Report of the Board of Education for Freedmen, Department of the Gulf, for the Year 1864

Report of the Board of Education for Freedmen, Department of the Gulf, for the Year 1864
Author: United States. Army. Board of Education for Freedmen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 36
Release: 1865
Genre: African Americans
ISBN:

Account of the creation and sustaining of the first public schools for the children of freed slaves in and around New Orleans in 1864. The appendices contain enrollment figures by month and the general orders that direct the establishment of schools for black children.

Report of the Board of Education for Freedmen, Department of the Gulf, for the Year 1864

Report of the Board of Education for Freedmen, Department of the Gulf, for the Year 1864
Author: United States Army Board of Education
Publisher: Palala Press
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2015-09-16
Genre:
ISBN: 9781342707703

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Sick from Freedom

Sick from Freedom
Author: Jim Downs
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2012-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199908788

Bondspeople who fled from slavery during and after the Civil War did not expect that their flight toward freedom would lead to sickness, disease, suffering, and death. But the war produced the largest biological crisis of the nineteenth century, and as historian Jim Downs reveals in this groundbreaking volume, it had deadly consequences for hundreds of thousands of freed people. In Sick from Freedom, Downs recovers the untold story of one of the bitterest ironies in American history--that the emancipation of the slaves, seen as one of the great turning points in U.S. history, had devastating consequences for innumerable freed people. Drawing on massive new research into the records of the Medical Division of the Freedmen's Bureau-a nascent national health system that cared for more than one million freed slaves-he shows how the collapse of the plantation economy released a plague of lethal diseases. With emancipation, African Americans seized the chance to move, migrating as never before. But in their journey to freedom, they also encountered yellow fever, smallpox, cholera, dysentery, malnutrition, and exposure. To address this crisis, the Medical Division hired more than 120 physicians, establishing some forty underfinanced and understaffed hospitals scattered throughout the South, largely in response to medical emergencies. Downs shows that the goal of the Medical Division was to promote a healthy workforce, an aim which often excluded a wide range of freedpeople, including women, the elderly, the physically disabled, and children. Downs concludes by tracing how the Reconstruction policy was then implemented in the American West, where it was disastrously applied to Native Americans. The widespread medical calamity sparked by emancipation is an overlooked episode of the Civil War and its aftermath, poignantly revealed in Sick from Freedom.