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(Ebook) The First Migrants: How Black Homesteaders’ Quest for Land and Freedom Heralded America’s Great Migration by Richard Edwards, Jacob K. Friefeld ISBN 9781496230843, 1496230841, B0BJTVXYZG

  • SKU: EBN-54190034
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Instant download (eBook) The First Migrants: How Black Homesteaders’ Quest for Land and Freedom Heralded America’s Great Migration after payment.
Authors:Richard Edwards, Jacob K. Friefeld
Pages:508 pages.
Year:2023
Editon:1
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Language:english
File Size:36.16 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9781496230843, 1496230841, B0BJTVXYZG
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) The First Migrants: How Black Homesteaders’ Quest for Land and Freedom Heralded America’s Great Migration by Richard Edwards, Jacob K. Friefeld ISBN 9781496230843, 1496230841, B0BJTVXYZG

"The Homesteading Project, University of Nebraska."--Title page.The First Migrants recounts the largely unknown story of Black people who migrated from the South to the Great Plains between 1877 and 1920 in search of land and freedom. They exercised their rights under the Homestead Act to gain title to 650,000 acres, settling in all of the Great Plains states. Some created Black homesteader communities such as Nicodemus, Kansas, and DeWitty, Nebraska, while others, including George Washington Carver and Oscar Micheaux, homesteaded alone. All sought a place where they could rise by their own talents and toil, unencumbered by Black codes, repression, and violence. In the words of one Nicodemus descendant, they found “a place they could experience real freedom,” though in a racist society that freedom could never be complete. Their quest foreshadowed the epic movement of Black people out of the South known as the Great Migration.In this first account of the full scope of Black homesteading in the Great Plains, Richard Edwards and Jacob K. Friefeld weave together two distinct strands: the narrative histories of the six most important Black homesteader communities and the several themes that characterize homesteaders’ shared experiences. Using homestead records, diaries and letters, interviews with homesteaders’ descendants, and other sources, Edwards and Friefeld illuminate the homesteaders’ fierce determination to find freedom—and their greatest achievements and struggles for full equality.
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