Rearing Wolves to Our Own Destruction: Slavery in Richmond Virginia, 1782–1865 (64 page)

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Authors: Midori Takagi

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BOOK: Rearing Wolves to Our Own Destruction: Slavery in Richmond Virginia, 1782–1865
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23. Bureau of Census, Population, 1860; Richmond, Manufacturing Census, 1860, LVA; O'Brien, "Factory, Church, and Community," 517.
24. Bureau of Census, Slave Schedules, 1860.
25. Margo, "Wages and Prices," 173-216.
26. Wright, "Cheap Labor and Southern Textiles before 1880," 851-70; Margo, "Wages and Prices during the Antebellum Period," 173-216.
27. "Slave Labor upon Public Works at the South,"
DeBow's Review
17 (July 1854): 77-78.
28. "Superiority of Slave Labor in Constructing Railroads," ibid., 18 (March 1855): 404-5.
29. Parish,
Slavery, History, and Historians,
43-63.
30. "Superiority of Slave Labor in Constructing Railroads,"
DeBow's Review
18 (March 1855): 405.
31. Green, "Urban Industry, Black Resistance," 314; Robert,
Tobacco Kingdom,
chap. 10.
32. Cooper,
South and the Politics of Slavery;
Greenberg,
Masters and Statesmen.
33.
Richmond Times and Compiler,
May 28, 1847;
Richmond Enquirer,
May 29, 1847, quoted in Schechter, "Free and Slave Labor in the Old South," 176.
34. Goldin,
Urban Slavery,
36; Bureau of Census, Population, 1860.
35. Joseph R. Anderson to Board of Directors, June 1, 1842, Minutes of Directors and Stockholders, 1838-53, Tredegar Papers, LVA.

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