Browse By Migrations Geography Timeline Source Materials Education Materials Search
Overview
OverviewFree Blacks in the South >
Image GalleryNext ImageLast Image
view larger imageview larger image request a copy request a copy

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division

Harper's Weekly, November 9, 1867

Leaving the South

The nineteenth-century migration of African Americans from the South to the North had a dramatic impact on life in America. By boats, trains, or on foot, men, women, and children uprooted themselves from familiar places and extended family, and gambled on the possibility of a better life and self-determination in Northern cities.

Hide indexing information
Image ID: 07_001
Title: Scene on a Mississippi River steamer - The parting song, illustration in Harper's Weekly.
Published: November 9, 1867
Location: Photographs and Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Subjects: Free African Americans
Mississippi River
Steamboats -- American

Keywords: Migration - Northern
Mississippi River
Ships
Songs
Image GalleryNext ImageLast Image
Home About Glossary The New York Public Library
Privacy Policy | Rules & Regulations | Using the Internet | Website Terms & Conditions

© The New York Public Library, 2005.