A documentary history of the Negro people in the United States, 1910-1932 /

Contains primary source material.

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Aptheker, Herbert, 1915-2003, (Editor)
Language:English
Published: Secaucus, N.J. : Citadel Press ©1973.
Edition:First edition.
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Table of Contents:
  • V. 3. From the emergence of the N.A.A C.P. to the beginning of the New Deal (1910-1932). 1. Booker T. Washington : pro and con (1910) ; a) A cartoon from The Boston Guardian ; b) Chapters from My experience / Booker T. Washington
  • 2. "Doomed to destruction, " : Black ministers appeal to President William Howard Taft (1910)
  • 3. The "United Colored Democracy" and the New York election of 1910 ; a) "Remember Brownsville" ; b) What do we want?
  • 4. From the first number of The Crisis (1910) ; a) Segregation ; b) Baltimore ; c) Voting ; d) Agitation ; e) Organizations and meetings ; f) The N.A.A.C.P.
  • 5. The opera house lynching (Kentucky, 1911)
  • 6. Peonage (1911)
  • 7. The National Association of Colored Women (1911)
  • 8. Second annual report, N.A.A.C.P. (1911)
  • 9. The Negro at work in New York City (1912)
  • 10. A southern domestic worker speaks (1912)
  • 11. Divine right / W.E.B. Du Bois (1912)
  • 12. A Black man's appeal to his white brothers (1912)
  • 13. Votes for women / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • 14. Woodrow Wilson : rhetoric and reality (1912-1913) ; a) Wilson to Bishop Walters ; b) Francis J. Grimké to Wilson ; c) An open letter to Woodrow Wilson from The Crisis ; d) From the board of the N.A.A.C.P.
  • 15. For an Afro-American literature / William H. Ferris (1913)
  • 16. "A glorious sight to see, " the I.W.W. in Louisiana (1913)
  • 17. Work for Black folk in 1914 / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • 18. "Too ready to sacrifice our rights" (1914)
  • 19. The Trotter encounter with President Wilson (1914)
  • 20. The ultimate effects of segregation and discrimination (1915) / William Pickens
  • 21. Protesting "Birth of a nation" (1915)
  • 22. Mr. B.T. Washington in Louisiana (1915)
  • 23. Votes for women : a symposium by leading thinkers of colored America (1915)
  • 24. My view of segregation laws (1915) / Booker T. Washington
  • 25. Are we making good? / Mrs. Booker T. Washington (1915)
  • 26. Installation address at Tuskegee (1916) / Robert R. Moton
  • 27. The Amenia Conference of 1916
  • 28. Lily-white Lincoln University (Pa.) in 1916
  • 29. An appeal to reject President Wilson, 1916
  • 30. Lynching and the N.A.A.C.P. (1916)
  • 31. Battle reports from the field (1916)
  • 32. Tuskegee Conference, 1917
  • 33. The Boston branch of the N.A.A.C.P. to 1917
  • 34. Organizing in the South (1917) / James Weldon Johnson
  • 35. Memorial to Atlanta, Ga., Board of Education, 1917
  • 36. The red light and the Black ghetto, Savannah, 1917
  • 37. On Pan-Africa and liberation / Bishop Walters (1917)
  • 38. "It is not my purpose to speak" / Francis J. Grimké (1917)
  • 39. The silent anti-lynching parade (1917)
  • 40. Forced labor and the "war for democracy" (1917)
  • 41. The Houston, Texas uprising, 1917
  • 42. The migration of Negroes / W.E.B. Du Bois (1917)
  • 43. Fighting against racism, 1917 ; a) In the District of Columbia ; b) In Georgia
  • 44. The Negro and the War Department / Emmett J. Scott (1917)
  • 45. Editorials from The Messenger, 1918 ; a) The hanging of the Negro soldiers ; b) The Bolsheviki
  • 46. Denouncing lynching and racism, 1918 ; a) The Atlanta appeal ; b) Petitioning President Wilson
  • 47. Harassment of Afro-American soldiers, 1918
  • 48. "Exhibitions of savagery" (1918)
  • 49. What the N.A.A.C.P. has done for the colored soldier (1918)
  • 50. The American Negro and the World War / Robert R. Moton (1918)
  • 51. "Hear our grievances" (1918)
  • 52. Address to the Committee on Public Information (1918)
  • 53. Reasons why white and Black workers should combine in labor unions (1918)
  • 54. Shooting Black soldiers at Camp Merritt, N.J. (1918)
  • 55. The work of a mob / Walter F. White (1918)
  • 56. Liberty and "liberty" / F.J. Grimké (1918)
  • 57. The "moral advantage" of Black people / Kelly Miller (1918)
  • 58. What will the Negro get out of the war? (1918)
  • 59. "Work or fight" in the South (1919) / Walter F. White
  • 60. Address of welcome to the men who have returned from the battlefront / F.J. Grimké (1919)
  • 61. Resolutions of the N.A.A.C.P., 1919
  • 62. On the Pan-African Congress, 1919 ; a) Du Bois' memorandum ; b) Resolutions of Congress
  • 63. Ben Fletcher and the I.W.W. (1919)
  • 64. Black and white psychology / Jean Toomer (1919)
  • 65. How to stop lynching (1919)
  • 66. A warning to the President, from Robert R. Moton (1919)
  • 67. Socialism, the Negroes' hope / W.A. Domingo (1919)
  • 68. For promoting labor unionism among Black workers (1919)
  • 69. The Negro and the labor union : an N.A.A.C.P. report (1919)
  • 70. The red year of 1919 ; a) Chicago and its eight reasons ; b) A letter from a Black woman ; c) Race conflict in Arkansas
  • 71. Bogalusa, Louisiana, 1919
  • 72. What does the Negro want in our democracy? / R.R. Wright, Jr. (1919)
  • 73. Black troops in Europe / R.R. Moton (1920)
  • 74. "Injustice makes Bolsheviks" (1920) : a speech by Williams Pickens
  • 75. For a Black God (1920)
  • 76. President Harding and the Black voter (1920)
  • 77. Sergeant Caldwell executed (1920)
  • 78. The woman voter hits the color line (1920)
  • 79. Trying to vote (1920) ; a) Election day in Florida ; b) A letter from Georgia ; c) A letter from Virginia
  • 80. A letter from a lynch victim (1921)
  • 81. Lynching and pogrom (1921) ; a) Lunching and debt-slavery / William Pickens ; b) The eruption of Tulsa / Walter F. White
  • 82. The 24th Infantry prisoners (1921)
  • 83. The Pan-African Congress of 1921 ; a) Bulletin 1 ; b) Manifesto, "To the world" ; c) Statutes of the association
  • 84. Analyses and proposals, 1922 ; a) Some things Negroes need to do / Carter G. Woodson ; b) From Report of Association for Study of Negro Life and History ; c) Some notes on color / Jessie Fauset ; d) "The nation is doomed" / F.J. Grimké ; e) The trend of the races / George E. Haynes
  • 85. On Marcus Garvey (1922) ; a) Garvey as a Negro Moses / Claude McKay ; b) A symposium on Garvey / Negro leaders
  • 86. Marcus Garvey and Garveyism (1923-1924) ; a) The emperor of Africa / William Pickens ; b) Imperator Africanus / Eric Walrond ; c) The Negro's greatest enemy / Marcus Garvey ; d) An appeal to the soul of white America / Marcus Garvey ; e) Advertisement in the New York World
  • 87. The Reconstruction Era : a reconsideration / John R. Lynch (1923)
  • 88. The African Blood Brotherhood (1923)
  • 89. The defeat of Arkansas Lynch Law (1923) / Walter F. White
  • 90. The National Association of Negro Musicians (1923) / Carl Diton
  • 91. From job to job : a personal narrative (1923) / George S. Schuyler
  • 92. The third Pan-African Congress (1923)
  • 93. Soviet Russia and the Negro (1924) / Claude McKay
  • 94. The massive petition for the Houston prisoners (1924)
  • 95. The Negro and non-resistance (1924) / E. Franklin Frazier
  • 96. Intelligence tests and propaganda (1924) / Horace Mann Bond
  • 97. Black workers and the A.F.L. : a proposal (1924), from the N.A.A.C.P.
  • 98. The gentlemen's agreement and the Negro vote (1924) / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • 99. Restricted West Indian immigration and the American Negro (1924) / W.A. Domingo
  • 100. La Follette and the Black voters (1924) ; a) The Crisis editorial : La Follette ; b) The political situation and the Negro / A. Philip Randolph ; c) Bishop Hurst endorses La Follette
  • 101. Art is helping obliterate the color line (1925) / Lester A. Walton
  • 102. American Negro Labor Congress (1925)
  • 103. The Fisk Student Strike of 1925
  • 104. Negroes in new abolition movement (1925) / Robert W. Bagnall
  • 105. On being young, a woman, and colored (1925) / Marita O. Bonner
  • 106. Go to high school, go to college campaign (1925)
  • 107. The Aiken, S.C. lynching (1926)
  • 108. Detroit (1926) / James Weldon Johnson
  • 109. Krigwa Players Little Negro Theatre (1926)
  • 110. The Negro artists and the racial mountain (1926) / Langston Hughes
  • 111. The National Negro Bankers' Association (1926)
  • 112. Resolution on the Negro question : anti-imperialist congress (1927)
  • 113. American Inter-Racial Peace Committee (1927)
  • 114. The fourth Pan-African Congress (1927)
  • 115. Battling segregation and discrimination (1927)
  • 116. The high cost of prejudice (1927) / Alain Locke
  • 117. The Hampton Strike (1927) / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • 118. Conditions in Maryland (1928) / Jesse L. Nicholas
  • 119. Marcus Garvey and the N.A.A.C.P. (1928) / W.E.B. Du Bois
  • 120. A new religion for the Negro (1928) / Eugene Gordon
  • 121. An appeal to America (the 1928 elections)
  • 122. For the recognition of the Soviet Union (1928) / William Pickens
  • 123. Race prejudice and the Negro artists (1928) / James Weldon Johnson
  • 124. Social work among Negroes (1928) / Eugene K. Jones
  • 125. The National Inter-Racial Conference (1928) ; a) On agriculture and industry / Charles H. Wesley
  • 126. Sixteen-year-old youth battles two hundred police (1928)
  • 127. A state of fact on lynching (1929) / Walter F. White
  • 128. The menace of capitalist "friendship" (1929)
  • 129. International Council of Women of the Darker Races (1929)
  • 130. The Thompson-Negro Alliance (1929) / Ralph J. Bunche
  • 131. A Black man enters Congress (1929)
  • 132. Negro labor and the church (1929) / A. Philip Randolph
  • 133. The Negro worker and the labor movement (1930) / A.L. Harris
  • 134. The Autumn Leaf Club (1930) / E.W. Grimes
  • 135. Report to trustees of Tuskegee (1930) / R.R. Moton
  • 136. Catholic justice (1930)
  • 137. White men and a colored woman (1930)
  • 138. The American Negro Labor Congress (1930)
  • 139. Negro authors week (1930) / C. Ruth Wright
  • 140. The Yokinen trial (1931)
  • 141. Equal opportunity (1931) / Manhattan Medical Society
  • 142. "With tears in my eyes" (1931) / Eugene Brown
  • 143. The miseducation of the Negro (1931) / Carter G. Woodson
  • 144. Communism and the Negro tenant farmer (1931) / Elmer A. Carter
  • 145. On racist textbooks (1931) / Walter F. White
  • 146. Rights and privileges as citizens (1932) / Oscar De Priest
  • 147. Negro editors on communism (1932)
  • 148. Negro social worker evaluates birth control (1932) / Constance Fisher
  • 149. War in the East (1932) / Cyril Briggs
  • 150. Appeal of the Scottsboro Boys (1932)
  • 151. Discrimination in federal flood control construction (1932) / Walter F. White
  • 152. The bankruptcy of capitalism and capitalist education (1932) / James W. Ford
  • 153. The Bonuseers ban Jim Crow (1932) / Roy Wilkins
  • 154. Herbert Hoover (1932) / W.E.B. Du Bois.