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An engraved illustration published in George Bourne's Picture of Slavery in the United States of America (1834) depicts a woman, presumably a plantation mistress, whipping an enslaved girl tied to a post. A plantation house is visible in the distance. Bourne was an English-born Presbyterian minister in Harrisonburg who condemned slavery and refused communion to those in his congregation who held humans in bondage. Read more about: Ladies Whipping Girls.
Mary Lumpkin - by Carolyn Edwards, PhD - History Not Told
Wheeling's 20th Man: 250 Years of Race Relations in the Northernmost Southern City of the Southernmost Northern State - Archiving Wheeling
From Slavery to the White House: The Extraordinary Life of Elizabeth Keckly - White House Historical Association
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Drew Gilpin Faust: Race and History in Virginia - The Atlantic
Image 55 of Federal Writers' Project: Slave Narrative Project, Vol. 7, Kentucky, Bogie-Woods (with combined interviews of others)
The land of the 'free': Criminal transportation to America - The History Press