ArtStor: Black History Month 2013

Jacob Lawrence | The Migration of the Negro, panel no. 3 | 1940 – 1941 |Image and original data provided by The Museum of Modern Art.


ARTstor celebrates Black History month by focusing on some of the excellent resources in the Digital Library that document the lives and achievements of African Americans. More
UConn Database: Artstor

Black History Month – Free resources

These resources will be freely available in the month of February:

EBSCO
African American Archives – http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?authtype=uid&user=csl&password=password&profile=footnoteep

The African American Archives provides over a million pages of original historical documents pertaining to the African American experience over several centuries, the earliest coming from the collection of Essential Records Concerning Slavery and Emancipation from the Danish West Indies (1672-1917). There are several other slavery-related collections, including letters, account books, annual reports, news clippings, and related manuscripts from the American Colonization Society. The African American Archives also includes Records of the Southern Claims Commission, government records, original muster and hospital rolls, descriptive books, lists of deserters, returns, notational cards, enlistment papers, casualty sheets, death reports, prisoner of war papers, and correspondence.

The African American Archives also includes Records of the Southern Claims Commission, government records, original muster and hospital rolls, descriptive books, lists of deserters, returns, notational cards, enlistment papers, casualty sheets, death reports, prisoner of war papers, and correspondence.

Gale Cengage http://www.gale.cengage.com/free_resources/bhm/

Includes biographical and historical resources.

ProQuest
Black Historical Newspapers – https://www.proquest.com/trials/trialSummary.action?view=subject&trialBean.token=T8F6IVTIS57S18Z0U10S

ProQuest Historical Newspapers-Black Newspapers offers primary source material essential to the study of American history and African-American culture, history, politics, and the arts. Examine major movements from the Harlem Renaissance to Civil Rights, and explore everyday life as written in the Chicago Defender, The Baltimore Afro-American, New York Amsterdam News, Pittsburgh Courier, Los Angeles Sentinel, Atlanta Daily World, The Norfolk Journal and Guide, The Philadelphia Tribune, and Cleveland Call and Post.

Source: IConn.org