Black History in Sandy Spring

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Black History in Sandy Spring
This collection celebrates the lives of Black men and women who worked as domestic farm laborers on land near Sandy Spring, Maryland. These pages bear witness to the integral role Black labor played in ensuring the success of the farming enterprises of local white landowners. These pages further demonstrate the complexities of wage labor in the 19th century when pay was often received in equivalently valued goods rather than cash money.
Bond, Diana

Bond, Diana

2 pages: 50% complete (100% transcribed, 50% needs review)
Bond, Uriah

Bond, Uriah

1 page: 0% complete (100% transcribed, 100% needs review)
Cooler, Sam

Cooler, Sam

1 page: 0% complete (100% transcribed, 100% needs review)
Harry Bond

Harry Bond

Collaboration is restricted.

8 pages: 25% complete (38% transcribed, 13% needs review)
Hood, Matilda

Hood, Matilda

1 page: 0% complete (100% transcribed, 100% needs review)
Hopkins, Sarah

Hopkins, Sarah

1 page: 0% complete (100% transcribed, 100% needs review)
Jacob Wilson

Jacob Wilson

6 pages: 0% complete (100% transcribed, 100% needs review)
Jeremiah Bacon

Jeremiah Bacon

Collaboration is restricted.

19 pages: 15% complete (16% transcribed)
John Thomas

John Thomas

Collaboration is restricted.

12 pages: 66% complete (67% transcribed)
Johnson, Ellen

Johnson, Ellen

Collaboration is restricted.

1 page: 0% complete (0% transcribed)
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