Thanks for your patience during our recent outage at scalar.usc.edu. While Scalar content is loading normally now, saving is still slow, and Scalar's 'additional metadata' features have been disabled, which may interfere with features like timelines and maps that depend on metadata. This also means that saving a page or media item will remove its additional metadata. If this occurs, you can use the 'All versions' link at the bottom of the page to restore the earlier version. We are continuing to troubleshoot, and will provide further updates as needed. Note that this only affects Scalar projects at scalar.usc.edu, and not those hosted elsewhere.
12016-04-07T10:48:20-07:00Calvin Schermerhorn72410f8bbde58a1e8e60023cf6749d711494714689064Transcriptions of Slave Manifests from Afrigeneasplain2016-04-07T11:33:45-07:00Calvin Schermerhorn72410f8bbde58a1e8e60023cf6749d7114947146
New Orleans Manifests, 1818-1860 Port of New Orleans, Record Group 36, United States Customs Service, Collector of Customs at New Orleans, Microfilm 1895, Rolls 1-3, 12 of 25 Rolls (1818 to 1860), Housed at the National Archives, Washington D.C., transcribed by Transcribed by Dee Parmer Woodtor, PhD and Alma McClendon. What can you do with these records? They list names of captives, ship masters (captains) and consigners' names for selected passages entering New Orleans. This resource corresponds to the larger NARA collection.
This page has paths:
12016-04-07T10:27:16-07:00Calvin Schermerhorn72410f8bbde58a1e8e60023cf6749d7114947146Researching African American SlaveryCalvin Schermerhorn20Research Databases and Resources for Slaveryplain2016-04-08T22:48:45-07:00Calvin Schermerhorn72410f8bbde58a1e8e60023cf6749d7114947146