Acknowledgements Introduction Harriet Jacobs: A Brief Chronology A Note on the Text Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself Appendix A: Historical Contexts 1. Handed by the Blacks of New Haven City, Petition (1788) 2. From the Fugitive Slave Act(1850) 3. Notice warning Black people in Boston to be on guard after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act(24 April 1851) 4. United States Supreme Court Justice Roger Taney, The Dred ScottDecision (6 March 1857) 5. From the First Confiscation Act(1861) 6. From the Second Confiscation Act(1862) 7.
The Emancipation Proclamation (1863) 8. From the Freedmen''s Bureau Act(1865) 9. The Thirteenth Amendment (1865) 10. From the Fourteenth Amendment (1868) 11. From the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) 12. From United States Supreme Court Justice Billings Brown, Plessy v. Ferguson(1896) Appendix B: Additional Historical Connections 1. Laws of Virginia, Act XII (1662) 2.
From Olive Gilbert, The Narrative of Sojourner Truth(1850) 3. Documents regarding Nat Turner''s Insurrection a. Anonymus to Governor John Floyd (28 August 1831) b. Proclamation by Governor John Floyd (17 September 1831) 4. Advertisement, American Beacon(30 June 1835) 5. South Carolina Negro Seamen Act(1 December 1822) Appendix C: The Composition, Publication, and Reception of Incidents 1. Harriet Jacobs''s First Forays into Writing for Publication a. From New York Daily Tribune(21 June 1853) b.
New York Tribune(25 July 1853) 2. Correspondence from Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post a. From Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (after 28 December 1852) b. From Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (14 February 1853) c. Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (4 April 1853) d. From Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (c. May 1853) e. From Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (9 October 1853) f.
From Harriet Jacobs to Amy Post (March 1854) 3. Correspondence from Lydia Maria Child to Harriet Jacobs a. Lydia Maria Child to Harriet Jacobs (13 August 1860) b. Lydia Maria Child to Harriet Jacobs (27 September 1860) 4. Original Title Page of Jacobs''s Narrative 5. Correspondence from John Greenleaf Whittier to Lydia Maria Child (1 April 1861) 6. William C. Nell, Linda, the Slave Girl, Liberator(24 January 1861) 7.
From Unsigned Book Review, Weekly Anglo-African(13 April 1861) 8. From Unsigned Book Review, Anti-Slavery Advocate(1 May 1861) Appendix D: Life after Incidents 1. From Linda [Harriet Jacobs], Life among the Contrabands, Liberator(5 September 1862) 2. From Jacobs (Linda) School, Alexandria, Va., Freedmen''s Record(February 1865) 3. From Harriet Jacobs, Freedman(February 1866) 4. From Louisa Jacobs, Freedmen''s Record(March 1866) 5. Linda [Harriet] Jacobs, Savannah Freedmen''s Orphan Asylum, Anti-Slavery Reporter(2 March 1868) 6.
Letters by an Adult Louisa Jacobs (1880-84) a. Ah me! (25 March 1880) b. Rest and quiet is what she needs (7 September 1884) c. I was sure Mother would not refuse him (21 December 1884) 7. Remembrances upon Jacobs''s Death a. From the Eulogy by Reverend Francis Grimké b. From the Obituary for Harriet Jacobs, Woman''s Journal(May 1897) Appendix E: Enduring Legacy 1. From Ellen Driscoll, The Loophole of Retreat (4 December 1991-8 February 1992) 2.
From Lydia Diamond, Harriet Jacobs: A Play(2011) 3. Quotations from Lorna Ann Johnson, Freedom Road(2004) Appendix F: People and Places Relevant to Incidents 1. Who Is Who in Incidents 2. Image of Dr. Norcom 3. Image of Mrs. Norcom 4. Image of Louisa Jacobs 5.
Visual Rendering of Floor Plan of Grandmother''s House and Hiding Place 6. Visual Rendering of the Edenton Neighborhood in Which Jacobs Was Born and Hid 7. Image of Amy Post 8. Image of Harriet Beecher Stowe 9. Image of Lydia Maria Child Works Cited and Select Bibliography Permissions Acknowledgements.