From Whence Cometh My Help: The African American Community at Hollins College
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In 1842 Charles Lewis Cocke arrived in Roanoke, Virginia, with sixteen slaves; there, he founded Hollins College, an elite woman's school. Many of the early students also brought their slaves to the college with them. Upon Emancipation some of the African Americans of the community "mostly women" stayed on as servants, forming what is now called the Hollins Community. Although the servants played an integral part in the college's success, students were strongly discouraged from acknowledging …
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BiographySocial SciencesPrint BooksEducationHistoryNonfictionAfrican AmericansPeoples & Cultures - BiographyAfrican American HistoryAfrican American Biography & MemoirSocial Sciences - General & MiscellaneousUnited States HistoryIndividual Colleges & UniversitiesRegional StudiesAmericans - Regional BiographyAfrican American BiographyUnited States History - Southern RegionAfrican American HistoryUnited States StudiesEthnic & Race RelationsSoutheastern States - Regional BiographyAfrican American General BiographyVirginia - State & Local HistoryAfrican American Regional History - Southern StatesUnited States Colleges & Universities - Middle Atlantic StatesRegional Studies - Southern U.S.United States - Ethnic & Race RelationsVirginia & West Virginia - Regional Biography



