Four scenes from the Library of Congress's AFI/Smalarz Collection print. This incomplete print derives from a 1920s reissue of the film, with the footage somewhat reordered from the 1914 original, with interpolated extra footage, and with many new intertitles. These clips have been re-edited to restore the order of the footage according to the script submitted by the producers to the Copyright Office, the interpolated footage and titles have been removed, and titles following the wording in the Copyright script have been inserted in the appropriate places according to that script, using a title design copied from the Library of Congress's AFI/Kesselhorn Collection print, a print from the original 1914 release. The re-editing was done by Kaitlin Fyfe. The clips run at 16 frames per second. The four scenes are discussed in Ben Brewster and Lea Jacobs, Theatre to Cinema, pages 50–53 (Subtitle 38 to Scene 135), pages 55–57 (Scene 94 to Scene 103), page 58 (Scene 1b to Scene 2), and pages 59–60 (Subtitle 47 to Scene 151). The fifth longish sequence discussed in Theatre to Cinema, Eliza's crossing of the half-frozen Ohio River (pages 54–55), is missing from this print, so is not included.
Four black and white film clips show a group of men riding horses down a road as a man hides in the trees above, men riding horses up a mountain pass as people shoot at them from rocks above, a girl (Eva) dying in bed as the family laments around her, and a boat of slaves docking and everyone getting off.