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116:. He also used the paper to advocate for giving Black men the right to vote. These actions angered some living in Norfolk, and just two months after the move the paper's press was destroyed by a mob. This was just one of many such attacks around the nation during the Reconstruction era.
104:, a lawyer representing the Loyal League of Virginia. It also published a column by "Anna" titled "To the Freed Women" about the status of women, particularly women of color, and inequalities. As editor, Wilson vocally criticized
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served as its editor. The paper's offices and press were destroyed by a white mob in early 1866, and it ceased publication shortly thereafter.
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became its editor in early 1866, and may have taken over the paper; sources conflict over whether Wilson or White led its move to
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and in
Hampton vocally criticized a white mob that seriously injured several Black people. Civil War veteran
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published in
Virginia. Founded in 1865, the paper was moved to Norfolk early the next year, where
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82:. The first issue was published November 24, 1865. Publication continued until mid-April 1866.
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Report of the Joint
Committee on Reconstruction, at the First Session, Thirty-ninth Congress
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97:, in February 1866, seeking a market where the paper might be more financially successful.
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Stories in Stone: Memorialization, the
Creation of History and the Role of Preservation
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For Free Press and Equal Rights: Republican
Newspapers in the Reconstruction South
409:"True Southerner 18 January 1866 — Virginia Chronicle: Digital Newspaper Archive"
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289:. Internet Archive. : University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 93–94.
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The paper was not initially financially successful. It was sponsored by the
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Reconstruction, United States
Congress Joint Committee on (June 26, 1866).
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Homelands and
Waterways: The American Journey of the Bond Family, 1846-1926
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Parramore, Thomas C.; Stewart, Peter C.; Bogger, Tommy L. (2000-01-29).
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published in
Virginia upon its foundation in March or November 1865, in
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51:. It advocated for the rights of African Americans and was the first
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Freedom's first generation : Black
Hampton, Virginia, 1861-1890
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Pride, Armistead Scott; Choat, Malcolm; Wilson, Clint C. (1997).
321:. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 161–163.
119:The Library of Virginia has issues of the paper on
445:Weekly newspapers published in the United States
261:"The True Southerner (Hampton, Va.) 1865-1866"
172:. University of Virginia Press. p. 227.
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35:was a weekly newspaper published during the
206:. University of Georgia Press. p. 35.
148:University of Florida Digital Collections
465:Defunct newspapers published in Virginia
236:. Howard University Press. p. 79.
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315:Alexander, Adele Logan (2007-12-18).
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108:'s decision to veto creation of the
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375:. U.S. Government Printing Office.
342:Williams, Emily (October 6, 2020).
450:1866 disestablishments in Virginia
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169:Norfolk: The First Four Centuries
460:1865 establishments in Virginia
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283:Engs, Robert Francis (1979).
348:. Vernon Press. p. 39.
233:A History of the Black Press
200:Abbott, Richard H. (2004).
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72:African-American newspaper
53:African-American newspaper
16:African-American newspaper
430:Google newspaper archives
385:– via Google Books.
358:– via Google Books.
114:Civil Rights Act of 1866
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413:virginiachronicle.com
144:"The true Southerner"
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265:Library of Congress
100:The paper defended
68:The True Southerner
32:The True Southerner
26:from February 1866.
24:The True Southerner
41:American Civil War
37:Reconstruction era
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328:978-0-307-42625-3
296:978-0-8122-7768-5
243:978-0-88258-192-7
213:978-0-8203-2527-9
179:978-0-8139-1988-1
110:Freedmen's Bureau
95:Norfolk, Virginia
76:Hampton, Virginia
49:Norfolk, Virginia
45:Hampton, Virginia
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39:after the
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47:and then
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63:History
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