http://usnewsmap.comI did a search for "haunted" and found a hit in a 1903 newspaper, someone wrote a poem. On the same page was a man who was shot, for either having low morals of sleeping with a black woman, or being involved in a gambling ring.I then did a search for "negro" and found an article in an 1864 charlotte paper whipping up fear of the North by implying the Dutch and Niggers and "foreigners of the meanest type" were taking over the armies.Also in 1896, NC A&T (then A&M) had some infighting between the faculty and college president about the school not having enough resources, with the commissioner of agriculture having the support of many "prominent negroes".Round trip ticket from charlotte to New Orleans for Mardi gras was $24 This is a good read, from 1868:http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85042146/1868-05-16/ed-1/seq-3/[Edited on March 8, 2016 at 2:11 AM. Reason : ]
3/8/2016 1:53:27 AM
There's some old-time jokes, here:http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87070095/1870-08-17/ed-1/seq-4/I don't get this one though:
3/8/2016 2:36:05 AM
^ that joke about scalping (removing the scalp) is so easy to get....
3/8/2016 6:43:18 AM
Oldspapers
3/8/2016 3:37:46 PM
^^^ Not trying to start nothing here, but I'm not sure that thing about the flag means what you think it means. First, you'd need to know what flag he was actually carrying (might not have been what we now call a "Confederate flag"). Second, it's only 5 years after the war, so it's only natural that the flag is representing the Confederate cause; the article depicts an open display of defiance against the US by someone who probably fought under that very flag. That's a bit different than trying to divine what the flag means to people today, 150 years later. That's not to say your overall claim of its meaning today is wrong, just that this example is a poor way to show it.
3/9/2016 1:28:41 AM
*apologist alert*
3/9/2016 1:42:47 AM
3/9/2016 2:05:59 AM
3/9/2016 7:36:30 AM