A. R. Bridgers

ynseyder, leighder, as politickeyr Americaanagh
She yn politickeyr ass Carolina Hwoaie bun-chooish y duillag shoh. My vel anaase ayd ayns y phianneyder as y chummeyder Americaanagh, lhaih Aaron Bridgers.

She ynseyder, leighder, as leigh-hoyrtagh Americaanagh ayns Carolina Hwoaie va Aaron R. Bridgers.[1] She Affro-Americaanagh as Pobblaghtagh v'eh, ren shassoo er son Edgecombe County ayns Thie Ynnydee Carolina Hwoaie ayns 1883.[2][3] Hooar Bridgers keim veih St. Augustine's College ayns Raleigh as v'eh ny ynseyder scoill ayns Tarboro.[4]

Lurg shayll as eh shirveish 'sy çhionnal slattyssagh, hooar Bridgers keim veih'n scoill leigh lesh Ollooscoill Howard ayns 1886.[5][6] V'eh lhiggit stiagh ayns barrey Carolina Hwoaie ayns 1887[7] as, eisht, darree eh dys Winston-Salem, Carolina Hwoaie.[8]

Imraaghyn

reagh
  1. "The Wilson Advance" (1882-09-08), dgn. 3. 
  2. Turner, Joseph Kelly; Bridgers, John Luther (1920). History of Edgecombe County, North Carolina (ayns English). Edwards & Broughton printing Company. dg. 381.
  3. Crow, Jeffrey J.; Escott, Paul D.; Hatley, Flora J. (2002). A History of African Americans in North Carolina (ayns English). N.C. Department of Cultural Resources, Office of Archives and History. dg. 233. ISBN 978-0-86526-301-7.
  4. Justesen, Benjamin R. (2009). ""The Class of '83": Black Watershed in the North Carolina General Assembly". The North Carolina Historical Review. Ym-lioar 86 (3): 296. ISSN 0029-2494. 
  5. "General Intelligence", The Banner-Enterprise (1884-05-31), dgn. 2. 
  6. Alumni catalogue of Howard university, with list of incorporators, trustees, and other employees, 1867-1896. Howard University. 1896. dg. 29.
  7. "Supreme Court", The News and Observer (1887-02-09), dgn. 4. 
  8. "Eastern Snap Shots", The Gazette (1897-02-06), dgn. 3.