1. |
2. |
2a. |
3. |
4. |
5. |
6. |
7. |
7.89. |
7.90. |
7.91. |
7.92. |
7.93. |
7.94. |
7.95. |
7.96. |
7.97. |
7.98. |
7.99. |
7.100. |
7.101. |
7.102. |
7.103. |
7.104. |
7.105. |
7.106. |
7.107. |
7.108. |
7.109. |
7.110. |
7.111. |
7.112. |
7.113. |
7.114. |
7.115. |
7.116. |
7.117. |
7.118. |
7.119. |
7.120. |
7.121. |
7.122. |
7.123. |
7.124. |
7.125. |
7.126. |
7.127. |
7.128. |
7.129. |
7.130. |
7.131. |
7.132. |
7.133. |
7.134. |
7.135. |
8. |
9. |
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Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||
519. PETER FAMILY PAPERS
ca. 2,000 items, ca. 1700-1900
Business, legal, and personal papers of this family of Georgetown,
D.C., and of Frederick and
Montgomery counties, Maryland. The frequent references to slavery
include a series of letters in 1836-45 mentioning the buying and selling of slaves in Georgetown; an 1850 letter
from John Denning to L. W.
Candler discussing the current market in slaves; and an undated
letter from John Candler to George Peter about seventy-five runaway slaves from Charles County heading through Rockville County to Pennsylvania.
(Acc. 7605-a)
Afro-American Sources in Virginia: A Guide to Manuscripts | ||