Julia Shih

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Since the 1790s, federal laws had permitted US Customs officials to provide certificates that sailors used as proof of their citizenship while working on the high seas and in foreign ports. Customs collectors regularly issued such certificates to Black sailors, thus affirming their status as US citizens.7 Yet that status seemed to mean little while Black sailors were inside the United States, where a person’s status under state law mattered more than his status under federal law.
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction
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