Antislavery movements -- United States
Label
Antislavery movements -- United States
Name
Antislavery movements
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of23
- Black mutiny, the revolt on the schooner Amistad, by William A. Owens ; with introductions by Derrick Bell and Michael E. Dyson
- The Amistad rebellion, an Atlantic odyssey of slavery and freedom, Marcus Rediker
- In memory, Angelina Grimké Weld, born in Charleston, South Carolina, Feb. 20, 1805, died in Hyde Park, Massachusetts, October 26, 1879
- She came to slay, the life and times of Harriet Tubman, Erica Armstrong Dunbar
- Maria W. Stewart, America's first Black woman political writer, essays and speeches, edited and introduced by Marilyn Richardson
- The abolitionists, American Experience Films presents ; executive producer, Sharon Grimberg ; written, produced & directed by Rob Rapley ; an Apograph Productions Inc. film for American Experience ; a production of WGBH
- Race and revolution, Gary B. Nash
- La rebelion del Amistad, patrimonio histórico de Sierra Leona y Estados Unidos, por Arthur Abraham
- An appeal in favor of that class of Americans called Africans, Lydia Maria Child ; edited with an introduction by Carolyn L. Karcher
- The Amistad revolt, an historical legacy of Sierra Leone and the United States, by Arthur Abraham
- Harriet Tubman, Rebecca Price Janney
- Race and the rise of the Republican Party, 1848-1865, James D. Bilotta
- Trial and imprisonment of Jonathan Walker, at Pensacola, Florida, for aiding slaves to escape from bondage., With an appendix, containing a sketch of his life
- The Frederick Douglass papers, John W. Blassingame, John R. McKivigan, and Peter P. Hinks, editors ; Gerald Fulkerson, textual editor ; James H. Cook, Victoria C. Gruber, and C. Jane Holtan, editorial assistants, Series two
- La révolte de L'Amistad, un legs historique de la Sierra Leone et des États-Unis, par Arthur Abraham
- Frederick Douglass, self-made man, Timothy Sandefur
- Frederick Douglass, in his own words, edited by Milton Meltzer ; illustrated by Stephen Alcorn
- Frederick Douglass, William S. McFeely
- This noble woman, Myrtilla Miner and her fight to establish a school for African American girls in the slaveholding South, Michael M. Greenburg
- Black women abolitionists, a study in activism, 1828-1860, Shirley J. Yee
- Life and times of Frederick Douglass, written by himself
- The life and legend of Sojourner Truth, produced, directed and written by Lynn C. Spangler
Outgoing Resources
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