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Knowing from where you came gives you guidance for where you are going. I don't know which country or tribe from which our families originated, but slavery is not where our history begins. Slaves were usually not named but enumerated separately and usually only numbered under the slave holder's name. So, a surname only identified the enslaved individual's owner names. Slaves were not permitted to legally marry, but they often formed unions and lived together as couples. These relationships were labeled as "cohabitation" rather than marriage. In the context of enslaved families, the term…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Knowing from where you came gives you guidance for where you are going. I don't know which country or tribe from which our families originated, but slavery is not where our history begins. Slaves were usually not named but enumerated separately and usually only numbered under the slave holder's name. So, a surname only identified the enslaved individual's owner names. Slaves were not permitted to legally marry, but they often formed unions and lived together as couples. These relationships were labeled as "cohabitation" rather than marriage. In the context of enslaved families, the term "inferred child" might refer to children born to enslaved parents who were not legally married but lived together as a family unit. These children were often considered part of the household, even though they may have been separated from their biological parents. After the importation of slaves was made illegal, Plantation owners started to breed and sell children as slave labor. tracing the family roots of individuals before 1865 was extremely difficult.
Autorenporträt
This book is the fourth in a series about the Morton's. They are a middle class family with unusual skills of one kind or the other. This book outlines the diverges on Dalilah's plans for her adult life. Her ability to undergo materialization, disappearance or teleportation was first displayed in the author's second book, "The Magic in Being Special". In the same book, her mother discovered that Dalilah's ability for channeling had given her a playmate that was the spirit of a little boy, who was killed in the house where they lived. His suspicious death sets the dynamics for in the author's first book, "The Dark One". Her exceptional artistic ability allowed Dalilah to draw a detail picture of her Aunt Shelley's abductor in the author's third book, "Battered, But Not Broken". The author is currently writing the fifth book in the Morton family series.