The
Anti-Slavery Alphabet
An alphabetary published for the 1847 Anti-Slavery Fair in Philadelphia. Digitized
by the Gutenberg Project.
The Earnest Laborer; or, Myrtle Hill Plantation
A juvenile antislavery and religious novel by an anonymous author, published
by the American Sunday School Union in 1864 for use in Sunday schools. Digitized
and annotated by the Antislavery Literature Project. (PDF)
(DOC)
The Generous Planter, and his Carpenter, Ben
A Sunday School tract opposing slavery, by an anonymous author (Boston: Isaac
Knapp, 1837). Digitized by the Antislavery Literature Project. (PDF)
(DOC)
The Gospel of Slavery
An illustrated antislavery children's alphabetary in verse, by Iron Gray (New
York: T.W. Strong, 1864). Digitized by the Antislavery Literature Project. (PDF)
(DOC)
The Star of Freedom
A miscellany of juvenile antislavery stories and poetry, published by an anonymous
author in New York; probably from 1840s. Digitized by the Antislavery Literature
Project. (PDF) (DOC)
Step by Step; or Tidy's Way to Freedom
Juvenile religious novel by an anonymous author, concerning a girl slave's life
on a plantation (American Tract Society: Boston, 1862). Digitized by the Gutenberg
Project.
BLACK CHILDREN'S LITERATURE BIBLIOGRAPHY - Black children's literature got the blues: The aesthetic creativity of Black writers and illustrators of Black children's literature by Tolson, Nancy Deborah, Ph.D., The University of Iowa, 1998, 177 pages
A
Selected Bibliography for the Study of African American Children's Literature
Dianne Johnson African American Review, Vol. 32, No. 1, Children's and Young-Adult
Literature Issue. (Spring, 1998), p. 157.
Children's Literature Dealing with Negro Life, Review author[s]: Vishnu V. Oak; Eleanor H. Oak,, The Journal of Negro Education, Vol. 8, No. 1. (Jan., 1939), pp. 77-79. (PDF) -- The author, of mixed African-Indian heritage, taught at one time or another at Wilberforce, Howard, Lincoln, Cheyney, Langston and Stowe.