Slave Narrative Collection

The Slave Narrative Collection, a group of autobiographical accounts of former slaves, today stands as one of the most enduring and noteworthy achievements of the WPA, Compiled in seventeen states during the years 1936-38, the collection consists of more than two thousand interviews with former slaves, most of them first-person accounts of slave life and the respondents’ own reactions to bondage.

The Black Presence in the Writers’ Project

While African Americans were virtually excluded from Writers’ Projects in several Southern states, the pattern was not universal. In several states–notably Virginia, Louisiana, and Florida–ambitious black units flourished; in several others the number of black workers fluctuated in response to work quotas. And the energies of the black writers were directed almost exclusively to the collection of materials pertaining to African-American culture.

The relative paucity of black personnel on the Writers’ Project makes their accomplishments all the more impressive. In addition to the collection and preparation of materials for the state guides, African-American workers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Florida, and Virginia engaged in research studies on black history and culture. The Washington office of the FWP also contemplated publishing a history of the antislavery struggle “from the Negro point of view”; development of a comprehensive bibliography of writings on African-American culture; and the compilation of a documentary record of events in the history of the Underground Railroad. Sterling A. Brown, whose unstinting support and encouragement sustained each of those efforts, had personally formulated plans for the publication of a volume that would draw substantially upon Writers’ Project materials obtained by black researchers. These studies were curtailed and publication plans based upon them thwarted, however, by the abrupt termination of the Writers’ Project in 1939. Only The Negro in Virginia, a product of that state’s black unit directed by Roscoe E. Lewis and one of the outstanding achievements of the Writers’ Project, attained publication.

Limitations of these narratives–

…At best with the awareness that a totalizing of history cannot be reconstructed from these interested, selective, and fragmentary accounts and with an acknowledgment of the interventionist role of the interpreter, the equally interested labor of historical revision, and the impossibility of reconstituting the past free from the disfigurements of present concerns. With all these provisos issued, these narratives nonetheless remain an important source for understanding the everyday experience of slavery and its aftermath….

Saidiya V. Hartman, Scenes of Subjection: Terror, Slavery, and Self-Making in Nineteenth-Century America (New York, 1997), 11.

Portraits of African American ex-slaves from the U.S. Works Progress Administration, Federal Writers’ Project slave narratives collections

Martin Jackson, ex-slave, San Antonio. United States San Antonio Texas, 1937. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/99615314/.
James Green, ex-slave, San Antonio. United States San Antonio Texas, 1937. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/99615295/.
Albert Todd, ex-slave, San Antonio. United States San Antonio Texas, 1937. July 9. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/99615382/.

William Branch, 322 Utah St. San Antonio, TX (Federal Writers’ Project: Slave Narrative Project, Vol. 16, Texas, Part 1, Adams-Duhon. 1936. Manuscript/Mixed Material. p.149)

Adeline Cunningham, 1210 Florida St. (ibid. p.273).

Sans Souci

More attitude than residence.

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Le fils du commandant Rosier-By.

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Ruines du Palais de Sans-Souci, a Milot (exterieur).

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The ruins of Christophe’s palace of Sans Souci.

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The summer residence of the emperor at Potsdam.

Public Domain at NYPL

Browsing through the Public Domain Collection of the NYPL. There is a residency attached to this project.

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Carte hydrogeologique de la Republique d’Haiti. Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division

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Le véhicule, chargé de négresses(sounds like Room Full, Paul!) Paul Reboux, 1919. Schomburg General Research and Reference Division

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Saint-Domingue a la veille de la revolution.

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Le Champ-de-Mars a Port-au-Prince ; La foule a l’inauguration de la statue de Dessalines. Sténio Vincent(president 1930-1941), 1910.

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L’arbre de justice, a l’ombre duquel le Roi Christophe jugeait parfois ses sujets. 1926

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Philippe Guerrier, président d’Haïti. (1844-1845). Nouvelle géographie de l’île d’Haïti: contenant des notions historiques et topographiques sur les autres Antilles, par Dantès Fortunat. 1888

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The caco (guerilla fighter opposed to the US occupation of Haiti, led by François Borgia Charlemagne Peralte) in the foreground killed an American Marine. Harry Alverson Franck, 1920.