Forgotten Negro Books, Remembered Online

Here's why Google Books, Project Gutenberg, Print-On-Demand, and other electronic publishing services are instrumental in modern education: The list of "forgotten" books are hardly forgotten today. Where, forty years ago, a library had to find nearly $500 -- probably a months' salary for one good librarian, or a half-dozen part-timer circulation desk workers -- nearly all of the books are available online today, most free to anyone with an internet connection...which, incidentally, is free in most libraries today.
- American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, by Theodore Weld (Google);
- My Bondage and My Freedom, Frederick Douglass (Google);
- The Underground Railroad, William Still (Arnold Bernhard Library);
- The Underground Railroad from Slavery to Freedom, Wilbur Siebert (Google);
- John Brown and His Men, Richard Hinton (Google)
- Reminiscences of My Life in Camp, Susie King Taylor (Google)
- Behind the Scenes, Elizabeth Keckley (Google)
- The Freedmen's Book, L Francis Child (Google)
- First Days Amongst the Contrabands, Elizabeth Hyde Botume (none at this time)
- The Facts of Reconstruction, John Roy Lynch (Google)
- Black and White: Land, Labor, and Politics in the South, Timothy Thomas Fortune (Google)
- The Life and Adventures of Nat Love Better Known as "Deadwood Dick" (UNC-Chapel Hill)
- Black Manhattan, James Weldon Johnson (Not Public Domain/in print)
- The Negro in Chicago: A Study of Race Relations and a Race Riot, Illinois Chicago Commission on Race Relations (Google)
- Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey, Amy Jacques Garvey ed. (not public domain/in print)
- The New Negro, Alain LeRoy Locke (not public domain/in print)
- 'New World A-Coming', Roi Ottley (not public domain/in print)
- On the Eve of Conflict: Anglo-African Magazine (not available)
- The Suppressed Book about Slavery!, George W. Carleton ed. (not available)
- An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans, L. Maria Child (Google)
- Reminiscences of Levi Coffin (Google)
- Negro Population in the United States 1790-1915, John Cummings (not available)
- The Condition, Elevation, Emigration, and Destiny of the Colored People of the United States, Marin Delany (Gutenberg)
- The Free Negro Family, E. Franklin Frazier (not public domain)
- Thoughts on African Colonization, William Lloyd Garrison (Google)
- Shadow and Light, M W Gibbs (Google)
- The Negro at Work in New York City, George Edmund Haynes (Gutenberg)
- Cheerful Yesterdays, Thomas Wentworth Higginson (Google)
- The Voice of the Negro 1919, Robert T, Kerlin (Google)
- Men of Mark, Wm J. Simmons (Google)
- A Key To Uncle Tom's Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe (Google)
- Some Recollections of our Anti-slavery Conflict, Samuel J. May (Google)
- Captain Canot, Or, Twenty Years of an African Slaver, Brantz Mayer ed. (Google)
- Race Adjustment: The Everlasting Stain, Kelly Miller (not public domain/in print)
- The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution, William C. Nell (Google)
- Recollections of Seventy Years, Daniel A Payne (UNC-Chapel Hill)
- Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of South Carolina (Google)
- Narrative of Sojourner Truth (University of Virginia)
- Autobiography of a Fugitive Negro, Samuel Ringgold Ward (UNC-Chapel Hill)
- History of the Negro Race in America from 1619 to 1880, George W Williams (Google)
- The Black Phalanx, Jos. T Wilson (Google)
- The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861, Carter G Woodson (Gutenberg)
Labels: 1960s, 1968, negro, print on demand, public domain, publishing