Anti-Negro Prejudice and Discrimination in Rhode Island, 1860-1900. Back Metadata Thumbnail Share TitleAnti-Negro Prejudice and Discrimination in Rhode Island, 1860-1900.Author and ContributorsGirard, Jean.Date Published1966Document FormatTypescriptSubject(s)African Americans -- Rhode Island -- History. | African Americans -- Rhode Island. | Rhode Island -- History.PublisherRhode Island CollegePlace Of PublicationProvidence, RIHoldingsRhode Island Historical SocietyPlaceRhode IslandCall NumberE185.61 G57CNEB_IDRIHS_113City-TownRHODE ISLANDDatePublishedClean1983 Continue browsing Mutiny and Murder. Confession of Charles Gibbs, a Native of Rhode Island; Who, with Thomas J. Wansley, was Doomed to be Hung in New-York on the 22d of April last, for the Murder of the Captain and Mate of the Brig Vineyard, on Her Passage from New-Orleans to Philadelphia, in November 1830. Gibbs confesses that within a few years he has participated in the murder of nearly 400 human beings. An Address to the People of Rhode Island, Delivered in Newport, May 3, 1843, in Presence of the General Assembly, on the Occasion of a Change in the Civil Government of Rhode Island, By the Adoption of the Constitution Which Superseded the Charter of 1663. Back to items list