Black Volunteers in the Nation’s First Epidemic
1794
Read Absalom Jones and Richard Allen’s narrative of the African American community’s response to the 1793 yellow fever epidemic.
Phillis Wheatley’s poem on tyranny and slavery
1772
Take a deep dive into one of Wheatley's best-known poems.
Reconstruction and Citizenship
with Eric Foner
Discover the changes in definitions of citizenship before, during, and after the Civil War.
Slave Patrol Contract
1856
Explore an effort to enforce North Carolina’s slave codes in 1856.
The First Age of Reform
by Ronald G. Walters
Learn more about the debates related to colonization in the context of other antebellum reform movements.
The Dred Scott Decision and Its Bitter Legacy
1800–1858
Dred Scott’s case before the US Supreme Court challenged the nation on slavery, citizenship, and state sovereignty.
A bond for the manumission of an enslaved woman
1757
View and develop an understanding of this manumission bond.
Study Aid: Slavery and the Law in Seventeenth-Century Virginia
1662–1691
Explore a timeline of laws pertaining to slavery in Virginia from 1662 to 1691.
Connections Between the American and Haitian Revolutions
by Laurent Dubois
Understand the relationship between the Haitian Revolution and American Revolution.
Frederick Douglass: From Slavery to Freedom
by Steven Mintz
Read about Frederick Douglass from his childhood and youth as an enslaved person and his legacy as a leading abolitionist and equal rights advocate.
Clarksdale: Myth, Music, and Mercy in the Mississippi Delta
by Shelley Ritter
Read about musician Muddy Waters, the blues, and the historical exhibits at the Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale, Mississippi.
A Journal of the Proceedings in the Detection of the Conspiracy
1744
Read an excerpt from a 1741 revolt of enslaved people, free Black people, and “Some White People” in colonial New York.
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