An Empire for Slavery: The Peculiar Institution in Texas, 1821-1865

ISBN-10
0807115053
ISBN-13
9780807115053
Series
An Empire for Slavery
Category
African Americans
Pages
306
Language
English
Published
1989
Author
Randolph B. Campbell

Description

In the popular mind, Texas conjures up images of the Old West and freedom of the range. Campbell reminds us that Texas grew from Southern roots entangled in human bondage. By the Civil War, Texas had a slave area equal to Alabama and Mississippi and a slave population comparable to Virginia. In the first comprehensive study of slavery in Texas, Campbell offers useful chapters on the law, the domestic slave trade, Indian relations, labor, family, religion, and more, but his book is especially welcome because it pulls the focus on bondage away from the Chesapeake and the Carolinas to show slavery's expansive and adaptive power in the developing West. Slavery knew no bounds, as Lincoln always understood. Recommended for college and university libraries.-- Randall M. Miller, St. Joseph's Univ., Philadelphia.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
    By R. Thomas Cobourn

    Recounts the life and career of the Los Angeles Lakers star, and describes his encounters with racism and his conversion to Islam The aim of the game is to get the ball and put it in the basket, and no one has ever been more successful at ...

  • Black History Makers: A Sampling of Great Men and Women from the Past and Present
    By C. Cabell Carter, Karen Bryant

    Each person pulled from history and presented in this book had unique circumstance to bring forth their contribution and role in history as well as social conditions relating to the times.

  • Spies!: David Mortimore Baxter Cracks the Case
    By Karen Tayleur

    After David receives a new game called Spy Moves he never expects to be asked to solve a realy mystery.

  • African American Heritage in the Upper Housatonic Valley: A Project of the Upper Housatonic Valley Heritage Area
    By DAVID LEVINSON, Rachel Fletcher, Frances Jones-Sneed

    African American Heritage in the Upper Housatonic Valley: A Project of the Upper Housatonic Valley Heritage Area

  • Martin Luther King, Jr.: Civil Rights Hero
    By Anna Claybourne

    Civil Rights Hero Anna Claybourne. Further Information Martin Luther King , Jr. Civil Rights Hero he gave. Glossary artery ( AR - tuh - ree ) A large blood vessel . assassin ( uh - SASS - in ) A killer who murders a famous person ...

  • Al on America
    By Al Sharpton

    We go into the booth and cast our vote for who we think will win , instead of the candidate that best fits our needs . People don't go into the voting booth and look at the candidates and say , “ I agree with this one , ” or “ I share ...

  • Hattiesburg: An American City in Black and White
    By William Sturkey

    American Biography, 45–47, graduation date and financial statistics on 46; Genealogical and Family History of the Wyoming and Lackawanna Valleys, 181–183; William Richard Cutter, ed., New England Families. Genealogical and Memorial (New ...

  • Make Haste Slowly: Moderates, Conservatives, and School Desegregation in Houston
    By William Henry Kellar

    Rupert N. Richardson, Wallace, and Adrian Anderson, Texas: Lone ... Edward L. Ayers, The Promise of the New South: Life After Reconstruction (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1992), 156-57; Barr, Black Texans, 84-85,136-37; Brophy, ...

  • The LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka Reader
    By Imamu Amiri Baraka, William J. Harris

    The LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka Reader includes poems from Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note, The Dead Lecturer, Black Magic, Hard Facts, It's Nation Time, & Poetry for the Advanced; the plays Dutchman, Great Goodness of Life, & What Was ...

  • Step by Step to the Top: The Saga of a President of a Historically Black University
    By William Percy Hytche

    Autobiography by William P. Hytche, who from 1976 to 1997 was chief executive officer/chancellor then president of University of Maryland Eastern Shore.