About
The Works Progress Administration (WPA) launched the Federal Writers’ Project to employ white-collar workers left jobless by the Great Depression and to create a comprehensive guide to the states, cities, and regions of the United States. The Federal Writers’ Project gathered information on American life and interviews with “ordinary” Americans from a wide variety of backgrounds. The bulk of interviews, articles, and notes contained in this collection paint a portrait of African-American life in South Carolina. These interviews with former slaves, notes on folklore, and articles on prominent African Americans and African-American organizations were compiled at the height of the Project in 1936 and 1937. Though they are products of their times, these materials provide us with one of the richest sources of information on African-American life in South Carolina at the time.
In 2005, Jody H. Graichen of the University of South Carolina submitted a history master’s thesis about this collection of African-American narratives from the South Carolina Federal Writers’ Project, which you can find on the homepage for this collection.
Related Terms:
- Manuscripts
Media Types:
- Abbeville County,
- Aiken County,
- Allendale County,
- Anderson County,
- Bamberg County,
- Barnwell County,
- Beaufort County,
- Berkeley County,
- Calhoun County,
- Charleston County,
- Cherokee County,
- Chester County,
- Chesterfield County,
- Clarendon County,
- Colleton County,
- Darlington County,
- Dillon County,
- Dorchester County,
- Edgefield County,
- Fairfield County,
- Florence County,
- Georgetown County,
- Greenville County,
- Greenwood County,
- Hampton County,
- Horry County,
- Jasper County,
- Kershaw County,
- Lancaster County,
- Laurens County,
- Lee County,
- Lexington County,
- Marion County,
- Marlboro County,
- McCormick County,
- Newberry County,
- Oconee County,
- Orangeburg County,
- Pickens County,
- Richland County,
- Saluda County,
- Spartanburg County,
- Sumter County,
- Union County,
- Williamsburg County,
- York County
SC Counties:
- Great Depression (1930 - 1938)