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The Freedman's Bureau! An agency to keep the negro in idleness at the expense of the white man. Twice vetoed by the president, and made a law by congress. Support Congress & you support the negro. Sustain the president & you protect the white man [graphic

N.Y. Young Men's Christian Asso'n : The citizens of New York ... are invited to assemble in mass meeting, on Tuesday evening, June 10, at 8 o'clock, at Cooper Institute to listen to the statement by Mr. Vincent Colyer ... about the loyal Freedmen and thei

Robert Small, pilot of the steamer Planter, Charleston, S.C.

Distinguished colored men

From the plantation to the senate

[Abraham Lincoln miscellany] [graphic].

Philharmonic T[h]eatre, Islington. Every evening at eight. [Sa]turday at three and eight. Sam Hague's Ori[gi]nal Slave Troupe at St. James's Hall, Li[me] Street, Liverpool. Every evening at 8, Saturdays at 3 & 8, all the year round. Positively for four we

Heroes of the colored race

Emancipation

All slaves were made freemen. By Abraham Lincoln, president of the United States, January 1st, 1863. Come, then, able-bodied colored men, to the nearest United States camp, and fight for the stars and stripes. [graphic].

Fannie Lawrence

Afro-American historical family record

The battle at Bunker's Hill near Boston June 17, 1775

Fannie Virginia Casseopia Lawrence [graphic] : A redeemed slave child, 5 years of age. Redeemed in Virginia, by Catherine S. Lawrence; baptized in Brooklyn, at Plymouth Church, by Henry Ward Beecher, May, 1863.

Freedom to the slaves. Proclaimed January 1st 1863, by Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. “Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof”__ Lev. XXV 10 [graphic].

The shackle broken - by the genius of freedom [graphic] / Lith. & Print. by E. Sachse & Co.

The Declaration of Independence illustrated. [graphic] / Fabronius; Designed by R. Thayer; L. Prang & Co. Lith, Boston.

An appeal to Friends and others on behalf of the destitute Freedmen of the South. Dear Friends ....

Proclamation of Emancipation. By the President of the United States of America

Fannie Lawrence

Extracts from recent correspondence in relation to fugitives from slavery in America..

[Glorification of the American Union]


[The scourged back]

Emancipation. [graphic] / Th. Nast; King & Baird, Printers, 607 Sansom Street, Philadelphia.

Emancipation: the past and the future. [graphic] / Th. Nast.

The past and the future. [graphic] / Th. Nast.

[Portrait of Millie and Christine McCoy] [graphic] / Ollivier, [Photo]. New York.

Reading the Emancipation Proclamation

"The Freedman's Bureau." [graphic] / Thos. Worth.