Hidden LiteraciesMain MenuHidden Literacies - An IntroductionPhillis Wheatley, Amanuensisa letter from Susanna Wheatley, likely dictated to the famous poet she enslaved — with commentary by Katy L. ChilesWalt Whitman’s Baby Talka Confederate veteran writes fan mail in the voice of his infant son — with commentary by Matt Cohen‘Permit Us to Speak Plainly’the 1849 Munsee Petition to Zachary Taylor — with commentary by Andrew NewmanJuvenile Journalism and Genocidea manuscript magazine by three young boys — with commentary by Karen Sánchez-EpplerVisions, Versions, and DeedsCreek Sovereignty in Coosaponakeesa’s Memorials — with commentary by Caroline WiggintonAccounting for Mary Fowler Occoma household inventory of Mary Occom — with commentary by Kelly WisecupLetters and Charactersletter from Walter Duncan to Dollie Duncan from the Oklahoma State Penitentiary — with commentary by Ellen CushmanWriting the Prisoncongregate literacy in the New York penitentiary — with commentary by Jodi Schorb‘Outlandish Characters’a Kickapoo prayer stick — with commentary by Phillip RoundCesar Lyndon Was Herethe account book of an enslaved man in colonial Rhode Island — with commentary by Tara A. BynumBirch-Bark Publications of Simon PokaganMargaret NoodinHidden Literacies - The PodcastAll podcast episodesHidden Literacies - CreditsIndexIndex of all pages
Chit Chat Figure 6
1media/Nelsons Figure 6_thumb.jpg2021-03-11T20:33:42+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed9677214112This family photograph, staged and taken by the brothers in 1898, depicts Father Hial reading aloud, Ernest (7) holding a cat, Mother Ida knitting, Walter (16) thumbing through the papers on the table, and Elmer (20) and Arthur (18) playing checkers. Courtesy of the Goshen Historical Society.plain2022-09-06T18:27:27+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed96772141