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"In Imperfect Equality, Richard Paul Fuke explores the immediate aftermath of slavery in Maryland, which differed in important ways from the slaveholding states of the South: Maryland never left the Union; white radicals had a period of access to power; and even prior to legal emancipation, a large free black population resided there. Moreover, the presence of Baltimore, a major city and port, provided abundant evidence with which to compare the rural and the urban experience of black Marylanders.
This state study is therefore uniquely revealing of the successes and failures of the post-emancipation period."--BOOK JACKET.
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Subjects
History, Freedmen, Whites, Civil rights, Race relations, Attitudes, African Americans, Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877), Reconstruction, African americans, civil rights, African americans, maryland, Whites, history, Maryland, history, Southern states, race relations, Freedmen, united states, African americans, history, Freed persons, White peoplePlaces
MarylandTimes
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Imperfect equality: African Americans and the confines of white racial attitudes in post-emancipation Maryland
1999, Fordham University Press
in English
0823219623 9780823219629
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [253]-294) and index.
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