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1st U.S. Colored Cavalry

Private Lives, Public Records

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« Austin Moody, Company I
Frederick Sawyer alias Frederick Bond, Company G »

The North Carolina Maps Project

May 18, 2020 by leslie1863

“The maps in the North Carolina Maps project range in coverage from small islands to all of North America. To help with navigating through the maps, there are several options for browsing the collection by location. Users can browse maps of specific counties, maps that show regions within North Carolina, and maps that show the entire state. There is also a full list of the primary locations shown on maps in the collection. Please see the page Tips for Finding Maps by Location for suggestions and examples.”
This description continues at the waypoint “NC Maps > Browse > Browse by Location.”

This digitization project is a collaborative effort between the North Carolina State Archives, the Outer Banks History Center, and the University Library at UNC-Chapel Hill (accessed May 17, 2020).

See also “1860 Map of North Carolina, Slave Population by County” published on this blog on April 1, 2019.

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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged maps |

  • While researching the lives of my great-great-grandfather Edward R. Pitt and his brother William Thomas Pitt of Norfolk County, Virginia, I found fascinating (and sometimes disturbing) details about the civilian and military experiences of those who served in the 1st U.S. Colored Cavalry.

    The regiment included free men, freedmen, freedom-seekers and white officers from the United States and abroad.  It was organized at Camp Hamilton, Virginia in 1863, attached to Fortress Monroe, Virginia in 1864, and mustered out at Brazos Santiago, Texas in 1866.

    Tell the story. Expand the legacy.

    Leslie Anderson, MSLS

    Copyright © Leslie Anderson. All Rights Reserved.

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