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The Legend of John Henry: Folklore and the Lives of African Americans in the Postwar South - U.S. by Scott Reynolds Nelson - First Edition, 2019 from Macmillan Student Store
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The Legend of John Henry: Folklore and the Lives of African Americans in the Postwar South - U.S.

First  Edition|©2019  Scott Reynolds Nelson

  • About
  • Contents
  • Authors

About

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Contents

Table of Contents

Central Question
Learning Objective
Historical Background 
Primary Sources  
Natalie Curtis-Burlin, “Hammerin’ Song” in Negro Folk Songs, 1919
Versions of the John Henry Ballad
Burnham Wardwell, Superintendent of the Virginia Penitentiary, Report on Penitentiary Conditions to the Governor, Apr.il 30, 1868 
Virginia Penitentiary Report, 1871
“A Rockman’s Work in Tunnel Building,” New York Times, May 5, 1901
Photographs of Convict Laborers, 1890s–1910s
Difficulties Drilling, Letters to H.D. Whitcomb, Chief Engineer of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, 1869 and 1871
Project Questions
Additional Assignments

Authors

Scott Reynolds Nelson


Table of Contents

Central Question
Learning Objective
Historical Background 
Primary Sources  
Natalie Curtis-Burlin, “Hammerin’ Song” in Negro Folk Songs, 1919
Versions of the John Henry Ballad
Burnham Wardwell, Superintendent of the Virginia Penitentiary, Report on Penitentiary Conditions to the Governor, Apr.il 30, 1868 
Virginia Penitentiary Report, 1871
“A Rockman’s Work in Tunnel Building,” New York Times, May 5, 1901
Photographs of Convict Laborers, 1890s–1910s
Difficulties Drilling, Letters to H.D. Whitcomb, Chief Engineer of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, 1869 and 1871
Project Questions
Additional Assignments

Scott Reynolds Nelson


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