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jstor.org
Arthur Huff Fauset, « Negro Folk Tales from the South. (Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana) », The Journal of American Folklore, vol. 40, no 157, , p. 213–303 (DOI10.2307/534988, JSTOR534988)
Zora Neale Hurston, « Cudjoe's Own Story of the Last African Slaver », Journal of Negro History, vol. 12, no 4, , p. 648–663 (DOI10.2307/2714041, JSTOR2714041, S2CID150096354)
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JOEL K. BOURNE, JR., « Last American slave ship is discovered in Alabama », National Geographic, (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
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(en-US) Sandra E. Garcia, « She Survived a Slave Ship, the Civil War and the Depression. Her Name Was Redoshi. », The New York Times, (ISSN0362-4331, lire en ligne, consulté le )
semanticscholar.org
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Hannah Durkin, « Finding last middle passage survivor Sally 'Redoshi' Smith on the page and screen », Slavery & Abolition, vol. 40, no 4, , p. 631–658 (DOI10.1080/0144039X.2019.1596397, S2CID150975893)
Zora Neale Hurston, « Cudjoe's Own Story of the Last African Slaver », Journal of Negro History, vol. 12, no 4, , p. 648–663 (DOI10.2307/2714041, JSTOR2714041, S2CID150096354)
web.archive.org
JOEL K. BOURNE, JR., « Last American slave ship is discovered in Alabama », National Geographic, (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
Matthew Teague, « American slaves' origins live on in Alabama's Africatown », Los Angeles Times, (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
(en-GB) Adam Lusher, « Descendant of last survivor of final slave ship to travel from Africa to US tells of pride as forefather's story is published – 87 years after it was written », The Independent, (lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
Katherine E. Rohrer, « Wanderer » [archive du ], sur New Georgia Encyclopedia, Georgia Humanities Council & University of Georgia Press, (consulté le )