Convict Labor and the Building of Modern America-U.S.
First EditionTalitha L. LeFlouria
©2018Table of Contents
Central Question
Learning Objective
Historical Background
Primary Sources
Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, “Slavery and Involuntary Servitude,” 1865
“The New Slavery in the South: An Autobiography by a Georgia Negro Peon,” Independent, February 25, 1904
Convicts Working on a Railroad (postcard photograph), 1915
Letter from Ezekiel Archey and Ambrose Haskins to the President of the Alabama Board of Inspectors of Convicts, January 26, 1884
“Juvenile Convicts at Work in a Field” (photograph), 1903
Recordings of Women Prisoners Singing at the Goree State Prison Farm in Texas, 1939
Project Questions
Additional Assignments
Additional Resources for Research
Learning Objective
Historical Background
Primary Sources
Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, “Slavery and Involuntary Servitude,” 1865
“The New Slavery in the South: An Autobiography by a Georgia Negro Peon,” Independent, February 25, 1904
Convicts Working on a Railroad (postcard photograph), 1915
Letter from Ezekiel Archey and Ambrose Haskins to the President of the Alabama Board of Inspectors of Convicts, January 26, 1884
“Juvenile Convicts at Work in a Field” (photograph), 1903
Recordings of Women Prisoners Singing at the Goree State Prison Farm in Texas, 1939
Project Questions
Additional Assignments
Additional Resources for Research