Slavery - kostenloses Unterrichtsmaterial, Arbeitsblätter und Übungen

The First Protest Against Slavery
On February 18, 1688 the first protest against slavery in the new world was drafted in Germantown (Thones Kunders House).
Families in Bondage
This lesson plan draws on letters written by African Americans in slavery and by free blacks to offer students a glimpse into slavery and its effects on African American family life (USA 2020).
The Whitney Plantation
Plantation museum in the state of Louisiana dedicated to telling the story of slavery, covering topics like Resistance, Slavery in Louisiana, the Atlantic Slave Trade (2015-20)
The Geography of Slavery in Virginia
Transcriptions and images of over 4,000 runaway and captured ads for slaves and servants placed in Virginia newspapers from 1736 to 1790 (University of Virginia 2013-21)
The History of Slavery in America
Dreiteiliges Video bei YouTube (insgesamt: 25 Minuten / USA: CombinedOccupancy 2014)
Last Seen: Finding Family After Slavery
A couple of lesson plans explore enslavement and emancipation, built for K-12 and higher education settings (USA: Villanova University 2021).
The Atlantic Slave Trade
John Green teaches about slavery. He investigates when and where slavery originated, how it changed over the centuries, and how Europeans and colonists in the Americas arrived at the idea that people could own other people (11 minutes / USA: Crash Course 2017).
New York Slavery Records Index
This online database containing more than 35,000 records includes ʺcensus records, slave trade transactions, cemetery records, birth certifications, manumissions, ship inventories, newspaper accounts, private narratives, legal documents, and many other sources.ʺ (USA: John Jay College of Criminal Justice 2018)
The Friend of Man (1836-1842)
One of the most significant newspapers documenting early anti-slavery and other reform movements (Cornell University 2015-21)