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Databases (Open Access)
Voices Remembering Slavery: Freed People Tell Their Stories
The Library of Congress possesses the recordings of former slaves in Voices Remembering Slavery: Freed People Tell Their Stories took place between 1932 and 1975 in nine states. Twenty-three interviewees discuss how they felt about slavery, slaveholders, coercion of slaves, their families, and freedom. Several individuals sing songs, many of which were learned during the time of their enslavement. It is important to note that all of the interviewees spoke sixty or more years after the end of their enslavement, and it is their full lives that are reflected in these recordings. The individuals documented in this presentation have much to say about living as African Americans from the 1870s to the 1930s, and beyond.
Digital History
Digital History explores the Reconstruction Era. With some primary sources and historical analysis, Digital History is an easy way to explore the timeline of Reconstruction.
The Journal of Negro History- The Ku Klux Klan During Reconstruction: The South Carolina Episode
Herbert Shapiro writes the account of the establishment of the KKK and their activity in South Carolina. This includes accounts of racial violence against both newly freed Blacks and government officials sympathetic to Reconstruction efforts
PBS: Reconstruction
Henry Louis Gates Jr. presents a vital new four-hour documentary series on Reconstruction: America After the Civil War. The series explores the transformative years following the American Civil War, when the nation struggled to rebuild itself in the face of profound loss, massive destruction, and revolutionary social change. The twelve years that composed the post-war Reconstruction era (1865-77) witnessed a seismic shift in the meaning and makeup of our democracy, with millions of former slaves and free black people seeking out their rightful place as equal citizens under the law. Though tragically short-lived, this bold democratic experiment was, in the words of W. E. B. Du Bois, a ‘brief moment in the sun’ for African Americans, when they could advance, and achieve, education, exercise their right to vote, and run for and win public office.