Been in the Storm So Long_ The Aftermath of Slavery - Leon F. Litwack [486]
107. New York Times, Feb. 15, 1868 (Montgomery, Ala.). See also Christian Recorder, Nov. 16, 1867 (Norfolk); New York Times, June 4 (Washington, D.C.), Aug. 2 (Knoxville and Memphis), Oct. 29 (Augusta and Richmond), 30 (Macon and Savannah), 1867.
Selected Bibliography
This bibliography is confined to books, articles, and government documents that have been cited more than once in the Notes.
Abbott, Martin. The Freedmen’s Bureau in South Carolina, 1865–1872. Chapel Hill, 1967.
An Address by the Colored People of Missouri to the Friends of Equal Rights. [State Executive Committee for Equal Political Rights in Missouri] St. Louis, 1865.
[African Methodist Episcopal Church]. Proceedings of the Forty-eighth Annual Session of the Baltimore Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, April 13th, 1865. Baltimore, 1865.
Albert, Mrs. Octavia V. Rogers. The House of Bondage, or Charlotte Brooks and Other Slaves. New York, 1891.
Alvord, John W. Semi-Annual Report on Schools for Freedmen. Washington, D.C., 1867–1870.
Ames, Mary. From a New England Woman’s Diary in Dixie in 1865. Springfield, Mass., 1906.
Anderson, Ephraim M. Memoirs: Historical and Personal; including the Campaigns of the First Missouri Confederate Brigade. St. Louis, 1868.
Andrews, Eliza Frances. The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl, 1864–1865. New York, 1908.
Andrews, Matthew Page (ed.). The Women of the South in War Times. Baltimore, 1920.
Andrews, Sidney. The South Since the War: As Shown by Fourteen Weeks of Travel and Observation in Georgia and the Carolinas. Boston, 1866.
Aptheker, Herbert. American Negro Slave Revolts. New York, 1943.
———. A Documentary History of the Negro People in the United States. New York, 1951.
———. “Notes on Slave Conspiracies in Confederate Mississippi.” Journal of Negro History XXIX (1944), 75–79.
Armstrong, Mrs. M. F., and Helen W. Ludlow. Hampton and Its Students. By Two of Its Teachers. New York, 1875.
Armstrong, Orland Kay. Old Massa’s People: The Old Slaves Tell Their Story. Indianapolis, 1931.
Avary, Myrta Lockett. Dixie After the War. New York, 1906.
Ball, William W. The State That Forgot: South Carolina’s Surrender to Democracy. Indianapolis, 1932.
Basler, Roy P. (ed.). The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. 8 vols. New Brunswick, N.J., 1953.
Beatty, John. The Citizen Soldier; or Memoirs of a Volunteer. Cincinnati, 1879.
Bennett, Andrew J. The Story of the First Massachusetts Light Battery. Boston, 1886.
Bentley, George R. A History of the Freedmen’s Bureau. Philadelphia, 1955.
Berlin, Ira. Slaves Without Masters: The Free Negro in the Antebellum South. New York, 1974.
Bettersworth, John K. Confederate Mississippi Baton Rouge, 1943.
———(ed.). Mississippi in the Confederacy: As They Saw It. Baton Rouge, 1961.
Blassingame, John W. Black New Orleans, 1860–1880. Chicago, 1973.
———. “The Recruitment of Colored Troops in Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri, 1863–1865.” The Historian XXIX (1967), 533–45.
———(ed.). Slave Testimony: Two Centuries of Letters, Speeches, Interviews, and Autobiographies. Baton Rouge, 1977.
Botume, Elizabeth Hyde. First Days Amongst the Contrabands. Boston, 1893.
Bradford, Sarah.