User:Orlady/Negro cloth
Negro cloth is a low-quality woolen or cotton cloth that was used historically for the clothing of African American slaves.[1]
http://www.africanaheritage.com/Edward_Ball_Excerpt.asp
http://ugrrquilt.hartcottagequilts.com/rr5.htm - likens it to osnaburg
For the Sake of Commerce: Slavery, Antislavery, and Northern Industry
http://history.research.glam.ac.uk/projects/negro-cloth/ - "Negro Cloth": a Welsh contribution to Atlantic slavery
http://www.nps.gov/ethnography/aah/aaheritage/lowCountryC.htm
Textile firm linked to 'Negro cloth' for slaves, USA Today, February 21, 2002
http://books.google.com/books?id=iU8GyhJ1veEC&pg=PA352&dq=negro+cloth
http://books.google.com/books?id=1X5D8FHBnHQC&pg=PA158
http://books.google.com/books?id=QTLl5wSQfaQC&pg=PA242 - Text of the South Carolina law on the type of clothing allowed for slaves
Cabin for African-American Experience Exhibit
[1] American negro slave revolts By Herbert Aptheker
Slave counterpoint: Black culture in the eighteenth-century Chesapeake and Lowcountry By Philip D. Morgan. 1998. (Mentions colors, including blue and white -- apparently related to identifying runaway slaves -- and boots made from negro cloth.)
http://utc.iath.virginia.edu/abolitn/abestwa9t.html - American Slavery As It Is Theodore Weld New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1839. From TESTIMONY OF REUBEN G. MACY. (“During the winter of 1818 and 19, I resided on an island near the mouth of the Savannah river, on the South Carolina side. Most of the slaves that came under my particular notice, belonged to a widow and her daughter, in whose family I lived."
Their clothing consisted of a pair of trowsers and jacket, made of whitish woollen cloth called negro cloth. The women had nothing but a petticoat, and a very short short-gown, made of the same kind of cloth. Some of the women had an old pair of shoes, but they generally went barefoot .
http://www.scribd.com/doc/18940799/Eighteenth-century-Chesapeake-clothing-A-costume-plan-for-the-National-Colonial-Farm -- relevant pages not included in free view
References
[edit]- ^ J.R. Bartlett (1895). James T. Haley (ed.). "Americanisms Pertaining to Afro-Americans". Afro-American Encyclopaedia; or, The Thoughts, Doings, and Sayings of the Race, Embracing Addresses, Lectures, Biographical Sketches, Sermons, Poems, Names of Universities, Colleges, Seminaries, Newspapers, Books, and a History of the Denominations, Giving the Numerical Strength of Each. In Fact, It Teaches Every Subject of Interest to the Colored People, as Discussed by More than One Hundred of Their Wisest and Best Men and Women. Nashville: Haley & Florida. p. 341. Republished in 2000 by Academic Affairs Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Category:Woven fabrics
Category:Slavery in the United States