American Negro Slavery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about American Negro Slavery.

American Negro Slavery eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 680 pages of information about American Negro Slavery.
Coromantees, conspiracy of,
  tribal traits of
Corporations, ownership of slaves by
Cotton culture,
  sea-island
  introduction of,
    methods and scale of
  upland,
    engrossment of thought and energy by
    improvements in
    methods and scale of
    stimulates westward migration
Cotton gin, invention of
Cotton mills
  slave operatives in
Cotton plantations, see plantations, cotton
Cotton prices, sea-island,
  upland,
    chart facing
Cottonseed,
  oil extracted from
  used as fertilizer
Covington, Leonard, planter, migration of
Creoles, Louisiana
Criminality among free negroes
  among slaves
Cuba

Dabney, Thomas S., planter, migration of
Dahomeys
Dale, Sir Thomas
Davis, Joseph and Jefferson, plantation policy of
Delaware,
  slaves and free negroes in
  forbids export of slaves
Depression, financial,
  in Mississippi
  in Virginia
Dirt-eating, among Jamaica slaves
Discipline, of slaves
Diseases,
  characteristic,
    in Africa
    among Jamaica slaves
  venereal
Doctors, black,
  in Jamaica
  in South Carolina
  in Virginia
“Doctoress,” slave, in Georgia
Drivers (plantation foremen)
Driving of slaves to death, question of
Dutch, in the slave trade
Dutch West India Company

Early, Peter, debates the closing of the foreign slave trade
East India Company, in the slave trade
Eboes, tribal traits of
El Mina
Elliott, William, planter
  economic views of
Ellsworth, Oliver
Emancipation, see manumission
Encomiendia system, in the Spanish West Indies
England, policy of, toward the slave trade
Epitaph of Peyton, a slave
Evans, Henry, negro preacher

Factorage, in planters’ dealings
Factorage, in the slave trade,
    in American ports
    in Guinea
Farmers,
  free negro
  white,
    in the Piedmont
    in the plantation colonies
    segregation of
    in the westward movement
Federal Convention
Festivities, of slaves
Fithian, Philip V., observations by
Foremen, plantation
Foulahs
Fowler, J.W.,
  cotton picking records of
  plantation rules of
Franklin and Armfield, slave-dealers
Free negroes,
  antipathy toward
  criminality among
  discriminations against
  emigration projects of
  endorsements of
  kidnapping of
  legal seizure of, attempts at
  mob violence against
  occupations of, in Augusta
  in Charleston
  in New Orleans and New York
  prominent characters among
  processes of procuring freedom by
  qualities and status of
  reenslavement of
  secret societies among
  slaveholding by
French, in the slave trade
Fugitive slaves, see slaves, runaway, rendition, in the Federal Constitution,
   act of 1793
Funerals, negro

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
American Negro Slavery from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.