The Journal of Negro History

The Journal of Negro History, Volume 6, 1921

Fifty Years of Negro Citizenship C. G. WOODSON Remy Ollier, Mauritian Journalist and Patriot CHARLES H. WESLEY A Negro Colonization Project in Mexico J. FRED RIPPY Documents James Madison's Attitude toward the Negro Advice Given Negroes a Century Ago Some Undistinguished Negro...

Chapters

1. Chapter 1

Fifty Years of Negro Citizenship C. G. WOODSON Remy Ollier, Mauritian Journalist and Patriot CHARLES H. WESLEY A Negro Colonization Project in Mexico J. FRED RIPPY Documents Jam...

11. Chapter 11

If now we put together here much of what we have learned from the study of this movement, we perceive first of all that it was a social phenomenon representing the maladjustment...

10. Chapter 10

The apparent effect of the migration in the light of the advanced reports of the census of 1920 has been the movement of the Negro population from the southern cities to norther...

6. Chapter 6

As we have noted the immensity, the make-up, and the causes of this movement, we are now justified in seeking to know something concerning its effects upon the South. If this mo...

8. Chapter 8

We pass on now to the study of the effects of the movement upon the migrants themselves, or to a consideration of the behavior of the Negroes under the existing economic and soc...

9. Chapter 9

Another way in which the migration affected the Negroes may be seen in a brief study of their health in the North. To any people moving into new surroundings health is an extrem...

5. Chapter 5

In the study of the migration of any group or groups of mankind a consideration of its causes is highly important, because it seems that therein largely lies much of the signifi...

7. Chapter 7

As the migration had its effects upon the South, it likewise influenced conditions in the North and West; but in the latter cases these effects were somewhat different from thos...

2. Chapter 2

In accordance with its title, this essay is intended to be an interpretation of the recent Negro migration in the United States. Its object is to sift out from the mass of writi...

4. Chapter 4

The exodus of the Negroes during the years from 1916 to 1918 occurred with such suddenness and attained such an immense volume that for a time it appeared to many observers that...

3. Chapter 3

Among the many who have written concerning this exodus one finds that not a few of them have been prone to emphasize the fact that in this recent movement the Negroes suddenly d...