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| List of Figures | p. x |
| Series Editors' Preface | p. xi |
| Preface to the New Edition | p. xiii |
| Preface | p. xv |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| "Death's Gwineter Lay His Cold Icy Hands on Me": Enslavement | p. 40 |
| A European Slave Trader, Describes the African Slave Trade (1682) | p. 42 |
| A Muslim Merchant, Recalls His Capture and Enslavement (1733) | p. 45 |
| An Employe... MORE | p. 48 |
| Olaudah Equiano, an II-Year-Old Ibo from Nigeria, Remembers His Kidnapping into Slavery (1789) | p. 49 |
| A Scottish Explorer, Mungo Park, Offers a Graphic Account of the African Slave Trade (1797) | p. 51 |
| Venture Smith Relates the Story of His Kidnapping at the Age of Six (1798) | p. 52 |
| "God's A-Gwineter Trouble de Water": The Middle Passage and Arrival | p. 57 |
| A European Slave Trader, Describes a Shipboard Revolt by Enslaved Africans (1700) | p. 59 |
| Olaudah Equiano, Who Was Born in Eastern Nigeria, Describes the Horrors of the Middle Passage (1789) | p. 62 |
| A Doctor, Alexander Falconbridge, Describes Conditions on an English Slaver (1788) | p. 65 |
| Olaudah Equiano Describes His Arrival in the New World (1789) | p. 70 |
| An English Physician, Alexander Falconbridge, Describes the Treatment of Newly Arrived Slaves in the West Indies (1788) | p. 71 |
| "A Change is Gonna Come": Slavery in the Era of the American Revolution | p. 74 |
| The Poet Phillis Wheatley Writes about Freedom and Equal Rights (1774) | p. 75 |
| Massachusetts Slaves Petition for Freedom (1774) | p. 76 |
| Virginia's Royal Governor Promises Freedom to Slaves Who Join the British Army (1775) | p. 78 |
| Virginia's Assembly Denounces Lord Dunmore's Proclamation (1775) | p. 79 |
| Connecticut Slaves Petition for Freedom (1779) | p. 80 |
| Boston King, a Black Loyalist, Seeks Freedom Behind British Lines (1798) | p. 82 |
| A Participant in Gabriel's Rebellion Explains Why He Took Part in the Attempted Insurrection (1812) | p. 84 |
| Gabriel's Brother Explains the Rebellion's Objectives (1800) | p. 84 |
| President Tries to Arrange for the Deportation of Men Involved in Gabriel's Rebellion (1802) | p. 85 |
| "We Raise de Wheat, Dey Gib Us de Corn": Conditions of Life | p. 87 |
| A Free Black Kidnapped from New York, Solomon Northrup, Describes the Working Conditions of Slaves on a Louisiana Cotton Plantation (1853) | p. 88 |
| a Slave in Maryland, South Carolina, and Georgia, Compares Working Conditions on Tobacco and Cotton Plantations (1858) | p. 89 |
| a Maryland Slave, Describes Slave Housing, Diet, and Clothing (1877) | p. 91 |
| Who Was a Slave near Washington, D.C., Describes Living Conditions Under Slavery (1856) | p. 93 |
| A South Carolina Slave, Recalls the Material Conditions of Slave Life (1898) | p. 94 |
| A Former Virginia Slave, Remembers a Slave Auction (1937) | p. 95 |
| Born into Slavery in Virginia, Describes a Slave Sale (1868) | p. 96 |
| "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen": Visual History of Slavery | p. 98 |
| The Inspection and Sale of an African Captive Along the West African Coast (1854) | p. 99 |
| An Illustration of the Layout of a Slave Ship (1807) | p. 100 |
| Enslaved Africans on the Deck of a Slave Ship (1860) | p. 102 |
| Two Slave Sale Advertisements (1859, c.1780s) | p. 103 |
| A Fugitive Slave Advertisement (1774) | p. 105 |
| An Illustration of a Slave Auction at Richmond, Virginia (1856) | p. 107 |
| Five Generations of a Slave Family (c.1850s) | p. 108 |
| An Engraving Illustrating Nat Turner's Insurrection (c.1831) | p. 109 |
| A Plantation Manual Offers Detailed Instructions to Overseers about How They Are to Treat Nursing Mothers (1857-1858) | p. 110 |
| African Americans in Baltimore Celebrate the Ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment, Extending the Vote to Black Men (1870) | p. 111 |
| "O Mother Don't You Weep": Women, Children, and Families | p. 114 |
| Describes Her Efforts to Escape Verbal, Physical, and Sexual Abuse (1861) | p. 115 |
| Describes How She Aborted a Slave Sale (1889) | p. 119 |
| Escapes to Freedom During the Civil War (1902) | p. 121 |
| Recalls the Formative Experiences of His Childhood (1898) | p. 123 |
| Pennington Analyzes the Impact of Slavery upon Childhood (1849) | p. 126 |
| Describes the Moment When He First Recognized the Meaning of Slavery (1842) | p. 128 |
| Learns that Her Husband, Who Had Been Sold Away, Has Taken Another Wife (1869) | p. 130 |
| An Overseer Attempts to Rape Mother (1877) | p. 132 |
| Discusses the Impact of Slavery on Family Life (1846) | p. 135 |
| "Go Home to My Lord and Be Free": Religion | p. 138 |
| from Eastern Nigeria, Describes West African Religious Beliefs and Practices (1789) | p. 139 |
| a Slave in Maryland, Remembers a Slave Funeral, which Incorporated Traditional African Customs (1837) | p. 142 |
| a Former Virginia Slave, Describes the Religious Gatherings Slaves Held Outside of Their Masters' Supervision (1893) | p. 142 |
| Who Toiled in Slavery in Kentucky, Louisiana, and Arkansas, Discusses "Conjuration" (1849) | p. 145 |
| "Oppressed So Hard They Could Not Stand": Punishment | p. 148 |
| a Fugitive Slave from Maryland, Describes the Circumstances that Prompted Masters to Whip Slaves (1845) | p. 149 |
| of Virginia Describes a Lashing She Received (1868) | p. 150 |
| Born into Slavery in Virginia, Has Bells and Horns Fastened on His Head (1855) | p. 152 |
| a Missouri Slave Driver, Is Tied Up in a Smokehouse (1847) | p. 153 |
| a Slave in Georgia and the Carolinas, Is Punished for Attempting to Run Away (1837) | p. 154 |
| A Kentucky Slave, Describes the Implements His Mistress Used to Beat Him (1846) | p. 155 |
| "Let My People Go": Resistance and Flight | p. 157 |
| Resists a Slave Breaker (1845) | p. 158 |
| a Baptist Preacher in Virginia, Describes His Revolt Against Slavery (1831) | p. 163 |
| a Former Maryland Slave, Sneaks into the South to Free Slaves (1872) | p. 167 |
| Life and Methods for Liberating Slaves (1863, 1865) | p. 169 |
| the "President" of the Underground Railroad, Assists Fugitives to Escape Slavery (1876) | p. 172 |
| A Maryland Slave, Follows the North Star to Freedom (1879) | p. 174 |
| Borrows a Sailor's Papers to Escape Slavery (1855, 1895) | p. 177 |
| Henry "Box" Brown of Virginia Escapes Slavery in a Sealed Box (1872) | p. 179 |
| a Fugitive Slave from Kentucky, Kills Her Daughter Rather Than See Her Returned to Slavery (1876) | p. 181 |
| "The Walls Came Tumblin' Down": Emancipation | p. 184 |
| the Mother of a Black Soldier, Pleads with President Abraham Lincoln Not to Rescind the Emancipation Proclamation (1863) | p. 185 |
| Private Thomas Long Assesses the Meaning of Black Military Service During the Civil War (1870) | p. 186 |
| Cherry Appeals for Equal Opportunity for Former Slaves (1865) | p. 187 |
| a former Tennessee Slave, Declines His Former Master's Invitation to Return to His Plantation (1865) | p. 188 |
| Major General Rufus Saxon Assesses the Freedmen's Aspirations (1866) | p. 190 |
| Describes the Attitudes of Ex-Confederates Toward the Freedmen (1865) | p. 191 |
| of South Carolina Asks for Land for the Freedmen (1868) | p. 192 |
| The Rev. Is Attacked by the Ku Klux Klan (1872) | p. 193 |
| a Former Arkansas Slave, Describes Sharecropping (1937) | p. 194 |
| Assesses the Condition of the Freedmen (1880) | p. 195 |
| Bibliographical Essay | p. 198 |
| Bibliography | p. 204 |
| Index | p. 236 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |