During the 1930s, the Federal Writers' Project undertook the task of
locating former slaves and recording their oral histories. The more than
ten thousand pages of interviews with over two thousand former slaves
were filed in the Library of Congress, where they were known to scholars
and historians but few others. From this storehouse of information,
Belinda Hurmence has chosen twenty-seven narratives from the twelve
hundred type-written pages of interviews with 284 former South Carolina
slaves. The result is a moving, eloquent, and often surprising firsthand
account of the lost years of slavery and first years of freedom. The
former slaves describe the clothes they wore, the food they ate, the
houses they lived in, the work they did, and the treatment they
received. They give their impressions of Yankee soldiers, the Klan,
their masters, and their newfound freedom. In Before Freedom, When I
Just Can Remember, Hurmence makes accessible to the casual reader what
many scholars and historians have long known to be a great source of our
nation's history. Book jacket.
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