Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves, Volume XI, North Carolina Narratives, Part 1
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171
1941
English
- Louisa Adams
- Ida Adkins
- Martha Allen
- Joseph Anderson
- Mary Anderson
- Cornelia Andrews
- Mary Anngady
- Jane Arrington
- Sarah Louis Augustus
- Charuty Austin
- Blound Baker
- Lizzie Baker
- Viney Baker
- Charlie Barbour
- Mary Barbour
- Alice Baugh
- John Beckwith
- John C. Bectom
- Laura Bell
- Emma Blalock
- David Blount
- Clay Bobbit
- Henry Bobbitt
- Herndon Bogan
- Andrew Boone
- W.L. Bost
- Mary Wallace Bowe
- Lucy Brown
- Midge Burnett
- Fanny Cannady
- Betty Cofer
- John Coggin
- Mandy Coverson
- Willie Cozart
- Hannah Crasson
- Julia Crenshaw
- Zeb Crowder
- Adeline Crump
- Bill Crump
- Charlie Crump
- Mattie Curtis
- Charles Lee Dalton
- John Daniels
- Harriet Ann Daves
- Jerry Davis
- W.S. Debnam
- Sarah Debro
- Charles W. Dickens
- Margaret E. Dickens
- Rev. Squire Dowd
- Fannie Dunn
- Jennylin Dunn
- Lucy Ann Dunn
- Tempie Herndon Durham
- George Eatman
- Doc Edwards
- John Evans
- Lindsey Faucette
- Ora M. Flagg
- Analiza Foster
- Georgianna Foster
- Frank Freeman
- Addy Gill
- Robert Glenn
- Sarah Anne Green
- Dorcas Griffeth
- Sarah Gudger
- Thomas Hall
- Hecter Hamilton
- George W. Harris
- Sarah Harris
- Cy Hart
- Alonzo Haywood
- Barbara Haywood
- Isabell Henderson
- Essex Henry
- Milly Henry
- Chaney Hews
- Joe High
- Susan High
- Kitty Hill
- Jerry Hinton
- Martha Adeline Hinton
- Robert Hinton
- William George Hinton
- Eustace Hodges
- Alex Huggins
- Charlie H. Hunter
- Elbert Hunter
These volumes of slave narratives are the product of the Federal Writers Project sponsored by the Library of Congress and the Work Project Administration. They consist of verbatim records of personal interviews with former slaves conducted during 1936-1938
"These life histories, taken down as far as possible in the narrators' words, constitute an invaluable body of unconscious evidence or indirect source material, . . . The narratives belong to folk history—history recovered from the memories and lips of participants or eye-witnesses,” This is volume one for the state of North Carolina. (Summary by Larry Wilson)
"These life histories, taken down as far as possible in the narrators' words, constitute an invaluable body of unconscious evidence or indirect source material, . . . The narratives belong to folk history—history recovered from the memories and lips of participants or eye-witnesses,” This is volume one for the state of North Carolina. (Summary by Larry Wilson)
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