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Charlottesville Syllabus
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Charlottesville Syllabus
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Overview
History of Racism
Racial Violence
Civil War Memory
Primary Sources
Interviews
Readings on Monuments
Writing & Citing
Legislation
Alabama Memorial Preservation Act [AL-SB60]
Virginia Memorials for War Veterans [15.2-1812]
Primary Sources
EBOOK The Confederate and Neo-Confederate Reader
by
James W. Loewen (Editor)
ISBN: 1604737883
Publication Date: 2011
Login with 14-digit PSC student ID number and 4-digit PIN.
Alexander Stephens, “Cornerstone” Speech, March 21, 1861
Constitution of the Confederate States
Declaration of Causes of Seceded States
Frederick Douglass, Speech at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia, 30 May 1871.
W.E.B. DuBois, “The Perfect Vacation,” The Crisis (1931).
George Washington Cable, The Negro Question (1903).
Emily Hazen Reed, The Life of A.P. Dostie; Or, the Conflict of New Orleans (1868).
Monument Dedication Addresses
Ceremonies in Augusta, Georgia: laying the corner stone of the Confederate monument and Dedication Address, 31 October 1878.
South Carolina Monument Association/Dedication of Monument to Confederate Dead, 13 May 1879.
Robert Edward Lee. An address delivered at the dedication of the monument to General Robert Edward Lee at Richmond, Virginia, May 29, 1890.
Report of proceedings incidental to the erection and dedication of the Confederate monument, Oakwood Cemetery, Chicago, 1 June 1895.
Address and poem delivered at the unveiling of the monument erected to the memory of the Confederate dead of Warren County, N.C. : 27 August 1903.
The speech of Hon. Don P. Halsey on the bill to provide a statue of Robert Edward Lee to be placed in Statuary Hall in the Capitol at Washington, D. C., delivered in the Senate of Virginia, 6 February 1903.
North Carolina Monument Program and Dedication at Appomattox, 10 May 1905.
A Souvenir Book of the Jefferson Davis Memorial Association and the Unveiling of the Monument, Richmond, Virginia, June 3, 1907.
Lee monument : speech of Hon. Edward W. Pou of North Carolina in the House of Representatives, 13 February 1914.
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