Slave Narratives: a Folk History of Slavery in the United States From Interviews with Former Slaves, Volume XI, North Carolina Narratives, Part 2

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Various 1941
English
  • John H. Jackson
  • Ben Johnson
  • Isaac Johnson
  • Tina Johnson
  • Bob Jones
  • Clara Jones
  • Clara Jones
  • Abner Jordon
  • Jane Lassiter
  • Dave Lawson
  • Jane Lee
  • Chana Littlejohn
  • Charity McAllister
  • Clara Cotton McCoy
  • Henrietta McCullers
  • Willie McCullough
  • James Turner McLean
  • Frank Magwood
  • Jacob Manson
  • Roberta Manson
  • Millie Markham
  • Maggie Mials
  • Anna Mitchel
  • Patsy Mitchner
  • Emiline Moore
  • Fannie Moore
  • Richard C. Moring
  • Julius Nelson
  • Lila Nichols
  • Martha Organ
  • Ann Parker
  • Amy Penny
  • Lily Perry
  • Valley Perry
  • Tempe Pitts
  • Hannah Plummer
  • Parker Pool
  • Rena Raines
  • Anthony Ransome
  • Caroline Richardson
  • Charity Riddick
  • Simuel Riddick
  • Adora Rienshaw
  • Celia Robinson
  • George Rogers
  • Hattie Rogers
  • Henry Rountree
  • Anderson Scales
  • Catherine Scales
  • Porter Scales
  • William Scott
  • Tiney Shaw
  • John Smith
  • John Smith
  • Josephine Smith
  • Nellie Smith
  • Sarah Ann Smith
  • William Smith
  • Laura Sorrell
  • Ria Sorrell
  • Chaney Spell
  • Tanner Spikes
  • Annie Stephenson
  • Sam T Stewart
  • Emma Stone
  • William Sykes
  • Annie Taylor
  • R.S.Taylor
  • Elias Thomas
  • Jacob Thomas
  • Margaret Thornton
  • Tillie
  • Ellen Trell
  • Henry James Trentham
  • Jane Anne Privette Upperman
  • Ophelia Whitley
  • Tom Wilcox
  • Catharine Williams
  • Rev. Handy Williams
  • John Thomas Williams
  • Lizzie Williams
  • Penny Williams
  • Plaz Williams
  • Melissa Williamson
  • Alex Woods
  • Anna Wright
  • Dilly Yellady
  • Hilliard Yellerday
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 two for the state of North Carolina. - Summary by Larry Wilson

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