Rearing Wolves to Our Own Destruction: Slavery in Richmond Virginia, 1782–1865 (67 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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62. Dew,
Ironmaker to the Confederacy,
23.
 
Page 160
63. Joseph R. Anderson to Harrison Row, Jan. 13, 1848, quoted in Bruce,
Virginia Iron Manufacture,
237.
64. Ibid., 248-49.
65. James River and Kanawha Company, Annual Report, 1847, VHS.
66. Bureau of Census, Population, 1860.
67. Converse, "How a Family Lived in the 1830s," 3-11; Tyler-McGraw and Kimball,
In Bondage and Freedom,
pt. 2.
68. Commonwealth v. Curetta and Betty, July 1862, Hustings Suit Papers.
69.
Daily Dispatch,
Nov. 9, 1852.
70. "Memoirs of Reverend Walter Brooks," Brooks Family Records, n.d., VHS; Chesson,
Richmond after the War, Daily Dispatch,
Dec. 24, 1852, Aug. 20, 1853; J.E. Bruce, "A Sketch of My Life," quoted in Lerner,
Black Women in White America,
33-34.
71. Rachleff,
Black Labor in Richmond,
chap. 2.
5. Formation of an Independent Slave Community
1. Chesson,
Richmond after the War,
15.
2. Rabinowitz,
Race Relations;
Scott,
Old Richmond Neighborhoods.
3.
Daily Dispatch,
May 2, 1853.
4. Tyler-McGraw,
At the Falls,
114; Chesson,
Richmond after the War,
16, 98.

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