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Resources in African American History
at the Tennessee State Library & Archives
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Slave auctions
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Fisk University, 1868
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The Fisk Jubilee Singers helped make the nation aware of African American achievement.
From the Merl Eppse Papers
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The 15th Amendment generated many political cartoons.
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Images from TSLA Photo Database
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This Carte de Visite shows a child with her slave nurse.
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Civil War
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Jack Knox Cartoons
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TSLA also has important photos and documents from the Civil Rights era.
Images from TSLA Photo Database
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Nat Turner’s Rebellion as portrayed in newspapers of the time
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Wessyngton Plantation, Robertson County
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The Tennessee Virtual Archive (TeVA) contains a wealth of
historic images from the treasures in our collection. It is accessible from our main web page.
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The Harry Mustard Collection pictures Rutherford County in the mid-1920s.
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The Mustard Collection focuses on health issues, as in this photo of children receiving vaccinations
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and this delightful photo of a child visiting a health clinic.
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Mustard’s images brought changes in Tennessee health standards.
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Other relevant TeVA images may be found in “Early 20th Century Schoolhouses”
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The Rosenwald schools, a vital part of early black education in Tennessee, were funded by a private foundation, as well as by contributions from private donors and some state funds. Bells School, Crockett County
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Other TN Rosenwald schools
Lauderdale County Crockett County White County Gibson County
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Many other TSLA collections contain remarkable photographs.
Photo of Brushy Mountain Prison from Samuel Robert Simpson Papers
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Sketches and drawings can provide important information about life in earlier times. Here are some details from a Harper’s article about the prison experience.
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Prisons housed both male and female inmates.
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This drawing foreshadows the Brushy Mountain Prison photograph seen earlier in the presentation.
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Our Cartes de Visite collection is full of treasures like this lovely portrait.
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Our online “Exhibits” area showcases the stories of the African American legislators who served in the Tennessee General Assembly during the 19th century.
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Early Tennessee legislators:
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The Education Outreach area of the TSLA website features “Teaching American History,” a set of digitized primary sources (with interpretive text) linked to the 10 eras of history designated by the State Department of Education.
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Tennessee Supreme Court, 1894
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One of the most interesting photo collections at TSLA can be found in the Merl Eppse Papers, featuring images of cultural, educational, and recreational life in Tennessee. cd
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Businesses of the 1940s and 1950s
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A Pearl High School basketball team
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Business class at Tennessee A&I
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Young stenographers (undated photo)
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The Tennessee A&I History Study Club traveled to the Chicago World’s Fair in 1933
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Ceremonies
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Social gatherings
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The Eppse collection also includes photos of several famous African Americans, including Hattie McDaniel, Louis Armstrong, and Jackie Robinson.
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TSLA holdings include a number of drawings and political cartoons,
1866 Memphis riots
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Fire in Freedmen’s Schoolhouse, Memphis, 1866
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This Harper’s Weekly cartoon shows Hiram Revels, the first black Senator, elected to Jefferson Davis’s former seat.
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From Harper’s Magazine, May 5, 1866: “Colored Orphan Asylum, Memphis
From Harper’s Magazine, May 5, 1866: “Colored Orphan Asylum, Memphis.” TSLA Photo Database
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The Earl S. Miers River Photographs are part of the rich TeVA Collection.
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Roustabouts
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This is a favorite from the Miers Collection.
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The Fisk University scrapbook of W. H. Fort Jr
The Fisk University scrapbook of W.H. Fort Jr. contains many historically valuable images. These photos show Langston Hughes on campus and a Nashville flood in 1926.
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Our photographic database, accessible from the TSLA home page, contains a wide variety of historic images.
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Images from TSLA Photo Database
Mary Church Terrell ( ) Ray Perkins Calvert photo, 1899 Sumner County, 1950
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from Photo Database
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Pikeville School for Colored Boys, 1930s
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Did you know that Tennessee did not ratify the 15th Amendment until 1997?
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Visit us soon – we have many more surprises
Visit us soon – we have many more surprises! __________________ Tennessee State Library & Archives th Avenue North, Nashville 37243
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