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4Results for "May 29, 1884"
Stories
Endowed Professorships
by Ryan Dukeman | Reconstruction to Present (1865-)
Of Princeton's more than 160 endowed professorships and lectureships, four honor men who derived their fortunes from slave labor or contributed to the legacy of slavery in New Jersey and the United States.
James McCosh and Princeton’s First Integrated Classrooms
by April C. Armstrong | Reconstruction to Present (1865-)
James McCosh, Princeton’s eleventh president (1868-88), admitted African American graduate students into his classes and strongly criticized slavery and the Confederacy—convictions that angered white southern students attending the college after the Civil War.
Princetonians in Virginia
by Ian Iverson | Colonial & Early National (1746-1820), Antebellum (1820-1861)
The College of New Jersey attracted large numbers of Virginia students in the 18th and 19th centuries, contributing to Princeton’s reputation as a school for southerners. This essay focuses on three students from Virginia whose careers as clergymen and educators reflected evolving arguments about slavery and emancipation from the Revolutionary War to the Civil War.
Primary Sources
Sketch of the McCormick Reaper
May 29, 1884 | Reconstruction to Present (1865-)
An illustration of Cyrus McCormick's mechanical reaper in action. McCormick's reaper, which made him a large fortune, was designed at least in part by his slave Jo Anderson.