Page:Journal of Negro History, vol. 7.djvu/11

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Buy Volumes I, II, III, IV, V, and VI of the Journal of Negro History in Bound Form

Volume I contains more than 250 pages of dissertations entitled:

  • The Negroes of Cincinatti prior to 1861, by Carter G. Woodson.
  • The Story of Maria Louise Moore and Fannie M. Richards, by W. B. Hartgrove.
  • The Passing Tradition and the African Civilization, by Monroe N. Work.
  • The Mind of the African Negro as reflected by His Proverbs, by A. O. Stafford.
  • The Historic Background of the Negro Physician, by Kelly Miller.
  • The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution, by W. B. Hartgrove.
  • Freedom and Slavery in Appalachian America, by Carter G. Woodson.
  • Antar, the Arabian Negro Warrior, Poet and Hero, by A. O. Stafford.
  • Colored Freemen as Slave Owners in Virginia, by John H. Russell.
  • The Fugitives of the Pearl, by John H. Paynter.
  • Lorenzo Dow, by Benjamin Brawley.
  • The Attitude of the Free Negro toward African Colonization, by L. R. Mehlinger.
  • People of Color in Louisiana, Part I, by Alice Dunbar-Nelson.
  • The Work of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel among the Negroes of the Colonies, by C. E. Pierre.
  • The Defeat of the Secessionists in Kentucky in 1861, by William T. McKinney.
  • The Negroes of Guatemala during the Seventeenth Century, by J. Kunst.

It contains also more than 200 pages of the following series of documents:

  • What the Negro was thinking during the Eighteenth Century.
  • Letters showing the Rise and Progress of the early Negro Churches of Georgia and the West Indies.
  • Eighteenth Century Slaves as advertised by their Masters.
  • Transplanting Free Negroes to Ohio.
  • The Proceedings of a typical Colonization Convention.
  • Travelers' Impressions of American Slavery from 1750 to 1800.
  • Some Letters of Richard Allen and Absalom Jones.

Volume II contains 292 pages of dissertations entitled:

  • The African Slave Trade, by Jerome Dowd.
  • The Negro in the Field of Invention, by Henry E. Baker.
  • Anthony Benezet, by Carter G. Woodson.
  • People of Color in Louisiana, Part II, by Alice Dunbar-Nelson.
  • The Evolution of the Slave Status in American Democracy, by J. M. Mecklin.

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