The Aftermath of Slavery

William A. Sinclair (1858 - 1912)

This work describes conditions and forces the black population of the South faced after freedom was brought by the Civil War. As Sinclair puts it at the outset of his book, ". . . the chief efforts of Southern leadership have been to curtail the freedom of the colored people, to minimize their liberty and reduce them as nearly as possible to the condition of chattel slaves." - Summary by Jim Locke

Genre(s): History, Social Science (Culture & Anthropology)

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 Slavery and Its Abolition 1 Jim Locke
00:34:21
Play 02 Slavery and Its Abolition 2 Jim Locke
00:36:22
Play 03 Reconstruction and the Southern Black Code 1 Jim Locke
00:38:52
Play 04 Reconstruction and the Southern Black Code 2 Jim Locke
00:37:35
Play 05 Southern Opposition to Reconstruction 1 Jim Locke
00:32:37
Play 06 Southern Opposition to Reconstruction 2 Jim Locke
00:33:26
Play 07 The War on Negro Suffrage 1 Jim Locke
00:48:32
Play 08 The War on Negro Suffrage 2 Jim Locke
00:45:45
Play 09 The False Alarm of Negro Domination 1 Jim Locke
00:31:38
Play 10 The False Alarm of Negro Domination 2 Jim Locke
00:31:57
Play 11 The Negro in Politics 1 Jim Locke
00:34:00
Play 12 The Negro in Politics 2 Jim Locke
00:33:44
Play 13 The Negro and the Law 1 Jim Locke
00:42:12
Play 14 The Negro and the Law 2 Jim Locke
00:43:33
Play 15 The Rise and Achievements of the Colored Race 1 Jim Locke
00:34:19
Play 16 The Rise and Achievements of the Colored Race 2 Jim Locke
00:32:33
Play 17 The National Duty to the Negro 1 Jim Locke
00:41:50
Play 18 The National Duty to the Negro 2 Jim Locke
00:41:32
Play 19 Public Opinion Omnipotent 1 Jim Locke
00:32:59
Play 20 Public Opinion Omnipotent 2 Jim Locke
00:28:42