People outside Enslaved Quarters at Hermitage Plantation, Savannah, Georgia, circa 1930

THF250122 / People outside Enslaved Quarters at Hermitage Plantation, Savannah, Georgia, circa 1930
01

Artifact Overview

Hundreds of enslaved people worked on the Hermitage Plantation near Savannah, Georgia, before the Civil War. They cultivated rice, raised livestock, made bricks, and operated a sawmill and foundry. After the war, depictions of the "old slave huts" and the now-freed people who lived in them appealed to tourists seeking the last vestiges of the "Old South" and intent on romanticizing times of enslavement.

Artifact Details

Artifact

Postcard

Subject Date

circa 1930

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

EI.1929.2425

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Color

Black-and-white (Colors)

Dimensions

Height: 3.500 in
Width: 5.438 in

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    The Quarter Row at Hermitage Plantation

    Enslaved African Americans built and lived in these brick quarters on the Hermitage Plantation, located just north of the city of Savannah in a rice-growing region. Owned by Henry McAlpin, in 1850 this prosperous plantation had 200 enslaved workers who lived in about 50 similar buildings. These enslaved workers cultivated rice, and manufactured bricks, rice barrels, cast iron products, and lumber.
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    The Quarter Row at Hermitage Plantation

    Enslaved African Americans built and lived in these brick quarters on the Hermitage Plantation, located just north of the city of Savannah in a rice-growing region. Owned by Henry McAlpin, in 1850 this prosperous plantation had 200 enslaved workers who lived in about 50 similar buildings. These enslaved workers cultivated rice, and manufactured bricks, rice barrels, cast iron products, and lumber.