Visit this site for factual information on the chronology on slavery from 1790 to the end. The site is organized where it has divided the chronology in three parts. It is a veritable mine house of information with its numerous links to cross-references and exact dates and figures for deeper research.
The site is a visual reference to the Atlantic slave trade with approx 1,200 pictures in eighteen different categories, all pertaining to slavery. These categories serve as rough guides to the contents of the collection. The site can be navigated through a search bar to aid your search beyond the eighteen categories.
This Library of Congress website is a collection of slave narratives from the Federal Writer’s project 1936-1938. It contains 2,300 typewritten narratives comprising over 9,500 page images with searchable text and bibliographic records, and more than 500 photographs of former slaves with links to their corresponding narratives for easy and informative read.
The page that takes one into a broad journey of slavery, offers resources for the study of slavery, abolition, and emancipation across a range of ages. The links on the main page takes one to more specific regions of this website where a wealth of historical, biographical, and bibliographical information is available.




