ABSTRACT

Now in its second edition, The Routledge Atlas of African American History traces the epic journey of African Americans’ four hundred years in North America.

With more than 75 full-color maps, charts, and illustrations, this volume illuminates the myriad of contributions from Black Americans to the nation’s political, economic, cultural, and social history. Jonathan Earle begins the sweeping story with the African roots of Black America and moves through important developments such as the Underground Railroad, Emancipation and the Civil War, African Americas in the U.S. Armed Forces, the spread of Jim Crow Laws, and the long Civil Rights Movement. This updated edition also introduces new essays on Black Seminoles, the National Women’s Club Movement, Black political realignment and the rise of Barack Obama, and Black Lives Matter protests. Other diverse topics include:

  • The AME Church
  • Buffalo Soldiers
  • Historically Black colleges and universities
  • Black nationalism
  • Racial violence and white supremacy.

Examining both the geographical and historical context of the African American experience, this book is an indispensable reference for students of American history and African American history, and anyone interested in the Black experience.

part I|22 pages

The Roots of Black America

chapter 1|4 pages

The African Past

chapter 3|3 pages

The African Dispersion

part II|33 pages

Two Communities, Enslaved and Free

chapter 7|3 pages

The First Emancipation

chapter 8|3 pages

The Haitian Revolution, 1791–1804

chapter 9|3 pages

Free Black People in the New Republic

chapter 10|2 pages

Racism in the Antebellum North

chapter 11|5 pages

The Cotton Kingdom

chapter 12|4 pages

The Free Black Community

The AME Church and Foundational African American Newspapers

chapter 13|5 pages

The Enslaved Community

chapter 14|3 pages

Nat Turner's Rebellion, 1831

chapter 15|3 pages

Black Seminoles

part III|24 pages

Toward Freedom

chapter 16|7 pages

The Expansion of Slavery, 1819–57

chapter 17|5 pages

Runaways, Kidnappings, and Abolitionists

chapter 18|3 pages

Slavery and the Civil War

chapter 19|4 pages

Reconstruction, 1865–77

chapter 20|2 pages

Exodusters

part IV|32 pages

African Americans Under Arms

chapter 21|4 pages

Black Patriots and Loyalists

chapter 22|4 pages

Black Men in Blue

chapter 24|3 pages

Imperial Wars, 1898–1902

chapter 25|3 pages

World War I

chapter 26|4 pages

World War II

chapter 27|5 pages

The Cold War

Korea and Vietnam

chapter 28|3 pages

Peacekeeping and the “Forever Wars”

part V|25 pages

Separate and Unequal

chapter 29|2 pages

Racial Violence and White Supremacy

chapter 31|2 pages

The Spread of Jim Crow

chapter 32|2 pages

The National Women's Club Movement

chapter 33|3 pages

The Great Migration

chapter 34|3 pages

Marcus Garvey and the UNIA

chapter 35|3 pages

The Negro Baseball Leagues

chapter 36|3 pages

The Harlem Renaissance

part VI|25 pages

The Struggle for Full Equality

chapter 37|3 pages

Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott

chapter 38|2 pages

African American Musical Traditions

Jazz, the Blues, Rock ‘n’ Roll, and Hip Hop

chapter 39|3 pages

Sit-ins and the Rise of SNCC

chapter 41|3 pages

Securing the Ballot

chapter 42|2 pages

The Nation of Islam

chapter 43|5 pages

Black Political Realignment

From Republican to Democrat, and the Rise of Barack Obama

chapter 44|3 pages

The Black Lives Matter Movement