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner W. James Kay (Chief Subassistant)
Apr.–July 1868
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner P. T. Swaine (Chief Subassistant)
July–Dec. 1868
Chief Superintendent and Chief Subassistant Commissioner A. Benson Brown (Chief Subassistant)
PADUCAH (McCracken County)
Aug. 1865–Apr. 1866
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner A. M. York (Superintendent)
Apr.–Nov. 1866
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner John F. Smith (Superintendent)
Dec. 1866–Jan. 1867
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner Jas. Drysdale (Superintendent)
Feb.–Apr. 1867
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner C. D. Smith (Superintendent)
Apr. 1867
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner C. D. Smith (Chief Agent)
Apr.–May 1867
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner C. D. Smith (Subassistant)
May–Nov. 1867
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner C. D. Smith (Chief Agent)
May–July 1868
Superintendent, Chief Agent, and Subassistant Commissioner R. S. Egelston (Subassistant)
PARIS
Mar. 1866
Agent Joseph A. Hilduth
Mar.–May 1866
Agent Thomas I. Elliott
June–July 1866
Agent R. W. Hutchraft
RUSSELLVILLE
Mar. 1868
Subassistant Commissioner H. A. Hunter
Apr.–June 1868
Subassistant Commissioner M. E. Billings
SMITHLAND
Mar. 1866–Jan. 1867
Agent J. Bone Thompson
Mar.–June 1867
Agent Solomon Littlefield
WINCHESTER
Feb. and Sept. 1866
Superintendent H. C. Howard
Feb.–June and Sept. 1866
Superintendent George W. Gist
Apr. 1866
Superintendent R. C. Nicholas


Keywords

Keywords table of terms and types.
Keyword Terms Keyword Types
American South Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Freedmen's Bureau Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Reconstruction, U.S. history, 1865-1877 Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid
Slaves -- Emancipation Topical Search Smithsonian Collections Search ArchiveGrid

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