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  1. Apr 25, 2024 · Slavery in America was the legal institution of enslaving human beings, mainly Africans and African Americans. Slavery existed in the United States from its founding in 1776 and became the main ...

  2. Oct 14, 2009 · African American history began with slavery, as white European settlers first brought Africans to the continent to serve as enslaved workers. After the Civil War, the racist legacy of slavery ...

    • 4 min
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  4. Feb 7, 2019 · In the case of an escaped enslaved man who came to be called "Whipped Peter," an 1863 photo of his savagely scarred back helped raise a national outcry against the cruelty of slavery. By the time ...

    • 3 min
    • Iván Román
    • 5 min
    • Harriet Tubman: Spy and Military Leader. Harriet Tubman, best known for her courage and acumen as a “conductor” on the Underground Railroad, led hundreds of enslaved men, women and children north to freedom through its carefully prescribed routes and network of safe houses.
    • Alexander Augusta: Pioneering War Doctor. With discrimination blocking his dreams of becoming a doctor in the United States, Alexander Augusta moved to Canada to earn his medical degree before returning to serve as the Union Army’s highest-ranking Black officer during the Civil War.
    • Abraham Galloway: Soldier, Spy and State Senator. Three years after escaping slavery in the cargo hold of a ship heading north, Abraham Galloway returned South to free more enslaved people, including a brazen incursion to free his mother.
    • Frederick Douglass: Abolitionist Pushing for Black Recruitment. 'Douglass Appealing to President Lincoln,' by William Edouard Scott, 1943, depicts Frederick Douglass as he petitions for the participation of African Americans in the Union Army during the US Civil War.
  5. Oct 27, 2009 · By 1860, nearly 12,000 African Americans had returned to Africa. Missouri Compromise The Missouri Compromise of 1820, which allowed Missouri to become a slave state, further provoked anti-slave ...

  6. Oct 27, 2009 · The civil rights movement was a struggle for justice and equality for African Americans that took place mainly in the 1950s and 1960s. Among its leaders were Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, the ...

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