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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Gerdes, M. Reginald. "To Educate and Evangelize: Black Catholic Schools of the Oblate Sisters of Providence (1828-1880)." U.S. Catholic Historian 7, nos. 2-3 (1988): 183-99.

Holland, Marcella. "Emergence of Maryland's African-American Women Attorneys." Maryland Bar Journal 28 (July 1995): 14-19.

Ives, Sallie M. "The Formation of a Black Community in Annapolis, 1870-1885." Geographical Perspectives on Maryland's Past." Edited by Robert D. Mitchell and Edward K. Muller, 129-49. College Park, MD: University of Maryland Department of Geography, 1979.

Jenkins, David S. A History of Colored Schools in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, and a Proposal for their Consolidation. M.A. thesis, University of Maryland, 1942.

Jensen, Ann. "'Do You Know What I Have Been?:' A History of Blacks in Annapolis." Annapolitan 5 (April 1991): 36-42, 78, 92-94.

Johansen, Mary Carroll. "'Intelligence, Though Overlooked:' Education for Black Women in the Upper South, 1800-1840." Maryland Historical Magazine 93 (Winter 1998): 443-65.
Notes: Black and white educators established forty-six schools for free black children in the early nineteenth century. These educators supported education for black women believing that women transmitted knowledge and morals, thus shaping a generation of virtuous citizens. In addition, educators looked to education as a means by which to form self-sufficient and industrious free black communities.

Keen, Dorothy Benson. "John Henry Robinson." Anne Arundel County History Notes 17 (January 1986): 5-6.

Leggett, Vincent O. "The Black Watermen of Shady Side." Maryland Humanities (March 1999): 8-10.

Linthicum, Sweetser. "John Henry Robinson: Some Additional Comments." Anne Arundel County History Notes 17 (April 1986): 13.

Morgan, Winifred. "Gender-Related Difference in the Slave Narratives of Harriet Jacobs and Frederick Douglass." American Studies 35 (Fall 1994): 73-94.

Morrow, Diane Batts. The Oblate Sisters of Providence: Issues of Black and Female Agency in their Antebellum Experience, 1828-1860. Ph.D. diss., University of Georgia, 1996.

Peake, Emily Holland. "Dr. William Bishop of Annapolis." Anne Arundel County History Notes 25 (January 1994): 3-4.

Pickett, T. H. "The Friendship of Frederick Douglass with the German Ottilie Assing." Georgia Historical Quarterly 73 (Spring 1989): 88-105.

Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn. "Black Women Freedom Fighters in Early 19th Century Maryland." Maryland Heritage News 2 (Spring 1984): 11-12.

Welcome, Verda F., as told to James M. Abraham. My Life and Times. Englewood, NJ: Henry House Publishers, 1991.

West, Margaret Genevieve. Zora Neale Hurston's Place in American Literary Culture: A Study of the Politics of Race and Gender. Ph.D. diss., Florida State University, 1997.

Yentsch, Anne. "Beads as Silent Witnesses of an African-American Past: Social Identity and the Artifacts of Slavery in Annapolis, Maryland." Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers 79 (1995): 44-60.

Anderson, Elizabeth. "Anderson Family Home." Anne Arundel County History Notes 19 (January 1988): 1.

"Annapolis." American Preservation 1 (October/November 1977): 27-33.
Notes: Photographic essay by Marion E. Warren.

"As National Register Listing is Rejected, Battle for Annapolis Bridge Continues." Historic Preservation News 32 (October 1992): 5, 28.

Buckley, C. T. "Maryland's Government House." Architectural Digest 43 (November 1986): 154-59, 222.

Christensen, John. McDowell Hall at St. John's College in Annapolis: 1742-1989. Annapolis, MD: St. John's College, 1989.

Davis, Clayton. "A Civil War Mansion." Anne Arundel County History Notes 27 (January 1996): 11.

Davis, Deering. Annapolis Houses: 1700-1775. New York: Bonanza Books, 1947.

Dowell, Susan Stiles. "Chase-Lloyd House." Maryland 13 (Summer 1980): 31-34.
Notes: Annapolis.

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