The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries, Documenting the American South, site http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/neh.html states: "Documenting the American South (DAS), an electronic collection sponsored by the Academic Affairs Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, provides access to digitized primary materials that offer Southern perspectives on American history and culture. It supplies teachers, students, and researchers at every educational level with a wide array of titles they can use for reference, studying, teaching, and research." "'North American Slave Narratives, Beginnings to 1920' documents the individual and collective story of the African American struggle for freedom and human rights in the eighteenth, nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. When completed, it will include all the narratives of fugitive and former slaves published in broadsides, pamphlets, or book form in English up to 1920 and many of the biographies of fugitive and former slaves published in English before 1920." The documents are presented in both web page form with scans of some illustrations, and a format that requires the downloading of a program (I didn't test it). In addition to various indexes, the site and can be searched with a customized Google search. It is very user friendly and it is free. Susan