Antislavery movements -- United States -- History -- 19th century
Label
Antislavery movements -- United States -- History -- 19th century
Name
Antislavery movements
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Contesting slavery, the politics of bondage and freedom in the new American nation, edited by John Craig Hammond and Matthew Mason
- Truth stranger than fiction, race, realism, and the U.S. literary marketplace, Augusta Rohrbach
- The works of James McCune Smith, Black intellectual and abolitionist, edited by John Stauffer ; foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr
- Fleeing for freedom, stories of the Underground Railroad, as told by Levi Coffin and William Still ; edited with an introduction by George and Willene Hendrick
- Douglass and Lincoln, how a revolutionary black leader and a reluctant liberator struggled to end slavery and save the Union, Paul Kendrick and Stephen Kendrick
- Ecstatic nation, confidence, crisis, and compromise, 1848-1877, Brenda Wineapple
- African-American activism before the Civil War, the freedom struggle in the antebellum North, edited by Patrick Rael
- Impossible witnesses, truth, abolitionism, and slave testimony, Dwight A. McBride
- John Brown's war against slavery, Robert E. McGlone
- Abolitionist politics and the coming of the Civil War, James Brewer Stewart
- Passages to freedom, the Underground Railroad in history and memory, edited by David W. Blight
- We are the revolutionists, German-speaking immigrants & American abolitionists after 1848, Mischa Honeck
- Searching for Jim, slavery in Sam Clemens's world, Terrell Dempsey
- The underground rail road, a record of facts, authentic narratives, letters, &c., narrating the hardships, hair-breadth escapes, and death struggles of the slaves in their efforts for freedom as related by themselves and others, or witnessed by the author, together with sketches of some of the largest stockholders, and most liberal aiders and advisers, of the road, by William Still
- Unsung, unheralded narratives of American slavery & abolition, The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture ; foreword by series editor Kevin Young ; edited with an introduction by Michelle D. Commander
- Antislavery violence, sectional, racial, and cultural conflict in antebellum America, edited by John R. McKivigan and Stanley Harrold
- Lincoln and the abolitionists, Stanley Harrold
- The Underground Railroad in Michigan, Carol E. Mull
- The underground railroad, Laurie Collier Hillstrom
- Selling antislavery, abolition and mass media in antebellum America, Teresa A Goddu
- All on fire, William Lloyd Garrison and the abolition of slavery, Henry Mayer
- Gateway to freedom, the hidden history of the underground railroad, Eric Foner
- The problem of slavery in the age of emancipation, David Brion Davis
- Toussaint Louverture and the American Civil War, the promise and peril of a second Haitian revolution, Matthew J. Clavin
- Lest we forget, the passage from Africa to slavery and emancipation, Velma Maia Thomas
- Abolitionists remember, antislavery autobiographies & the unfinished work of emancipation, Julie Roy Jeffrey
- Of one blood, abolitionism and the origins of racial equality, Paul Goodman
- John Brown, one man against slavery, by Gwen Everett ; paintings by Jacob Lawrence
- The black hearts of men, radical abolitionists and the transformation of race, John Stauffer
- John Brown, the legend revisited, Merrill D. Peterson
- A political companion to Frederick Douglass, edited by Neil Roberts
- The body
- The debate over slavery, antislavery and proslavery liberalism in antebellum America, David F. Ericson
- The rise of aggressive abolitionism, addresses to the slaves, Stanley Harrold
- "Fire from the midst of you", a religious life of John Brown, Louis A. DeCaro, Jr
- Border war, fighting over slavery before the Civil War, Stanley Harrold
- My bondage and my freedom, Frederick Douglass
- To live an antislavery life, personal politics and the antebellum Black middle class, Erica L. Ball
- Harriet Tubman, imagining a life, Beverly Lowry
- The underground railroad, William Still
- Harriet Tubman, the road to freedom, Catherine Clinton
- The spirit of David Walker, the obscure hero, James S. Peters II
- The tie that bound us, the women of John Brown's family and the legacy of radical abolitionism, Bonnie Laughlin-Schultz
- The lives of Frederick Douglass, Robert S. Levine
- Abolition and the press, the moral struggle against slavery, Ford Risley
- When slavery was called freedom, evangelicalism, proslavery, and the causes of the Civil War, John Patrick Daly
- Crusade against slavery, friends, foes, and reforms, 1820-1860, Louis Filler
- Polemical pain, slavery, cruelty, and the rise of humanitarianism, Margaret Abruzzo
- The crusade against slavery, 1830-1860
- John Brown, abolitionist, the man who killed slavery, sparked the Civil War, and seeded civil rights, David S. Reynolds
Outgoing Resources
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