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- Freedman - Wikipedia
A freedman or freedwoman is a person who has been released from slavery, usually by legal means
- Freedmen’s Bureau | History Facts | Britannica
Headed by Maj Gen Oliver O Howard, the Freedmen’s Bureau might be termed the first federal welfare agency Despite handicaps of inadequate funds and poorly trained personnel, the bureau built hospitals for, and gave direct medical assistance to, more than 1,000,000 freedmen
- Freedmen History - Oklahoma Historical Society
Records pertaining to Freedmen include various censuses, per capita payments, letters sent and received, and information about citizenship View the list of records available on microfilm
- The Freedmens Bureau | National Archives
This series contains hundreds of marriage records of newly liberated African Americans in the Civil War era collected from 1861 through 1869 first by the Union Army and then by the Freedmen's Bureau in its field offices in the Southern States and the District of Columbia
- The Freedmen | Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861 to 1877 | U. S . . .
For its part, the federal government established the Freedmen's Bureau, a temporary agency, to provide food, clothing, and medical care to refugees in the South, especially freed slaves
- The Rise and Fall of the Freedmens Bureau - U. S. National Park Service
From 1865 to 1870 the Freedmen’s Bureau provided over fifteen million rations to destitute whites and the formerly enslaved The bureau established refugee camps, provided clothing, medical care, legal services, and even helped the freedmen legally get married
- Freedmen Nation
Freedmen Nation is a platform dedicated to empowering American Freedmen through reparations, economic development, legal advocacy, and political engagement We provide resources for genealogy research, business support, land protection, and education while preserving Freedmen history and rights
- Freedmen and Southern Society Project - Welcome Page
The Freedmen and Southern Society Project was established in 1976 to capture the essence of that revolution in the words of its participants: liberated slaves and defeated slaveholders, soldiers and civilians, common folk and the elite, Northerners and Southerners
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