Black Freedom Struggle in the United States:

About

At ProQuest, we believe that knowledge and trusted information can help guide progress and change – and as an EdTech provider, we have a unique responsibility to take action.

That’s why we developed this website focused on Black Freedom, featuring select primary source documents related to critical people and events in African American history. Our intention is to support a wide range of students (see examples for using in teaching and learning), as well independent researchers and anyone interested in learning more about the foundation of ongoing racial injustice in the U.S. – and the fights against it.

By centering on the experiences and perspectives of African Americans, we hope this collection imbues the study of Black history with a deeper understanding of the humanity of people who have pursued the quest for freedom, and the significance of movements like Black Lives Matter.   

From the Editors

In recent years, the tragic killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown have contributed to an overdue collective outrage against the long history of discrimination and violence against African Americans in the U.S., sparking widespread demonstrations against police brutality and systemic racism.

Originally brought to the American colonies primarily in an enslaved status, people of African descent in the United States have waged a long and determined struggle for freedom. In his beautifully written study, There is a River, the late historian and pastor Vincent Harding compared the Black Freedom Struggle to a river, sometimes running slow and narrow, at other times running swift and wide.

In the introduction to There is a River, Harding wrote: “I was especially concerned to try to convey its long, continuous movement, flowing like a river, sometimes powerful, tumultuous, and roiling with life; at other times meandering and turgid, covered with the ice and snow of seemingly endless winters, all too often streaked and running with blood.” Harding goes on to note: “the dynamics and justice of its movement have continually gathered others to itself, have persistently filled other men and women with the force of its vision, its indomitable hope. And at its best the river of our struggle has moved consistently toward the ocean of humankind’s most courageous hopes for freedom and integrity…” [Vincent Harding, There is a River: The Black Struggle for Freedom in America (New York, 1981) p. xix]

In this website, we present primary source documents from several of the time periods in American History when the river of the Black Freedom Struggle ran more powerfully, while not losing sight of the fierce, often violent opposition that Black people have faced on the road to freedom.

This website contains over 3,000 documents focused on six different phases of Black Freedom:

    1. Slavery and the Abolitionist Movement (1790-1860)
    2. The Civil War and the Reconstruction Era (1861-1877)
    3. Jim Crow Era from 1878 to the Great Depression (1878-1932)
    4. The New Deal and World War II (1933-1945)
    5. The Civil Rights and Black Power Movements (1946-1975)
    6. The Contemporary Era (1976-2000)

The documents presented here represent a selection of primary sources available in several ProQuest databases. The databases represented in this website include American Periodicals, Black Abolitionist Papers, ProQuest History Vault, ProQuest Congressional, Supreme Court Insight and Alexander Street’s Black Thought and Culture.

The goal of this website is to provide a selection of primary source documents that may be used by a wide range of students, from middle and high school students to college students and independent scholars. Examples of assignments may include National History Day projects or research papers about Black Freedom.

Teachers can use these documents to teach with primary sources on a specific topic or person such as the Abolitionist Movement or Frederick Douglass. In addition, any person might use this website to learn more about Black Freedom.

Libraries are encouraged to bookmark blackfreedom.proquest.com and share with patrons.

ProQuest African American History Advisory Board Members:

    • Ashley D. Farmer, Assistant Professor, History & African & African Diaspora Studies, University of Texas-Austin
    • Chad Williams, Samuel J. and Augusta Spector Chair in History and Professor of African and African American Studies, Brandeis University
    • Crystal Eddins, Assistant Professor of Africana Studies, UNC Charlotte
    • Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Associate Professor of History, The Ohio State University