Category: History - Other

The Journal of Negro History, Volume 8, 1923

L. P. JACKSON: _The Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872_ 1 G. R. WILSON: _The Religion of the American Negro Slave: His Attitude toward Life and Death_ 41 G. SMITH WORMLEY: _Prudence Crandall_ 72 DOCUMENTS: 81...

Chapters

1. VOLUME VIII

L. P. JACKSON: _The Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872_ 1 G. R. WILSON: _The Religion of the American Negro S...

15. Chapter IV, which deals with the endeavors of John Woolman to

emancipate and elevate the Negro race, will be of unusual help to students of Negro history. Around Woolman and his coworkers, beginning in 1760, centered the effort toward the...

14. Volume II._ By SIR HARRY H. JOHNSTON, G.C.M.G., K.C.B., Sc.D.

This work is the result of a study of the Bantu languages commenced by the author in 1881 in the Library of the British Museum, and instigated by the project of accompanying the...

13. CHAPTER X

The formation of the American Colonization Society stimulated interest in Negro deportation. Both whites and blacks put many inquiries to Cuffe. He was thought of as the prospec...

16. VOLUME VIII

_A Negro Pioneer in the West_, 333-335 _Abram Hannibal, the Favorite of Peter the Great_, 359-366 _Africa and the Discovery of America_, review of, 233-238 African Institution,...

12. CHAPTER IX

There is no evidence in the Cuffe papers that he was acquainted with the history of the Negro deportation projects in America. It is altogether likely that the one hundred years...

7. CHAPTER IV

When Captain Cuffe sailed from Philadelphia on New Year's Day, 1811, he apparently intended to visit only Sierra Leone. After an examination of the plans then in operation for t...

10. CHAPTER VII

It was Cuffe's plan to make a trip to Sierra Leone once every year. This would enable him to keep in touch with the colony. He would carry over whatever goods were needed, buy a...

11. CHAPTER VIII

Neither voyage to Africa was financially profitable. Cuffe did not make either visit with that end in view. But he was careful to make use of every opportunity to reduce the exp...

4. CHAPTER I

The records tell us that on the sixteenth day of February, 1742, in consideration of the sum of one hundred and fifty pounds, Ebenezer Slocum of Dartmouth, Bristol County, Massa...

6. CHAPTER III

Early in his life Paul Cuffe became interested in the redemption of Africa. "The travail of my soul," said he, "is that Africa's inhabitants may be favored with reformation." Th...

9. CHAPTER VI

The visit of Captain Cuffe to Africa was a spontaneous movement on his part. He was anxious to contribute to the improvement of his countrymen. His visit to England was a great...

8. CHAPTER V

Cuffe remained in Sierra Leone for three months. On Sundays he attended the various churches. He made the most of these opportunities to caution the lukewarm and to reprimand cl...

5. CHAPTER II

"Having no vote or Influence in the Election of those that Tax us yet many of our Colour (as is well known) have Cherfully Entered the field of Battle in the defense of the Comm...

3. Volume C, No. 189, March, 1922, by Carl Kelsey, Ph.D., Professor of

Sociology, University of Pennsylvania; _The Monroe Doctrine and Its Application to Haiti_, by William A. MacCorkle, Former Governor of West Virginia, in THE ANNALS OF THE AMERIC...

2. Volume XV, No. 6, March, 1922; _Latin America, Clark University

Addresses_, November, 1913, edited by George H. Blakeslee, Professor of History, Clark University; _Caribbean Interests of the United States_, by Chester Lloyd Jones, Professor...