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St. Simon Island, Georgia - Oil Painting by Shirley Hunter Gullah History

Gullah History

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Gullah History. St. Simon Island, Georgia - Oil Painting by Shirley Hunter. Nearly a half a million Gullah live between Jacksonville, North Carolina and Jacksonville, Florida today. Edna Lewis Oil Painting by Elayna Shakur. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: Gullah History

Nearly a half a million Gullah live between Jacksonville, North Carolina and Jacksonville, Florida today.

Edna LewisOil Painting by Elayna Shakur

Page 3: Gullah History

This 500 mile stretch along the Atlantic Ocean and over and between the Rivers that surround it is home to the descendants of the Africans brought to the Carolina Colony beginning in the late 1500s.

Page 4: Gullah History

For nearly five centuries, their lives have been economically and politically tied to this region and the "cash crops" needed for its success whether it be rice or tourism.

Page 5: Gullah History

Places in and around Wilmington, North Carolina, Georgetown and Charleston, South Carolina, Savannah and Jacksonville, Florida figure prominently in the Gullah story from the beginning to now.

Page 6: Gullah History

Their origin and history began on African soil.

During the slave trade, captured Africans, destined for American plantations, were often retained in holding cells along the West African coastlines.

Page 7: Gullah History

This imprisonment brought an unprecedented  large number of different Africans together under one roof and formed the basis for the outline and structure of what became and is called Gullah culture.

Page 8: Gullah History

By the mid 1700s, these Africans dominated the slave labor force.

They became the muscle and mind behind the rice and cotton industries that once lined the waters of the Carolina Slave Coast.

Page 9: Gullah History

Their knowledge of farming, rice, rice cultivation, along with their labor, made the Gullah the most desired and sought after labor of the agricultural South.

These Gullah slave farmers made their owners some of the wealthiest businessmen in pre-Civil War America.

Page 10: Gullah History

In the early days, slaves reserved the name title Gullah for certain members of their communities.

It was used more as a handle or prefix as was the case of Golla Jack in the Denmark Vessey Conspiracy of 1822.

Page 11: Gullah History

Until this day, the similarities in the African and American names of these groups, the Golas (Gullah) and the Gizzis (Geechees), could very well be the source of the importance placed on whether one is called Gullah or Geechee today.

Page 12: Gullah History

The Gullah represent one of the oldest culture groups surviving and living among us today.

They are acknowledged for their contributions to the growth, development and success of the Rice and Sea Island cotton industries of the slave period.

Page 13: Gullah History

During the early days of freedom, their underpaid labor contributed to the re-growth and recovery of the region they inhabited.

Page 14: Gullah History

By the 1940s, the shift from agriculture to tourism made them the dominate labor force in and of the hospitality industry, the chief income in every state wherever they reside in large numbers today.

Page 15: Gullah History

In the 21st Century, the 500-mile region where the Gullah live is nationally recognized as endangered land right within our midst.

Page 16: Gullah History

http://www.ultimategullah.com/culture.htmlhttp://gallerychuma.com/

johnwjonesgullahart.htmhttp://dining.discoversouthcarolina.com/

famous-flavors/sc-gullah-foods.aspx

Sources