1931, the brother george was simultaneously an officer of the new york times company a leader of the new york chapter of the sons of the confederate veterans. there are a lot of names here. the publisher was a leader at the new york chapter. his mother was pro- confederacy, proslavery, pro- succession enacted and supported those movements. he was her father s brother and his name was john mayer. he dropped the surname leavy according to a family tree compiled some seven years ago. the mayor was a storm owner and prominent leader of the community and during the war organized a home guard unit according to family members and historians. the separate slave schedule lifted. identified is two males 70 and
1931, the brother george was simultaneously an officer of the new york times company a leader of the new york chapter of the sons of the confederate veterans. there are a lot of names here. the publisher was a leader at the new york chapter. his mother was pro- confederacy, proslavery, pro- succession enacted and supported those movements. he was her father s brother and his name was john mayer. he dropped the surname leavy according to a family tree compiled some seven years ago. the mayor was a storm owner and prominent leader of the community and during the war organized a home guard unit according to family members and historians. the separate slave schedule lifted. identified is two males 70 and
University of Mississippi professors research legacy of slavery at state’s flagship university
OXFORD Five University of Mississippi professors, along with local community organizations and other campus partners, are exploring the history and impact of slavery at the university and in the Oxford community.
The University of Mississippi Slavery Research Group (UMSRG) started as a 2013 book club consisting of several faculty and administrators where they read and discussed historian Craig Steven Wilder’s book, “Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery, and the Troubled History of America’s Universities,” in efforts to “develop a set of preliminary initiatives that faculty and students on the campus might be able to tackle with regard to the history of slavery at the University of Mississippi,” according to the group’s website.