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19220907 Board Meeting Notice Post Card Back.jpg
letter stating the date of the next school board meeting

19220905 Letter Amount Pay for Certificate.jpg
Letter stating how much the board will pay

19220804 Do not believe in Rosenwald Fund.jpg
Letter to Mr. Hayden stating that the current board does not believe in the Rosenwald Fund

19220401 Letter Front.jpg
Front and back of a letter discussing funds

2011_10_007.jpg
Joe Tinsley and Bobby Gilliard, taken on the front porch of Westend. In February 28, 1931 issue of The Southern Churchmanis Mr. Tinsley's obituary: "Entered into eternal life, February 16, 1931, at the home of the late Mrs. Mary Watson Taylor,…

WE_2011_12_692(1).jpg
Martin and Martha Johnson appear in the Freedman’s Bureau marriage records for Louisa County – he is 42 and she is 39.

Barbara is listed as the daughter of Martin Johnson and Martha Johnson in a 1850 slave list.
In the 1900 census, Barbara…

WE_2011_12_729A.jpg
Perhaps during period of Country Inn

WE_2011_12_730.jpg
Hired help at Westend, 5 men in livery and a cook to staff the country inn. These suited men were likely taking guests' bags to their rooms, and bringing food to the dining room table.

While the time period is not certain, the shawl lapels that…

WE_2011_12_510.jpg
Man riding horse "Black Mama". The man is possibly George, husband to Mourning, or a Tinsley boy- "Little Joe", Felix, or "Stiff Lad Johnny".

4h-1955-VA-Statte-in-Peters.jpg
During the Jim Crow era every area of life was segregated. In many ways, two parallel universes existed in the South and in Central Virginia; one white and one black. Since agriculture was vitally imporant to white and black farmers in Louisa…

Gordons-store.jpg
While many African American families struggled to survive as well as to receive a good education, there were a few families who prospered after emancipation. Reuben Gordon was a former slave who worked on the Garland Plantation. After the Civil War,…

Shelling-Corn.jpg
For many African Americans, daily life after slavery was not much different than life in bondage. There was still a struggle for survival for many African American families. Most of the residents of Louisa County lived on farms and until Rural…

Jeff-Porter-Trevilians-Stat.jpg
These images are photos of Jeff Porter and his home. Porter was born sometime in 1849. Throughout his lifetime in Louisa County, Porter lived at Trevillians Depot. We know little more about him than what these photos reveal, except that he was a…

Aunt-Dinah-Robinson-also-Am.jpg
This photograph is an image of Aunt Dinah Robinson who served as the janitor at the Mineral High School during the era of segregation. In most cases, it was African Americans who worked as the janitors at white schools, and they witnessed the…

at-Poindexter\'s-Store.jpg
This photograph is an image of three African American individuals outside of the Poindexter Store in Louisa County. The style of clothing of the two women in this photograph suggests that both are domestic workers (the apron and the hats). Often, if…

1902-Graduation-small.jpg
Early African American schools were designed to advance younger generations of African Americans. Within this community of individuals there was a belief that, as an African American became more educated and continued to exceed in society, the…

FBC-before-renovation.jpg
The picture on the left is an image of the original building for the First Baptist Church on its present location one block west of the courthouse. This is not the building that the trustees purchased in 1866. The picture on the right is an image of…

054_2009_08_135010-(Identif.jpg
This document is a pamphlet directing Local Registrars and "Other Agents in Adminstration of the Law" on how to register indivduals on birth certificates. This pamphlet also contains a copy of the Racial Purity Act laws (for use at the discretion of…
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