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RARE Authentic 19thC Georgia CHILD SLAVE Shackles browse these categories for related items... All Items: Popular Collectibles:Memorabilia:Black Americana: Pre 1900: item # 876681 Please refer to our stock # BA705 when inquiring.
Stonegate Antiques PO Box 461 Glastonbury, CT 06033 860-712-9565 Guest Book $895.00 |
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Once part of the Middle Passage Museum inventory, these authentic and extraordinarily RARE child’s slave shackles have been de-accessioned. These plantation-made, iron, 19th century shackles were once used on a Georgia plantation. They remain all-original and untouched with fourteen small, one inch long each, chain links. These RARE shackles measure a total of 18 inches in length. These shackles are a bit more unusual as they have only a single, leg or arm shackle with an iron loop used to attach these shackles to yet another set of shackles. A locking mechanism appears at the other end, and I regret, I cannot explain how it operates. A horrible, tangible testament to the malevolence of slavery. Also currently offered for sale and priced separately is a second pair of child’s shackles, also de-accessioned from the Middle Passage Museum. Please type the word "shackles" in the search box on our home page to find this 2nd set of child’s shackles. The Middle Passage Museum was the dream of Jim and Mary Anne Petty of Mississippi as well as that of an anonymous Georgian benefactor who had together compiled a collection of slave artifacts numbering over 15,000 pieces and who had hoped to find a permanent site in Mobile, Alabama, for their museum. While they formed a non-profit organization to raise funds for their hoped-for museum, their dream was never realized. In a 2003 statement, Jim Petty remarked, "The importance of the exhibit of these artifacts is to understand the harshness of what slavery and segregation was all about. The items in the exhibit remind us of the terrible heinousness of slavery. Viewing the collection can be very emotional, but it is a tool through which we can understand, honor and respect a great culture. We want to realize that out of slavery, a great culture emerged, and carried on, and continued to strive for a better life regardless of the adverse conditions that were placed upon them." |
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