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Introduction | ||
I Ain't Never Been a Slave | 3 | |
Old Joe Can Keep His Two Bits | 7 | |
Mules Be Eatin', and Niggers Be Eatin' | 11 | |
They Planted the Silver in the Field | 16 | |
Escapes Whipping by Pulling Frock Coattail | 18 | |
Today's Folks Don't Know Nothin' | 25 | |
Sho I Believes in Spirits | 34 | |
I Runned Most of the Way | 37 | |
A Conjure What Didn't Work | 39 | |
The Yankees Was a Harricane | 43 | |
We Et Like Li'l Pigs | 46 | |
Cornshuckin' Was the Greates' Thing | 49 | |
This Was That Long Ago | 52 | |
Hongry for Punkin Pie | 62 | |
I Had Many Masters | 66 | |
The Patriarch Abraham Saw the Stars Fall | 70 | |
How to Make Em "Teethe Easy" | 73 | |
Cures and "Cunjer" | 76 | |
Chasing Guinea Jim, the Runaway Slave | 81 | |
Massa Had a Way of Looking at You | 87 | |
Peter Had No Keys Ceptin' His'n | 92 | |
These Uppity Niggers | 98 | |
What I Keer About Bein' Free? | 100 | |
I Loved to Pick That Box | 102 | |
I Would Talk a Lot for a Dime | 104 | |
Cabins As Far As You Could See | 107 | |
In Slavery Time | 110 | |
Ole Joe Had Real 'Ligion | 113 | |
White Hen Is Heaps of Company | 117 | |
Gittin' My Pension | 119 | |
The Overseer's Mean | 128 | |
I Heard Lincoln Set Us Free | 133 | |
Sometime an Old Nigger Die | 139 | |
Mad Bout Somep'n So They Had a War | 143 | |
Us Gwine Walk Them Gold Streets | 147 | |
Chillun Was Mannerable | 150 | |
Hid Things They Ain't Never Found | 155 | |
I Warn't No Common Slave | 157 | |
The Court Jester | 160 | |
I Can't Read No Writin' | 163 | |
The Called Us McCullough's Free Niggers | 166 | |
She Can Just Remember Her Husband's Name | 169 | |
Homesick for Old Scenes | 172 | |
Wed in the White Folks' Parlor | 175 | |
Plantation Punishment | 178 | |
Wealth in the Bodies and Souls of Men Was Slipping Away | 182 |
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Add Weren't No Good Times: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Alabama, From 1936 to 1938, the Federal Writers' Project (FWP), a part of the New Deal's Works Progress Administration, hired writers, editors, and researchers to interview as many former slaves as they could find and document their lives during slavery. More than, Weren't No Good Times: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Alabama to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Weren't No Good Times: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Alabama, From 1936 to 1938, the Federal Writers' Project (FWP), a part of the New Deal's Works Progress Administration, hired writers, editors, and researchers to interview as many former slaves as they could find and document their lives during slavery. More than, Weren't No Good Times: Personal Accounts of Slavery in Alabama to your collection on WonderClub |