Description: "Reading from the slave narratives - In their words, our shared history.
"When the Civil War ended in 1965, more than 4 million slaves were set free. By the late 1930's, 100,000 former slaves were still alive.
"In the midst of the Great Depression, the Federal Writers Project hired journalists and writers to travel the country and record the memories of this last generation of Africa-Americans born into bondage.
"Over 2,000 interviews were transcribed as spoken, in the vernacular of the time, to form a unique historical record – first-hand accounts of what it was to be a slave. The Library of Congress is home to most of these 'Slave Narratives.'
"UNCHAINED MEMORIES: READING FROM THE SLAVE NARRATIVES breathes the voices of the living into these transcripts of the past, bringing to life the pain and suffering, the fear and yearning, the pride, the spirit and the deep resonating sadness of those who had been born into slavery.
"It is a unique and extraordinary exploration and evocation, both of the past and of the people whose enslaved toil helped build a nation. Their stories survive as vital today as when they were first recorded over half a century ago."