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ContentsI. Europeans Come to Western Africa
A. People & Events
 Prince Henry the Navigator
 Elmina Castle, trading outpost and "slave factory"B. Historical Documents
 The Arrival of Europeans in Africa
II. New World Exploration and English AmbitionA. People & Events
III. From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery The Virginia Company of London
 Jamestown Settlement
 English saved by Native AmericansB. Historical Documents
 The Hope of Jamestown
 Landing of Negroes at Jamestown from a Dutch Man-of-War, 1619
 The First Slave Auction at New Amsterdam in 1655
 A Way to Get WealthC. Modern Voices
 Thomas Davis on the differing visions of European settlers
 Thomas Davis on how Europeans handle labor in the New World
 Thomas Davis on the fears about the Spanish and Native Americans
 Thomas Davis on the reality in Jamestown
 Charles Joyner on the origins of the South Carolina colony
 Betty Wood on the propaganda to settle the New World
 Betty Wood on the Europeans' reaction to Native Americans
 Betty Wood on why the English did not use Native Americans for their work force
 Peter Wood on the first settlers who come to America
 Peter Wood on the need for labor in Jamestown
 Peter Wood on English Protestantism
 Betty Wood on the implications of tobacco on labor needs in Virginia
A. People & Events
IV. The African Slave Trade and the Middle Passage Anthony Johnson
 Arrival of first Africans to Virginia Colony
 Africans in court
 Virginia looks toward Africa for labor
 Virgina recognizes slavery
 Royal African Company established
 Bacon's Rebellion
 Samuel Sewall speaks out
 Virginia's slave codesB. Historical Documents
 Portrait of a Negro
 Portrait of the Moorish Woman Katharina
 Colonial laws
 Court document regarding Anthony Johnson
 The Selling of JosephC. Modern Voices
 David Blight on the formation of the Royal African Company
 Timothy Breen on the relationship between black slaves and white indentured servants
 Thomas Davis on the first Africans in Virginia
 Thomas Davis on Anthony Johnson
 Norrece Jones on the early status of Africans in Virginia
 Barry Unsworth on desperation of European slave traders
 Margaret Washington on the change from indentured labor towards enslaved labor
 Margaret Washington on Virginians' concerns about white and black servants
 Margaret Washington on the earliest Africans in Virginia
 Peter Wood on the Africans' arrival in 1619
 Betty Wood on the early status of the Africans in Virginia
 Peter Wood on inheriting the mother's slave status
 Peter Wood on the shift from indentured servitude to lifelong slavery
 Peter Wood on the difference between being a slave and a servant
 Peter Wood on the meaning of indentured sevants
 Peter Wood on the Africans' experience
A. People & Events
V. The Growth of Slavery in North America The Middle Passage
 John Newton
 Olaudah Equiano
 Nicolas Owen
 Efforts to end the slave trade
 Liverpool and the slave tradeB. Historical Documents
 African Captives Yoked in Pairs
 An Englishman Tastes the Sweat of an African
 A View of Calabar
 Broadside announcing the sale of slaves
 Living Africans Thrown Overboard
 Alexander Falconbridge's account of the slave trade
 Plan of a ship for transporting slaves
 Frontispiece of Equiano's autobiography
 Equiano's autobiography
 The Slave Trade (Morland)
 The Goree Warehouses, Liverpool
 Slave with Iron Muzzle
 The Slave Trade (Biard)
 Interior of a Slave Ship
 The Slave Chain
 Insurrection on Board a Slave Ship
 The Slave Deck of the Bark "Wildfire"
 Slave Caravans on the Road
 Slave Offered in the Market
 Slaves Left to DieC. Modern Voices
 Catherine Ancholou on the importance of Equiano's narrative
 Catherine Ancholou on how Africans reacted to the possibility of being stolen into slavery
 Catherine Ancholou on Equiano's family's reaction when told about Equiano's story
 Catherine Ancholou on Equiano's people
 Catherine Ancholou on the difference between African slavery and American slavery
 David Blight on the meaning of British participation in the slave trade
 Charles Joyner on the Middle Passage
 Asoka Perbi on the impact of kidnappings on people's lifestyles
 Barry Unsworth on how slave traders kept control of the ship
 Barry Unsworth on what drew Europeans to be slave traders
 Barry Unsworth on how slavers looked upon the Africans
 Barry Unsworth on the slave crew
 Barry Unsworth on the Middle Passage
 Barry Unsworth on the threat of fasting during the Middle Passage
 Margaret Washington on the relationships between Europeans and Africans
A. People and Events
 Arthur Middleton
 New York: The Revolt of 1712
 The Stono Rebellion
 Witchhunt in New York: The 1741 rebellionB. Historical Documents
 William Byrd's diary
 Runaway notices
 Report from William Bull re. Stono Rebellion
 Report re. Stono Rebellion slave-catchers
 A List of White Persons taken into Custody on Account of the 1741 Conspiracy
 A Tobacco Plantation
 A Negro Hung Alive by the Ribs to a Gallows
 Harvesting the Rice
 The Hunted Slaves
 Ready for HarvestC. Modern Voices
 Thomas Davis on what is unique about America between 1750 and 1800
 Thomas Davis on the impact of the Stono Rebellion on slaveowners
 Thomas Davis on the empowerment of Africans and the Stono Rebellion
 Thomas Davis on the long-term impact of the Stono Rebellion
 Charles Joyner on the arrival of the Barbadians in South Carolina
 Charles Joyner on the origins of rice culture
 Charles Joyner on preparing the land for rice cultivation
 Charles Joyner on the task system in Carolina
 Charles Joyner on the Stono Rebellion's impact on slavery
 Margaret Washington on Jemmy, the leader of the Stono Rebellion
 Margaret Washington on the idea of freedom for Stono rebels
 Margaret Washington on the impact of the Stono Rebellion
 Margaret Washington on the rise of Africans' concern after the Stono Rebellion
 Betty Wood on Francis Le Jau's attitude towards the institution of slavery
 Betty Wood on Christianity and slavery
 Betty Wood on Le Jau's journals and Christianity
 Betty Wood on Oglethorpe, the founder of Georgia

