Read Slavery by Another Name Online
Authors: Douglas A. Blackmon
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ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS
The Peonage Files of the U.S. Department of Justice, 1901–1945. Department of Justice, Record Group
60, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Booker T. Washington Papers, Volumes 1–14. Urbana: University of Il inois Press, 1972,
ht p://www.historycooperative.org/btw.
ARTICLES, PAMPHLETS, MANUSCRIPTS, SPEECHES
Abernathy, C. A. “The Birth of Calcis: Founding of Calcis, Turner Brothers, Justice Store, and Our
‘Historical’ House: The Community, Its Historical Importance, and Our Family Ties to It.” Unpublished
typescript, Nov. 1, 1992. Author's col ection.
Al en, Alvaran Snow. “The Story of a Lie: By Convict No. 2939, Himself 15 Years in Prison.” Pamphlet
printed by Mission Printing Company, Tulsa, c. 1926. Author's col ection.
Armes, Ethel. “The Ironmasters of Alabama.” Advance Magazine 3, no. 15 (November 17, 1906).
Blackmon, Douglas. A. “Hard Time: From Alabama's Past, Capitalism and Racism in a Cruel
Partnership.” Wal Street Journal, July 16, 2001, p. 1.
——-. “Silent Partner: How the South's Fight to Uphold Segregation Was Funded Up North.” Wal Street
Journal, June 11, 1999.
Bunn, J. Michael. “Slavery in the Shelby Iron Works During the Civil War.” Shelby County Historical
Quarterly, March 2003.
Carper, N. Gordon. “Martin Tabert, Martyr of an Era.” Florida Historical Quarterly 52 (October 1973).
Carter, Catherine McRee. “History of Kinderlou, Georgia, 1860–1940.” Unpublished typescript, Dec.
1940. Author's col ection.
Cohen, Wil iam. “Negro Involuntary Servitude in the South, 1865–1940: A Preliminary Analysis.”
Journal of Southern History, February 1976.
Col ins, Donald E., ed. “A Georgian's View of Alabama in 1836.” Alabama Review, January 1972.
Cory, Marielou Armstrong. “History of the Ladies Memorial Association,” 1902,
www.monumentpreservation.com/monument/history.html.
Cot ingham, Anna Blanche. The Cot ingham's of Bibb County: Vol. 1. Ada, Okla.: Pontotoc County
Historical and Genealogical Society, 1970.
Drobney, Je rey A. “Where Palm and Pine Are Blowing: Convict Labor in the North Florida Turpentine
Industry, 1877–1923.” Florida Historical Quarterly 72, no. 4 (1994), pp. 411–34.
El is, R. H. “The Calhoun School, Miss Charlot e Thorn's ‘Lighthouse on the Hil ’ in Lowndes County,
Alabama.” Alabama Review 37, no. 3 (1984). Golubo , Risa L. “The Thirteenth Amendment and the
Lost Origins of Civil Rights.” Duke Law Journal 50, no. 6 (2001). Graves, John Temple, ed. “Bibb
County History,” in The Book of Alabama and the South. Birmingham: Protective Life Insurance Co.,
1933.
Grossman, Jonathan. “Black Studies in the Department of Labor, 1897–1907.” Monthly Labor Review,
June 1974.
Harrison, Shelby M. “A Cash-Nexus for Crime”; “The Human Side of Large Outputs, Steel and Steel
Workers in Six American States, Part IV, Birmingham District: Labor Conservation.” The Survey, Jan.
6, 1912. “Keystone Lime Company.” Columbiana Sentinel, Sept. 7, 1905.
SCHS. Langston, Cirrenia. “Childhood Memories of the War Between the States.” Centrevil e Press,
March 14, 1934.
Logan, Eugenia Wal ace. Copy of typescript of oral history, 1935. Author's col ection.
MacKnight, J. A. “Columbiana: The Gem of the Hil s.” Published by the Shelby County Sentinel, c.
1907.
SCHS. McNeil , Mary Ann (Cobb) Johnson. “Cobb History and Stories.” Unpublished manuscript, n.d.,
ht p://www.mytree.net/gen/showhistory.php?docID=53. “The New Slavery in the South, an
Autobiography.” Independent, Feb. 25, 1904.
O cial Programme of Daily Events, Cot on States and International Exposition, Dec. 30, 1895 (Atlanta:
C. P. Byrd). Author's col ection. Roosevelt, Theodore. “Expansion of the White Races.” Speech to
Methodist Episcopal Church celebration of the African Diamond Jubilee, Washington, D.C., Jan. 18,
1909.
Seales, Bobby Joe. “Shelby Iron Company: Brief History of Shelby Iron Co.” Shelby County Historical
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——-. “Siluria Cot on Mil Company.” SCHS, ht p://www.rootsweb.com/~alshelby/SiluriaMil s.html.