The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4

audiobook

The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Part 3 of 4

by American Anti-Slavery Society

EN·~35 hours·53 chapters

Chapters

53 total

THE ANTI-SLAVERY EXAMINER Part 3 of 4

0:05

No. 10 THE ANTI-SLAVERY EXAMINER.

2:34

NOTE.

2:47

INTRODUCTION.

22:18

NARRATIVE OF MR. CAULKINS.

41:52

NARRATIVE AND TESTIMONY OF REV. HORACE MOULTON.

56:38

TESTIMONY OF MR. WILLIAM POE

1:29:51

IV. DWELLINGS.

14:29

PERSONAL NARRATIVES—PART II.

27:21

TESTIMONY OF MRS. NANCY LOWRY, A NATIVE OF KENTUCKY.

3:18

Description

The audio presents a 1839 abolitionist periodical, part of a four‑part series, that assembles a thousand witness statements about American slavery. It draws heavily on the words of slaveholders themselves, newspaper excerpts, and firsthand accounts from residents of slave states, all cited with names and locations. Listeners will hear the stark language of the era, framed by biblical and philosophical quotations that underscore the moral urgency.

The publication catalogues the everyday realities of enslaved people—food, clothing, work hours, medical care, family life, and the various punishments inflicted upon them—presented as carefully verified facts. It also includes a public appeal from the American Anti‑Slavery Society, urging anyone with direct knowledge to submit detailed testimonies to strengthen the record. This makes the work both a documentary archive and a rallying cry, offering a vivid snapshot of the abolitionist movement’s evidentiary strategy early in the nineteenth‑century debate.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~35 hours (2040K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Stan Goodman, Amy Overmyer, Shawn Wheeler and PG Distributed Proofreaders

Release date

2004-02-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

American Anti-Slavery Society

American Anti-Slavery Society

A leading force in the fight against slavery, this group pushed the bold idea of immediate emancipation at a time when that demand was still considered radical. Its speakers, newspapers, and local chapters helped turn abolition into a national moral and political cause.

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