
audiobook
by United States. Work Projects Administration
A richly assembled chorus of voices brings listeners into the lives of Missouri’s former enslaved people. Drawing from dozens of interviews, the collection lets each speaker recount the rhythms of work, the texture of family ties, and the stark realities of a world defined by plantation hierarchies. The firsthand accounts are vivid and unvarnished, preserving the dialect and personal detail that make history feel immediate.
Through these narratives, listeners hear stories of childhood chores, the harsh discipline of masters, and the complex negotiations that followed emancipation. The testimonies reveal both the cruelty endured and the moments of unexpected humor or defiance, offering a nuanced portrait of survival and community. By letting the people speak for themselves, the volume invites a deeper, empathetic understanding of a chapter of American history that is often left unheard.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (504K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-02-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

Born during the Great Depression, this New Deal agency became one of the most ambitious public-work efforts in U.S. history, putting millions of people to work while reshaping roads, parks, schools, and cultural life across the country. Its story offers a vivid look at how government relief, labor, and the arts came together in a moment of national crisis.
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