By Topic
- 401
- Slavery, Abolition, and Emancipation
- Resources including slave narratives, biographies of abolitionists, images, poetry, links, and further readings.
- 402
- Thomas A. Edison in Menlo Park
- Maps, local references, photographs, and excerpts from a local history book regarding Edison's activities in Menlo Park, New Jersey.
- 403
- Thomas Alva Edison's Boyhood
- Articles about his early life in Port Huron, Michigan and his boyhood home.
- 404
- Groton In The Witchcraft Times
- Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society Boston, 1883, 1-29, 3rd series.
- 407
- The Malleus Maleficarum
- Unabridged online republication of the 1928 edition. Introduction to the 1948 edition is also included. Translation, notes, and two introductions by Montague Summers.
- 410
- Witch Hunts (A.D. 1400-1800)
- Articles and essays about Europeans' heightened concern with the phenomenon of witchcraft during the early modern era, including materials about specific witch-hunt episodes in Europe and America.
- 411
- Black Seminole Slave Rebellion: Toolkit of facts
- Guide to facts, primary and secondary sources on the slave rebellion led by Black Seminoles in Florida from 1835-1838, documenting claim it was the largest slave revolt in U.S. history.
- 412
- Death or Liberty: Gabriel, Nat Turner and John Brown
- Exploration of three 19th-century events in Virginia that focused America's attention on slavery: Gabriel's Conspiracy, Nat Turner's Rebellion, and John Brown's Raid on Harpers Ferry.
- 413
- Dred Scott v. Sandford
- Contains the text of the Supreme Court case and primary source materials from the online collections of the Library of Congress.
- 414
- Fortune's Story
- The story of Fortune was an African American man enslaved in a Connecticut farming community, in Waterbury, includes curriculum materials and student activities.
- 415
- North American Slave Narratives
- Collection of all narratives of fugitive and former slaves published in English up to 1920 and many related biographies, from University of North Carolina's Documenting the American South.
- 416
- Slavery - The Peculiar Institution
- Exhibit that explores the methods used by Africans and their American-born descendants to resist enslavement, as well as to demand emancipation and full participation in American society.
- 417
- Slavery in the United States
- Jenny B. Wahl of Carleton College describes the spread of slaveholding, its legal, social, and economic underpinnings, with graphs and tables of statistics.
- 418
- Voices from the Days of Slavery, Audio Interviews
- Sound recordings of former slaves describing their lives, from the Library of Congress.
