Part 28 (1/2)
Louisiana Historical a.s.sociation [1963] 260 p. E445.L8T3 Bibliography: p. 239-252.
877 Trefousse, Hans L. The radical Republicans; Lincoln's vanguard for racial justice. New York, Knopf, 1969 [c1968] xiv, 492, xvii p. illus., ports. E449.T79 Bibliography: p. 471-492.
877a Turner, Edward R. The Negro in Pennsylvania, slavery-servitude-freedom, 1639-1861. Was.h.i.+ngton, American Historical a.s.sociation, 1911. 314 p. (Prize essays of the American Historical a.s.sociation, 1910) E185.93.P41T9 To this essay was awarded the Justin Winsor Prize in American History for 1910.
Bibliography: p. 255-294.
878 Turner, Nat. The confessions of Nat Turner, the leader of the late insurrection in Southampton, Va., as fully and voluntarily made to Thomas R. Gray, in the prison where he was confined.
Richmond, T. R. Gray, 1832. 24 p. F232.S7T9
879 Wade, Richard C. Slavery in the cities; the South, 1820-1860.
New York, Oxford University Press, 1964. 340 p. E443.W3 Bibliographical references included in ”Notes” (p. [287]-323).
880 Walker, David. David Walker's appeal, in four articles, together with a preamble, to the coloured citizens of the world, but in particular, and very expressly, to those of the United States of America. Edited and with an introduction by Charles M. Wiltse.
New York, Hill and w.a.n.g [1965] 78 p. (American century series, AC73) E446.W178 Reprint of the 1929 ed.
Bibliographical footnotes.
881 Wish, Harvey, _ed._ Slavery in the South; first-hand accounts of the ante-bellum American Southland from northern & southern whites, Negroes, & foreign observers. New York, Farrar, Straus [1964] xxi, 290 p. facsim. (Materials of American history series) E441.W78 Bibliography: p. [xxiii].
882 Zilversmit, Arthur. First emanc.i.p.ation; the abolition of slavery in the North. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1967] 262 p.
E446.Z5 ”Bibliography essay”: p. [245]-250.
17-HISTORY-Reconstruction
883 Abbott, Martin. The Freedmen's Bureau in South Carolina, 1865-1872. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1967] 162 p. F274.A23 Bibliography: p. [145]-158.
884 Allen, James S. Reconstruction; the battle for democracy (1865-1876). New York, International Publishers [c1937] 256 p.
illus. [A history of the American people] E668.A45 ”Selected bibliography”: p. 249-252.
884a Andrews, Sidney. The South since the war, as shown by fourteen weeks of travel and observation in Georgia and the Carolinas.
Boston, Ticknor and Fields, 1866. 400 p. F216.A56
885 Bentley, George R. A history of the Freedmen's Bureau.
Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, 1955. 298 p. E185.2.B4 Thesis-University of Wisconsin.
Bibliography: p. 266-279.
886 Botume, Elizabeth H. First days amongst the contrabands. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 286 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.93.S7B7 1968 Reprint of the 1893 ed., with a new introduction.
887 Brock, William R. An American crisis: Congress and Reconstruction, 1865-1867. [New York] St. Martin's Press [1963]
312 p. E668.B85 ”Bibliographical note”: p. 305.
888 Bruce, Philip A. The plantation Negro as a freeman; observations on his character, condition, and prospects in Virginia. New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1889. 262 p. (Questions of the day, no. 57) E185.6.B88
889 Buckmaster, Henrietta, _pseud._ Freedom bound. New York, Macmillan [1965] 185 p. E185.2.B9 Bibliography: p. 183-184.
890 Carter, Hodding. The angry scar; the story of Reconstruction.
Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1959. 425 p. (Mainstream of America series) E668.C3 Bibliography: p. [411]-414.
891 Coulter, Ellis M. The South during Reconstruction, 1865-1877.