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Title: The Negro in the United States; a selected bibliography. Compiled by Dorothy B. Porter
Author: Dorothy B. Porter
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THE NEGRO IN THE UNITED STATES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The career of Daniel Alexander Payne Murray, who served as a member of the staff in various capacities "up to an assistant librarian" from 1871 to 1922, is a natural starting point for a discussion of Negro materials in the Library of Congress. While serving in his first position in the Library, as a personal assistant to the Librarian, Ainsworth R. Spofford, Mr. Murray undertook the systematic study of "the origin and historical growth of the colored race throughout the civilized world," which he hoped would result in an encyclopedic history of his race. Almost 30 years later, he was chosen by Herbert Putnam, then just beginning his career as Librarian, to respond to a request from Ferdinand W. Peck, Commissioner General of the United States to the Paris exposition of 1900, that a collection of books and pamphlets by Afro-American authors be made a feature of the American exhibit at the exposition. Within a period of 2 weeks, Mr. Murray prepared a preliminary list of 223 works written by 152 Negro authors. The purpose of this list was to aid in securing a copy of "every book and pamphlet in existence, by a Negro Author, the same to be used in connection with the exhibit of Negro Authorship in the Paris Exposition of 1900, and later placed in the Library of Congress."
It was soon discovered that, owing to Dr. Spofford's foresight, the Library of Congress was "uncommonly rich in such books and pamphlets," but "no little difficulty was encountered then and subsequently in identifying them." By the time the world exposition at Paris opened in May 1900, however, Mr. Murray had located 1,100 titles written by Negro authors, of which about 500 were forwarded to the exposition. Thomas J. Calloway, special agent for the U.S. Commission at the exposition, wrote that "the most creditable showing in the exhibit is by Negro authors collected by Mr. Daniel Murray of the library of Congress."
After the close of the Paris exposition, Mr. Murray continued to collect works by Afro-American, Afro-European, and West Indian authors and to amass a varied collection of Afro-Americana. At his death in 1925, the library of Congress received by provision of his will a unique collection of some "1,448 volumes and pamphlets, 14 broadsides, and 1 map, with the idea that it should form part of the material especially selected by him for exhibit purposes." The books that had been sent to the Paris exposition were kept together upon their return to the Library. This small collection, along with Mr. Murray's bequest and a few volumes presented to the library by Mrs. Anna Murray after her husband's death, became the "Colored Author Collection." Many of the titles have since been cataloged and added to the general collections.
The Preliminary List of Books and Pamphlets by Negro Authors, for Paris Exposition and Library of Congress (1900), compiled by Daniel Murray, appears to have been the first effort on the part of the Library to draw attention to works by and about Negroes.
In 1906 Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin, chief of the Division of Bibliography, directed the compilation of a Select List of References on the Negro Question, published by the library. It contained entries for 232 books and 286 periodical articles published during the period 1879-1906. The library also published in the same year a List of Discussions of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, which comprised 103 entries. Both bibliographies included titles relating primarily to Negro suffrage and the Negro in the South and were compiled to "meet requests by letter upon topics of current interest."
In 1940, for the 75th anniversary of the proclamation of the 13th amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which abolished slavery, the Library prepared and issued a bibliography of its special materials on the Negro. In connection with this anniversary, the Library also mounted an exhibition of books, manuscripts, and works of art and arranged a series of concerts. The festival of music and the exhibits that opened on December 18, 1940, vividly presented the contribution of the American Negro to American culture.
Without question both scholars and the general public are aware that the Library of Congress has extensive holdings on the Negro, not only printed books and periodicals but also manuscripts, music, prints, photographs, motion pictures, and sound recordings. This awareness is reflected in the steady flow of requests for bibliographies and other guides to Negro studies that the Library receives. The factors that stimulate such requests are rooted in the national—indeed, the worldwide—interest in the American Negro which recent social and cultural events in this country have intensified. For many years the Library has responded to this interest by issuing from time to time typed lists relating to various aspects of Negro life.
The mounting interest in Negro history and culture, manifested particularly by the introduction of courses in these subjects in high school, college, and university curricula, has given rise to a demand for lists of books that can be used to support such studies. The present bibliography is designed to meet the current needs of students, teachers, librarians, researchers, and the general public for introductory guidance to the study of the Negro in the United States.
This bibliography is selective rather than exhaustive. Among the topics covered are the urban Negro, relations between the races, discriminatory practices in all areas, and efforts to obtain political and economic freedom, as well as the education and cultural history of the Negro, his religious life, the social conditions under which he lives, and his historical past. Included are works depicting the lives of outstanding Negroes—abolitionists, fugitive slaves, educators, civil rights leaders, scientists, journalists, religious leaders, artists, athletes, and literary figures.
The selection of many of the titles, especially in the fields of literature and history, was based on the frequency of requests for particular works in large library collections on the Negro and on their inclusion in the numerous bibliographies and reading lists now being compiled for use in junior colleges, colleges, and universities. In addition, bibliographic lists and essays appended to such works as From Slavery to Freedom, by John Hope Franklin; North of Slavery, by Leon F. Litwack; The Burden of Race: a Documentary History of Negro-White Relations in America, by Gilbert Osofsky; The Negro in the Civil War, by Benjamin Quarles; The Black Power Revolt, edited by Floyd B. Barbour; and The Negro in the United States, by E. Franklin Frazier, were consulted. Use was also made of previously published bibliographies such as Monroe Work's Bibliography of the Negro in Africa and America and Erwin A. Salk's A Layman's Guide to Negro History.
While some books written especially for children and young people are included, and some of the other publications cited are well adapted to their use, no systematic effort was made to represent material of this type. Lists such as Miles M. Jackson's Bibliography of Negro History & Culture for Young Readers may be used as guides in this field.
Identification of writers by race has not been attempted except in the section on fiction, which lists only novels and short stories written by representative Negro authors. While the writings of white novelists are not cited, the importance of the treatment of Negro characters and the educational, moral, and artistic value of works by such authors as Howard Fast, William Faulkner, Harper Lee, Du Bose Heyward, Julia Peterkin, Lillian Smith, Harriet Beecher Stowe, T. S. Stribling, and Mark Twain are undisputed. Apart from fiction, the publications of both white and Negro writers are included throughout the bibliography.
The compiler gratefully acknowledges the invaluable editorial assistance of Mary Jane Gibson, assistant head of the Bibliography and Reference Correspondence Section, General Reference and Bibliography Division, Library of Congress. Miss Gibson also prepared the index. The compiler wishes to express her appreciation as well to Ruth S. Freitag, head of the Bibliography and Reference Correspondence Section, for helpful suggestions and for assistance in indexing and proofreading, and to Robert H. Land, chief of the General Reference and Bibliography Division, for emphasizing the need for the bibliography and offering encouragement while the work was in progress.
Dorothy B. Porter
April 1969
Scope. The emphasis of this bibliography is on recent monographs in the collections of the library of Congress, although a number of important older works, a few periodicals, and several titles from the holdings of other American libraries are included.
Arrangement. Entries are arranged alphabetically by author under broad subject headings that reveal the Negro's part in numerous aspects of American life, culture, and history. An index of names and subjects is provided.
Annotations. Entries have been given brief annotations where clarification seemed necessary. Because of the increasing importance for the building of library collections of scholarly reprints of long unavailable classics in Negro literature and history, indication of reprint editions has been made where possible.
Call numbers and location symbols. Location of items is indicated either by a Library of Congress call number or location symbol, or, for material in another library, by the National Union Catalog symbol for that library. A key to the symbols used is given on the next page.
DHU Howard University, Washington, D.C. DLC Library of Congress (uncataloged) DLC-LL Library of Congress, Law Library (unclassified) FU University of Florida, Gainesville ICN Newberry Library, Chicago, Ill. ICU University of Chicago MH Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. NNC Columbia University, New York, N.Y. NcD Duke University, Durham, N.C. NcU University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill PSt Pennsylvania State University, University Park TxU University of Texas, Austin Vi Virginia State Library, Richmond
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1Abrahamson, Julia. Race relations; a selected list of readings on racial and cultural minorities in the United States, with special emphasis on Negroes, by Julia Waxman. Chicago, Julius Rosenwald Fund, 1945. 47 p. [Z1361.N39A3] [TR: Waxman, Julia. (New York State Library C, 016.3231, W35).]
2Baker, Augusta. Books about Negro life for children. Rev. New York, New York Public Library, 1963. 33 p. Z1361.N39B2 1963A new edition is in preparation.
3Bennett, Elaine C. Calendar of Negro-related documents in the records of the Committee for Congested Production Areas in the National Archives. Prepared for the Committee on Negro Studies of the American Council of Learned Societies: Washington, American Council of Learned Societies, 1949. 100 leaves. E185.6.B47
3aBibliographic survey: the Negro in print, v. 1+ May 1965+ Washington, Negro Bibliographic and Research Center, bimonthly. Z1361.N39N39At head of title, May 1965-Mar. 1968: Bibliographic Survey.Title varies: May 1965-Mar. 1968, The Negro in Print.An annotated list of fiction and nonfiction, paperbacks, and books for young readers, with occasional periodical articles and references on poetry and art.
4Brooks, Alexander D. Civil rights and liberties in the United States, an annotated bibliography. With a selected list of fiction and audio-visual materials collected by Albert A. Alexander and Virginia H. Ellison. New York, Civil Liberties Educational Foundation, c1962. 151 p. Z7164.L6B7
5Brown, Warren H. Check list of Negro newspapers in the United States (1827-1946). Jefferson City, Mo., School of Journalism, Lincoln University, 1946. 37 p. (Lincoln University journalism series, no. 2) [Z6951.B88] Z6944.N39B7
6Chapman, Abraham. The Negro in American literature, and a bibliography of literature by and about Negro Americans. Stevens Point, Wisconsin State University [c1966] 135 p. (Wisconsin Council of Teachers of English. Special publication, no. 15) DHU; TxU
7Dickinson, Donald C. A bio-bibliography of Langston Hughes, 1902-1967. With a preface by Arna Bontemps. [Hamden, Conn.] Archon Books, 1967. 267 p. port. PS3515.U274Z62An expansion of the author's dissertation, University of Michigan.Bibliography: p. 257-262.
8Dodds, Barbara. Negro literature for high school students. [Champaign, Ill.] National Council of Teachers of English [1968] 157 p. Z1361.N39D62 [TR: Stanford, Barbara Dodds.]
9DuBois, William E. B., ed. A select bibliography of the Negro American. A compilation made under the direction of Atlanta University, together with the Proceedings of the Tenth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, on May 30, 1905. 3d ed. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1905. 71 p. (Atlanta University publications, no. 10) E185.5.A88 v. 10 [Z1361.N39D85]
10Dumond, Dwight L. A bibliography of antislavery in America. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press [1961] 119 p. Z1249.S6D8
11Ellis, Ethel M. V., comp. The American Negro: a selected checklist of books. Washington, Negro Collection, Howard University Library, 1968. 46 leaves. Z1361.N39E4 [TR: Ellis, Ethel M. Vaughan.]
12Guzman, Jessie P. George Washington Carver, a classified bibliography. Tuskegee Institute, Ala. Dept. of Records and Research, Tuskegee Institute, 1953 [i.e. 1954] 26 p. (Records and research pamphlet no. 3) Z8150.7.G8 [TR: Guzman, Jessie Parkhurst]
13Hall, Woodrow W. A bibliography of the Tuskegee gerrymander protest; pamphlets, magazine and newspaper articles chronologically arranged. Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Dept. of Records and Research, Tuskegee Institute, 1960. 54 leaves. (Records and research pamphlet no. 8) DLC [TR: Z7164.R4H28]
14Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va. Collis P. Huntington Library. A classified catalogue of the Negro collection in the Collis P. Huntington Library, Hampton Institute. Compiled by workers of the Writers' Program of the Works Projects Administration in the State of Virginia. Sponsored by Hampton Institute. [n.p.] 1940. 255, [35] p. Z1361.N39H3 [TR: Collis P. Huntington Library (Hampton Institute) 1971]
15Haywood, Charles. A bibliography of North American folklore and folksong. 2d rev. ed. v. 1. The American people north of Mexico, including Canada. New York, Dover Publications [1961] xxx, 748 p. maps (on lining papers) Z5984.U5H32 v. 1Section on the Negro: p. 430-560.
16Heartman, Charles F. Phillis Wheatley (Phillis Peters); a critical attempt and a bibliography of her writings. New York, For the author, 1915. 44 p. facsims. (part fold.), port. (Heartman's historical series, no. 7) PS866.W5Z6"The following essay was written by me originally in German ... now translated by another person.""A short list of books with contents relating to Phillis Wheatley": [1] p. at end.
17Historical Records Survey. District of Columbia. Calendar of the writings of Frederick Douglass in the Frederick Douglass memorial home, Anacostia, D. C. Prepared by District of Columbia Historical Records Survey, Division of Professional and Service Projects, Work Projects Administration. Sponsored by the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Washington, District of Columbia Historical Records Survey, 1940.93 leaves. Z6616.D7H57
18Howard University, Washington, D. C. Library. Moorland Foundation. The Arthur B. Spingarn collection of Negro authors. Washington [1948] [12] p. facsim. Z733.W31M6
18aHussey, Edith L., Mary Henderson, and Barbara Marx. The Negro American; a reading list. [New York, Dept. of Racial and Cultural Relations, National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA, 1957] 40 p. (Interracial publication, no. 96) Z1361.N39I5 no. 96
18bIndex to periodical articles by and about Negroes. Mar. 1950+ Boston, G. K. Hall, quarterly. A13.O4 [TR: E185.5.I55M]Vols. for 1961+ called v. 2+Title varies: Mar. 1950-summer 1954, Index to Selected Negro Periodicals.—Fall 1954-fall 1965, Index to Selected Periodicals.Vols. for 1960+ compiled by Hallie Q. Brown Memorial Library, Central State College, Wilberforce, Ohio, and the Schomburg Collection, New York Public Library.Vols. for Mar. 1950-fall 1959 issued by the Library, Central State College (called Mar.-Dec. 1950 College of Education and Industrial Arts).Decennial cumulation, 1950-59; annual cumulation, 1960+
19Jackson, Miles M. A bibliography of Negro history & culture for young readers. Assisted by Mary W. Cleaves and Alma L. Gray. [Pittsburgh] University of Pittsburgh Press, published for Atlanta University [c1969] xxxi, 134 p. Z1361.N39J3
20Johnson, Clifton H., and Carroll G. Barber. The Negro American, a selected and annotated bibliography for high schools and junior colleges. Nashville, Tenn., Amistad Research Center [c1968] 113 p. DHU
21Kaplan, Louis. A bibliography of American autobiographies, compiled by Louis Kaplan in association with James Tyler Cook, Clinton E. Colby, Jr. [and] Daniel C. Haskell. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1961. 372 p. Z1224.K3See the index for autobiographies relating to the Negro.
22Koblitz, Minnie W. The Negro in schoolroom literature; resource materials for the teacher of kindergarten through the sixth grade. [New York, Center for Urban Education, 1967?] 67 p. Z1037.K6"Research ... was performed pursuant to a contract with the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Office of Education."
23Lancaster, Emmer M. A guide to Negro marketing information. [Washington] U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Business and Defense Services Administration; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1966. 50 p. illus. HC110.C6L3Bibliography: p. 7-20.
24Lewinson, Paul. A guide to documents in the National Archives: for Negro studies, compiled for the Committee on Negro Studies of the American Council of Learned Societies. Washington, 1947. 28 p. (American Council of Learned Societies Devoted to Humanistic Studies. Committee on Negro Studies. Publications, no. 1) NNC
25McNamee, Lawrence F. Dissertations in English and American literature; theses accepted by American, British, and German universities, 1865-1964. New York, Bowker, 1968. 1124 p. Z5O53.M32Chapter 32 is on Negro literature.
26Merriam, Alan P. A bibliography of jazz. With the assistance of Robert J. Brenford. Philadelphia, American Folklore Society, 1954. 145 p. (Publications of the American Folklore Society. Bibliographical series, v. 4, 1954) ML128.J3M4
27Miller, Elizabeth W. The Negro in America; a bibliography compiled for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. With a foreword by Thomas F. Pettigrew. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1966. xvii, 190 p. Z1361.N39M5
28Murray, Daniel A. P. Preliminary list of books and pamphlets by Negro authors, for Paris Exposition and Library of Congress. [Washington, U.S. Commission to the Paris Exposition, 1900] 8 p. Z1361.N39M9
29National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Education Dept. Integrated school books; a descriptive bibliography of 399 pre-school and elementary school texts and story books. New York, NAACP Special Contribution Fund, 1967. 55 p. Z5814.D5N3
30National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Division of Christian Education. Negro heritage resource guide; a bibliography of the Negro in contemporary America. [New York, Council Press, c1967] 21 p. Z1361.N39N16
31National Urban League. Dept. of Research and Community Projects. Selected bibliography on the Negro. New York, Dept. of Research, National Urban League, 1937. 13 leaves. Z1361.N39N18—— —— Supplement, no. 1. Compiled by the Dept. of Research, National Urban League. [New York, 1938] 13 leaves. Z1361.N39N18 Suppl.
32New Jersey Library Association. Bibliography Committee. New Jersey and the Negro; a bibliography, 1715-1966. [Trenton] 1967. 196 p. Z1361.N39N45
33New York Public Library. The Negro; a list of significant books. Compiled by Dorothy R. Homer. 8th rev. ed. New York, 1960. 25 p. DHU [TR: Z1361.N39N52 1965]
34New York. Public Library. Schomburg Collection of Negro Literature and History. Dictionary catalog. Boston, G.K. Hall, 1962. 9 v. (8473 p.) Z881.N592S35A first supplement (2 v.) was published in 1968.
35Oberlin College. Library. A classified catalogue of the collection of anti-slavery propaganda in the Oberlin College Library, compiled by Geraldine Hopkins Hubbard, edited by Julian S. Fowler. [Oberlin] 1932. 84 p. (Its Bulletin, v. 2, no. 3) Z1249.S6O2"Formed the bibliographical portion of a thesis submitted in June, 1932, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of master of arts at Oberlin College."—Preface."The main list contains all printed items ... which can be classed as American anti-slavery propaganda published before January 1, 1863....An appendix describes the smaller collections of pro-slavery literature and of the British anti-slavery propaganda."
36Porter, Dorothy B. Early American Negro writings: a bibliographical study. In Bibliographical Society of America. Papers, v. 39, 3d quarter 1945: 192-268. Z1008.B51P, v. 39 [TR: Wesley, Dorothy Porter, 1905-1995.]
37Porter, Dorothy B. North American Negro poets, a bibliographical check-list of their writings, 1760-1944. Hattiesburg, Miss., Book Farm, 1945. 90 p. ([Heartman's historical series, no. 70]) Z1361.N39P6 [TR: Wesley, Dorothy Porter, 1905-1995.]A new edition is in preparation.
37aPorter, Dorothy B., and Ethel M. V. Ellis, comps. The journal of Negro education. Index to vols. 1-31, 1932-1962. Washington, Howard University Press, 1963. 82 p. DHU
38[Pride, Armistead S.] Negro newspapers on microfilm; a selected list. Washington, Library of Congress, Photoduplication Service, 1953. 8 p. Z6944.N39P7
39Princeton University. Program in American Civilization. The Negro in America; bibliographies, conference 1966. [Lincoln University, Pa., American Studies Institute, c1966] 90 p. DLC
40Reid, Ira De A. Negro youth, their social and economic backgrounds; a selected bibliography of unpublished studies, 1900-1938. Washington, American Youth Commission of the American Council on Education [c1939] 71 leaves. Z1361.N39R35Largely unpublished theses of a selected list of colleges and universities in the United States.
41Reisner, Robert G. The literature of jazz, a selective bibliography. With an introduction by Marshall W. Stearns. [2d ed. rev. and enl.] New York, New York Public Library, 1959. 63 p. ML128.J3R4 1959
42Rollins, Charlemae H., ed. We build together; a reader's guide to Negro life and literature for elementary and high school use. Contributors: Augusta Baker [and others] 3d ed. [Champaign, Ill., National Council of Teachers of English, 1967] xxviii, 71 p. Z1361.N39R77 1967 [TR: [1941?]]
43Ross, Frank A., and Louise V. Kennedy. A bibliography of Negro migration. New York, Columbia University Press, 1935. 251 p. Z1361.N39R8Annotated."The fifth volume produced under the project, Negro Migration, conducted in the Department of Sociology at Columbia University, under subsidy by the Social Science Research Council, and the Columbia University Council for Research in the Social Sciences."—Preface."Bibliographies": p. [191]-194.
44Salk, Erwin A. A layman's guide to Negro history. Chicago, Quadrangle Books, 1966. xviii, 170 p. port. Z1361.N39S23
45Scally, Mary Anthony, Sister. Negro Catholic writers, 1900-1943, bio-bibliography. Detroit, W. Romig [1945] 152 p. Z1361.N39S35"Sources": p. 11-12.
46Schomburg, Arthur A., comp. A bibliographical checklist of American Negro poetry. New York, L. F. Heartman, 1916. 57 p. (Bibliographica americana; a series of monographs, v. 2) Z1231.P7S3 [TR: Z1361.N39S37]"Bibliography of the poetical works of Phillis Wheatley (copyrighted by Charles F. Heartman) [reprinted from Heartman's 'Phillis Wheatley (Phillis Peters)']": p. 47-57.
47Sieg, Vera. The Negro problem: a bibliography. Madison, Wis., 1908. 22 p. (Wisconsin Free Library Commission. American social questions, no. 1) Z7164.S66A5, no. 1 [Z1361.N39S5]Prepared in fulfillment of requirements for graduation, Wisconsin Library School.
48Spangler, Earl. Bibliography of Negro history: selected and annotated entries, general and Minnesota. Minneapolis, Ross and Haines, 1963. 101 p. Z1361.N39S65
49Texas. Southern University, Houston. Library. Heartman Negro collection; catalogue, v. 1. Houston [1955?] 1 v. (unpaged) [Z881.H84]
50Thompson, Edgar T., and Alma M. Thompson. Race and region, a descriptive bibliography compiled with special reference to the relations between whites and Negroes in the United States. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1949. 194 p. Z1361.N39T5Material in the libraries of Duke University, the University of North Carolina, and North Carolina College.
51Treworgy, Mildred L., and Paul B. Foreman. Negroes in the United States; a bibliography of materials for schools, approvable for purchase in Pennsylvania under NDEA provisions. With a supplement of recent materials on other American minority peoples. University Park, Pa. [Available from the Office of the Director of Libraries, Pennsylvania State University] 1967. 93 p. (Pennsylvania. State University. Libraries. School series, no. 1) PSt
52Tuskegee Institute. Dept. of Records and Research. A bibliography of the student movement protesting segregation and discrimination, 1960. Tuskegee Institute, Ala., 1961. 10 leaves. (Its Records and research pamphlet no. 9) Z7164.R12T8
53Tuskegee Institute. Dept. of Records and Research. A selected list of references relating to the elementary, secondary, and higher education of Negroes, 1949 to June 1955. [Tuskegee Institute, Ala.] 1955. 18 leaves. (Its Records and research pamphlet no. 5) Z1361.N39T8
54Tuskegee Institute. Dept. of Records and Research. A selected list of references relating to the Negro teacher, 1949 to June 1955. [Tuskegee Institute, Ala.] 1955. 3 leaves. (Its Records and research pamphlet no. 7) Z1361.N39T83
55U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development. Library. Bibliography of Robert C. Weaver. [Washington, 1966] 9 leaves. Z7164.H8U446
56U.S. Library of Congress. 75 years of freedom; commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the proclamation of the 13th amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The Library of Congress. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1943] 108 p. col. plates. E185.6.U597"The contribution of the American Negro to American culture was the theme of a series of exhibits and concerts in the Library of Congress commencing on December 18th, the 75th anniversary of the proclamation of the Thirteenth amendment, which ended slavery in the United States."—p. v.
57U.S. Library of Congress. Division of Bibliography. List of discussions of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments with special reference to Negro suffrage. Compiled under the direction of Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1906. 18 p. [Z881.U5] Z1361.N39U5
58U.S. Library of Congress. Division of Bibliography. Select list of references on the Negro question. Compiled under the direction of Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin. 2d issue, with additions. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1906. 61 p. [Z881.U5] Z1361.N39U6 1906
59Weinberg, Meyer. School integration; a comprehensive classified bibliography of 3,100 references. Chicago, Integrated Education Associates, 1967. 137 p. Z5814.D5W4
60Welsch, Erwin K. The Negro in the United States; a research guide. Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1965. 142 p. Z1361.N39W4 1965Bibliography: p. 108-138.
61Whiteman, Maxwell. A century of fiction by American Negroes, 1853-1952; a descriptive bibliography. Philadelphia, 1955. 64 p. Z1361.N39W5
62Williams, Daniel T., and Carolyn L. Redden. The Black Muslims in the United States: a selected bibliography. [Tuskegee, Ala.] Hollis Burke Frissell Library, Tuskegee Institute, 1964. 19 leaves. Z7835.B5W5
63Work, Monroe N. A bibliography of the Negro in Africa and America. New York, Argosy-Antiquarian, 1965. xxi, 698 p. Z5118.N4W6 1965Reprint of the 1928 ed."A bibliography of bibliographies on the Negro in the United States": pt. 2, p. [630]-636.
64Bicknell, Marguerite E., and Margaret C. McCulloch. Guide to information about the Negro and Negro-white adjustment. [Memphis, Brunner Print. Co.] 1943. 39 p. E185.61.B5
65Davis, John P., ed. The American Negro reference book. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1966] xxii, 969 p. illus. E185.D25Includes bibliographical references.
66Directory of U.S. Negro newspapers, magazines & periodicals. 1966. [New York] U.S. Negro World. 30 leaves. Z6944.N39D5Editor: F. B. Sawyer.
67Ebony. The Negro handbook, compiled by the editors of Ebony. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1966. 535 p. E185.E2Includes bibliographies.
68Encyclopedia of the Negro, preparatory volume with reference lists and reports, by W. E. B. DuBois and Guy B. Johnson; prepared with the cooperation of E. Irene Diggs, Agnes C. L. Donohugh, Guion Johnson [and others]. Introduction by Anson Phelps Stokes. Rev. and enl. ed. New York, Phelps-Stokes Fund, 1946. 215 p. group port. HT1581.E5 1946"Bibliography of bibliographies": p. [191]-198.
69Fleming, George J., and Christian E. Burckel. Who's who in colored America. An illustrated biographical dictionary of notable living persons of African descent in the United States. 7th ed. New York, C. E. Burckel, 1950. 648 p. illus. DHU—— —— Supplement. New York, C. E. Burckel, 1950. 34 p. DHU
70[Gibson, John W.] Progress of a race; or, The remarkable advancement of the American Negro, from the bondage of slavery, ignorance, and poverty to the freedom of citizenship, intelligence, affluence, honor and trust. Rev. and enl. by J. L. Nichols and William H. Crogman, with special articles by well known authorities, Mrs. Booker T. Washington, Charles M. Melden, M. W. Dogan, Albon L. Holsey, and an introduction by Robert R. Moton. Naperville, Ill., J. L. Nichols [1929] 480 p. illus., ports. E185.G453Cover title: The New Progress of a Race.1901 ed. by J. W. Gibson and W. H. Crogman, published under title: The Colored American.
71Haley, James T., comp. Afro-American encyclopedia; or, The thoughts, doings, and sayings of the race, embracing addresses, lectures, biographical sketches, sermons, poems, names of universities, colleges, seminaries, newspapers, books ... as discussed by more than 100 of their wisest and best men and women. Nashville, Haley & Florida, 1895. 639 p. illus. DHU
72Julius Rosenwald Fund. Directory of agencies in race relations, national, State and local. Chicago, 1945. 124 p. E184.A1J8"The burden of the responsibility for compilation and editing ... has been upon Elizabeth Linn Allen."—Introduction.
73The National cyclopedia of the colored race. Montgomery, Ala., National Pub. Co., 1919. [622] p. illus., ports. E185.N27Editor: Clement Richardson.
74The Negro handbook. 1942-49. New York, Malliet. tables. E185.5.N382Editor: 1942-49, Florence Murray."Books and periodicals, a list of books by and about Negroes": 1942, p. 194-200.Ceased publication with 1949.
75Negro year book. New York, W. H. Wise, 1912-52. illus., diagrs., maps. E185.5.N41No editions were published for 1920-21, 1923/24, 1927/28-1929/30.Editor: 1912-38, M. N. Work.Vols. for 1912-47 issued by Tuskegee Institute.Ceased publication with 1952.
76Plans for Progress. Directory of Negro colleges and universities, March, 1967. Washington [1967] 103 p. LC2801.P55 1967
77Ploski, Harry A., and Roscoe C. Brown, comps. The Negro almanac. New York, Bellwether Pub. Co. [1967] 1012 p. illus., maps, ports. [E185.P55] [TR: E185.N385]Bibliography: p. 946-965.
78Who's who in colored America; a biographical dictionary of notable living persons of Negro descent in America. 1927-1938-40. New York, T. Yenser. ports. E185.96.W54Ceased publication with 1938-40.
79Who's who of the colored race; a general biographical dictionary of men and women of African descent. Chicago, 1915. 296 p. illus. E185.96.W6Edited by Frank Lincoln Mather.Memento ed., "Half-Century Anniversary of Negro Freedom in U.S."
80Williams, Ethel L. Biographical directory of Negro ministers. New York, Scarecrow Press, 1965. 421 p. BR563.N4W5Bibliography: p. 407-412.
81Wright, Richard R., ed. The encyclopaedia of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, containing principally the biographies of the men and women, both ministers and laymen, whose labors during a hundred and sixty years, helped make the AME Church what it is; ... and other matters concerning African Methodism and the Christian church in general. Compiled by R. R. Wright, Jr., assisted by associate editors, W. A. Fountain [and others]. Introduction by William A. Fountain, foreword by Reverdy Cassius Ransom. 2d ed. Philadelphia, 1947 [i.e. 1948] 688 p. illus., maps, ports. BX8443.W8 1948First ed., 1916, has title: Centennial Encyclopedia of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
82Albany Institute of History and Art, Albany. The Negro artist comes of age; a national survey of contemporary American artists. Albany Institute of History and Art, January 3rd through February 11th, 1945. [Albany, 1945] [77] p. illus., ports. MHForeword signed: John Davis Hatch, Jr."Up till now" (p. iii-vii) signed: Alain Locke.Contains biographies.
83Bowdoin College. Museum of Fine Arts. The portrayal of the Negro in American painting; [exhibition] the Bowdoin College Museum of Art. [Catalogue. Brunswick? Me.] 1964. 1 v. (unpaged) illus., ports. N8232.B6
84Dover, Cedric. American Negro art. [Greenwich, Conn.] New York Graphic Society [1960] 186 p. illus., col. plates, ports. N6538.N5D6 1960"Bibliography by Maureen Dover": p. 57-60.
85Harmon Foundation. Negro artists, an illustrated review of their achievements. New York [1935] 59 p. illus., ports. N6538.N5H34Includes exhibition of paintings by Malvin Gray Johnson and sculptures by Richmond Barthé and Sargent Johnson, presented by the Harmon Foundation in cooperation with the Delphic Studios, April 22-May 4, 1935, inclusive.
86Locke, Alain L. Negro art: past and present. Washington, Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936. 122 p. (Bronze booklet no. 3) [E185.5.B85 no. 3] [TR: Call number of original: E185.82.L74]"Reading references" at end of each chapter.
87Locke, Alain L. The Negro in art; a pictorial record of the Negro artist and of the Negro theme in art; edited and annotated by Alain Locke. Washington, Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1940. 224 p. illus., plates. N6538.N5L6"Selected bibliography": p. 224.
88Murray, Freeman H. M. Emancipation and the freed in American sculpture; a study in interpretation. Introduction by John Wesley Cromwell. Washington, The author, 1916. xxviii, 239 p. plates. (Black folk in art series) E185.89.I2M9"This monograph is chiefly the expansion of papers which were read as lectures ... at the Summer School and Chautauqua of the National Religious Training School at Durham, N.C., in 1913. Some of the matter has also appeared in the A.M.E. Church Review."—Preface.
89The Negro in American art. An exhibition co-sponsored by the California Arts Commission, UCLA Art Galleries, September 11 to October 16, 1966; University of California, Davis, November 1 to December 15, 1966; Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego, January 6 to February 12, 1967; Oakland Art Museum, February 24 to March 19, 1967. [Los Angeles?] UCLA Art Galleries, Dickson Art Center [1967?] 63 p. DLC [TR: N6538.N5N35]
90New York (City) City University of New York. The evolution of Afro-American artists, 1800-1950. New York, 1967. 70 p. illus. N6538.N5N4Catalog of an exhibition organized by the City University of New York in cooperation with the Harlem Cultural Council and the New York Urban League, and held at Great Hall, the City College.
91Porter, James A. Modern Negro art. With eighty-five halftone plates. New York, Dryden Press, 1943. 272 p. illus. N6538.N5P6Bibliography: p. 183-192.Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
92Porter, James A. Ten Afro-American artists of the nineteenth century. Washington, Gallery of Art, Howard University [1967] 33 p. illus. N6538.N5P62Catalog, prepared by J. A. Porter, of an exhibition commemorating the centennial of Howard University held Feb. 3-Mar. 30, 1967, Gallery of Art, Howard University.Bibliography: p. 32-33.
93Rodman, Selden. Horace Pippin, a Negro painter in America. New York, Quadrangle Press, 1947. 88 p. illus., plates (part mounted col.), ports. ND237.P65R6
94Roelof-Lanner, T. V., ed. Prints by American Negro artists. Los Angeles, Cultural Exchange Center [1965] [11] p., [51] illus. (part col.) NE508.R6
95Schoener, Allon, comp. Harlem on my mind; cultural capital of Black America, 1900-1968. Preface by Thomas P. F. Hoving. Introduction by Candice Van Ellison. New York, Random House [1969, c1968] 255 p. illus., ports. F128.68.H3S3Supplements an exhibition held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1969 and organized by the museum in association with the New York State Council on the Arts.
96United States Committee for the First World Festival of Negro Arts. Dix artistes nègres des États-Unis; premier Festival mondial des arts nègres, Dakar, Sénégal, 1966. Ten Negro artists from the United States; first World Festival of Negro Arts, Dakar, Senegal, 1966. An exhibition produced and sponsored by the United States Committee for the First World Festival of Negro Arts, Inc., and the National Collection of Fine Arts, Smithsonian Institution. [Text translation prepared by Denise and Michel Berthier. New York, Distributed by October House, 1966] 1 v. (unpaged) illus., ports. N6538.N5U513"The exhibition will be circulated in the United States by the American Federation of Arts."English and French.
97White, Charles. Images of dignity: the drawings of Charles White. Foreword by Harry Belafonte. Introduction by James Porter. Commentary by Benjamin Horowitz. [Los Angeles] W. Ritchie Press [1967] 121 p. illus., port. [NC1075.W55H6] [TR: NC139.W454A4 1967]
98Adams, Russell L. Great Negroes, past and present. Illustrations by Eugene Winslow. David P. Ross, Jr., editor. Chicago, Afro-Am Pub. Co. [c1963] 182 p. illus. (part col.), maps (part col.), ports. (part col.) E185.96.A4Bibliography: p. 178-179.
99Bardolph, Richard. The Negro vanguard. New York, Rinehart [1959] 388 p. E185.96.B28Bibliography: p. 343-369.
99aBarton, Rebecca C. Witnesses for freedom; Negro Americans in autobiography. Foreword by Alain Locke. New York, Harper [1948] 294 p. E185.96.B3Bibliography: p. 286-287.
100Bennett, Lerone. Pioneers in protest. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1968. 267 p. ports. E185.96.B4
101Bontemps, Arna W. Famous Negro athletes. New York, Dodd, Mead [1964] 155 p. ports. (Famous biographies for young people) GV697.A1B575
102Bontemps, Arna W., and Jack Conroy. Anyplace but here. New York, Hill and Wang [1966] 372 p. E185.6.B75 1966"A revised and expanded version of They Seek a City."—Dust jacket.Bibliography: p. 349-360.
103Bontemps, Arna W. We have tomorrow. Illustrated with photographs by Marian Palfi. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1945. 131 p. ports. E185.96.B6Biographical sketches of 12 young Negro men and women.
104Brawley, Benjamin G. Negro builders and heroes. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1937. 315 p. ports. E185.96.B797"Bibliographical notes": p. 293-304.
105Brown, Hallie Q., comp. Homespun heroines and other women of distinction. Foreword by Mrs. Josephine Turpin Washington. [Xenia, Ohio, Aldine Pub. Co., c1926] 248 p. ports. E185.96.B84
106Brown, William W. The black man, his antecedents, his genius, and his achievements. New York, T. Hamilton, 1863. 288 p. E185.96.B86"Memoir of the author": p. 11-29.
107Bruce, John E., comp. Short biographical sketches of eminent Negro men and women in Europe and the United States, with brief extracts from their writings and public utterances. Yonkers, N.Y. [Gazette Press] 1910. 103 p. E185.96.B88
108Bryant, Lawrence C. Negro lawmakers in the South Carolina Legislature, 1869-1902. Orangeburg, School of Graduate Studies, South Carolina State College [1968] 142 p. E185.93.S7B75Bibliographical footnotes.
109Bryant, Lawrence C. Negro senators and representatives in the South Carolina Legislature, 1868-1902. Orangeburg, S. C.[1968] 199 p. E185.93.S7B76Bibliographical footnotes.
110Bullock, Ralph W. In spite of handicaps; brief biographical sketches with discussion outlines of outstanding Negroes now living who are achieving distinction in various lines of endeavor. With a foreword by Channing H. Tobias. Freeport, N.Y., Books for Libraries Press [1968] 140 p. ports. (Essay index reprint series) E185.96.B93 1968Reprint of the 1927 ed.Bibliography: p. 131-140.
111Cherry, Gwendolyn, Ruby Thomas, and Pauline Willis. Portraits in color; the lives of colorful Negro women. New York, Pageant Press [1962] 224 p. illus. E185.96.C45Bibliography: p. 207-224.
112Child, Lydia M. F. The freedmen's book. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 277 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.86.C46 1968Reprint of the 1865 ed.
113Christmas, Walter, ed. Negroes in public affairs and government. Contributors: Clifford A. Bradshaw [and others] Photographic editor: Roland Mitchell. Preface: Alfred E. Cain. v. 1. Yonkers [N.Y.] Educational Heritage [1966] 352 p. illus., ports. (Negro heritage library) E185.96.C47Bibliography: p. 342-345.
114Daniel, Sadie I. Women builders. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1931] xviii, 187 p. plates, ports. E185.96.D23Contents.—Lucy Craft Laney.—Maggie Lena Walker.—Janie Porter Barrett.—Mary McLeod Bethune.—Nannie Helen Burroughs.—Charlotte Hawkins Brown.—Jane Edna Hunter.
115Dannett, Sylvia G. L. Profiles of Negro womanhood. Illustrations: Horace Varela. Roll of honor portraits: Tom Feelings. Yonkers, N.Y., Educational Heritage [1964-66] 2 v. illus., facsims., ports. (Negro heritage library) E185.96.D25Includes bibliographies.Contents.—v. 1. 1619-1900.—v. 2. 20th century.
116David, Jay, comp. Growing up black. New York, Morrow, 1968. 256 p. [E185.96.D283] [TR: E185.96.G76 1992]Includes well-known personalities such as Ethel Waters, Richard Wright, Dick Gregory, and Booker T. Washington.
117Dobler, Lavinia G., and Edgar A. Toppin. Pioneers and patriots: the lives of six Negroes of the Revolutionary era. Illustrated by Colleen Browning. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1965. 118 p. illus., facsims., ports. (Zenith books) E185.96.D6
118Embree, Edwin R. 13 against the odds. New York, Viking Press, 1944. 261 p. ports. E185.96.E4Contents.—Mary McLeod Bethune, Amazon of God.—Richard Wright, native son.—Charles S. Johnson, a scholar and a gentleman.—Walter White, little David.—George Washington Carver, sweet potato wizard.—Langston Hughes, Shakespeare in Harlem.—Marian Anderson, deep river of song.—W. E. B. DuBois, elder statesman.—Mordecai W. Johnson, Lord high chancellor.—William Grant Still, music maker.—A. Philip Randolph, Saint Philip of the Pullman porters.—Joe Louis, champion of the world.—Paul Robeson, voice of freedom.
119Foley, Albert S. God's men of color; the colored Catholic priests of the United States, 1854-1954. With a foreword by Richard J. Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. New York, Farrar, Straus [1955] 322 p. BX4670.F6Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
120Haynes, Elizabeth R. Unsung heroes. New York, DuBois and Dill, 1921. 270 p. illus., ports. E185.96.H4Contents.—Frederick Douglass.—Paul Laurence Dunbar.—Booker T. Washington.—Harriet Tubman.—Alexander S. Pushkin.—Blanche Kelso Bruce.—Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.—Benjamin Banneker.—Phillis Wheatley.—Toussaint L'Ouverture.—Josiah Henson.—Sojourner Truth.—Crispus Attucks.—Alexandre Dumas.—Paul Cuffé.—Alexander Crummell.—John Mercer Langston.
121Hill, Roy L. Who's who in the American Negro press. Dallas, Royal Pub. Co. [1960] 80 p. PN4888.N4H5Bibliography: p. 70.
122Hughes, Langston. Famous Negro heroes of America. Illustrated by Gerald McCann. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1958. 202 p. illus. (Famous biographies for young people) E185.96.H82
123Hughes, Langston. Famous Negro music makers: illustrated with photographs. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1955. 179 p. illus. (Famous biographies for young people) ML3556.H9
124Huie, William B. Three lives for Mississippi. With an introduction by Martin Luther King, Jr. [New York] New American Library [1968] 160 p. illus., maps, plans, ports. (A Signet book) F347.N4H8 1968Concerns civil rights workers Andrew Goodman, James E. Chaney, and Michael H. Schwerner.
125Lomax, Louis E. To kill a black man. Los Angeles, Holloway House Pub. Co.; [distributed by: All America Distributors Corp., 1968] 256 p. E185.97.L5L6Malcolm X and Martin Luther King are the subjects of this study.
126Majors, Monroe A. Noted Negro women, their triumphs and activities. Chicago, Donohue & Henneberry [c1893] xvi, 365 p. illus., ports. E185.96.M23
127Metcalf, George R. Black profiles. New York, McGraw-Hill [1968] 341 p. E185.96.M48Bibliographical references included in "A note on sources" (p. 337-340).Contents.—Martin Luther King, Jr.—William E. B. DuBois.—Roy Wilkins.—Thurgood Marshall.—Jackie Robinson.—Harriet Tubman.—Medgar Wiley Evers.—James H. Meredith.—Rosa Parks.—Edward W. Brooke.—Whitney Moore Young, Jr.
128Moseley, J. H. Sixty years in Congress and twenty-eight out. New York, Vantage Press [1960] 99 p. illus. [JK1021.M75] [TR: E185.96.M84]
129[Mott, Abigail F., and M. S. Wood], comps. Narratives of colored Americans. Printed by order of the Trustees of the residuary estate of Lindley Murray. New York, W. Wood & co., 1877. E185.96.M92
130Murray, Pauli. Proud shoes; the story of an American family. New York, Harper [1956] 276 p. E185.97.M95
131The National register; pertinent facts about colored Americans. Louisville, Ky., Register Publications, 1952. 632 p. E185.96.N37Editor: T. J. Johnson.
132Newbold, Nathan C., ed. Five North Carolina Negro educators; prepared under the direction of N. C. Newbold. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1939. 142 p. ports. LC2802.N8N4Biographical sketches composed by committees organized in nine North Carolina colleges, each committee consisting of one faculty adviser and one or more students."Published under the auspices of the Division of Cooperation in Education and Race Relations; cooperating organizations: State Department of Public Instruction, University of North Carolina [and] Duke University."Contents.—Simon Green Atkins.—James Benson Dudley.—Annie Wealthy Holland.—Peter Weddick Moore.—Ezekiel Ezra Smith.
133Nichols, Charles H. Many thousand gone; the ex-slaves' account of their bondage and freedom. Leiden, Brill, 1963. xvi, 229 p. (Studies in American literature and history, 1) E444.N5Bibliography: p. [213]-224.
134Ovington, Mary W. Portraits in color. New York, Viking Press, 1927. 241 p. E185.96.O96Contents.—James Weldon Johnson.—Marcus Garvey.—Max Yergan.—Mordecai W. Johnson.—Lucy Laney.—Robert Russa Moton.—W. E. Burghardt DuBois.—Scipio Africanus Jones.—Walter White.—Robert S. Abbott.—Maggie Lena Walker.—Eugene Kinckle Jones.—Louis Tompkins Wright.—Ernest Everett Just.—George Washington Carver.—Janie Porter Barrett.—Langston Hughes.—Paul Robeson.—Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller.—Roland Hayes.
135Redding, Jay Saunders. The lonesome road; the story of the Negro's part in America. New York, Doubleday, 1958. 355 p. (Mainstream of America series) E185.61.R298Bibliography: p. 335-340.The lives of 12 Negro men and women and their struggle for equal rights.
136Richardson, Ben A. Great American Negroes; rev. by William A. Fahey, illustrated by Robert Hallock. New York, Crowell [1956] 339 p. illus. E185.96.R5 1956
137Robinson, Wilhelmena S. Historical Negro biographies. New York, Publishers Co. [1967] 291 p. ports. (International library of Negro life and history) DT18.R57Published under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.Bibliography: p. 271-281.
138Rogers, Joel A. World's great men of color. New York, J. A. Rogers [1946-47] 2 v. illus., ports. DT18.R59On cover: 3000 B.C. to 1946 A.D.Paged continuously.Includes bibliographies.
139Rollins, Charlemae H. Famous American Negro poets. New York, Dodd, Mead [1965] 95 p. ports. (Famous biographies for young people) PS153.N5R6
140Rollins, Charlemae H. Famous Negro entertainers of stage, screen, and TV. New York, Dodd, Mead [1967] 122 p. ports. (Famous biographies for young people) PN2286.R6Contents.—Ira Aldridge.—Marian Anderson.—Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong.—Josephine Baker.—Harry Belafonte.—Nat "King" Cole.—Sammy Davis, Jr.—"Duke" Ellington.—Lena Horne.—Eartha Kitt.—Sidney Poitier.—Leontyne Price.—Paul Robeson.—-Bill "Bojangles" Robinson.—"Bert" Williams.—Thomas "Fats" Waller.
141Rollins, Charlemae H. They showed the way; forty American Negro leaders. New York, Crowell [1964] 165 p. E185.96.R6
142Scruggs, Lawson A. Women of distinction: remarkable in works and invincible in character. Introduction by Mrs. Josephine Turpin Washington. Special contributions by T. Thomas Fortune, William Still. Raleigh, L. A. Scruggs, 1893. xxiii, 382 p. illus., ports. E185.96.S4
143Simmons, William J. Men of mark; eminent, progressive and rising. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 1141 p. ports. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.96.S45 1968Reprint of the 1887 ed.
144Spellman, A. B. Four lives in the bebop business. New York, Pantheon Books [1966] xiv, 241 p. ML394.S74
145Sterne, Emma G. I have a dream. Illustrated by Tracy Sugarman. New York, Knopf [1965] x, 229, iv p. illus. E185.96.S79Bibliography: p. [i]-iv (3d group).Contents.—Lift every voice and sing: Marian Anderson.—For life, liberty, and the pursuit of jobs: Asa Philip Randolph.—Freedom on the seas: Hugh Mulzac.—Hammer of justice: Thurgood Marshall.—Tired feet and rested hearts: Rosa Lee Parks.—At the point of the bayonet: Daisy Bates.—When freedom is a cup of coffee: James Farmer.—The man with the bulletproof soul: Fred Shuttlesworth.—We shall overcome: John Lewis.—One day out of a long tomorrow.
146Styles, Fitzhugh L. The Negro lawyers' contribution to seventy-one years of our progress. 71st anniversary celebration of Negro progress, Philadelphia, 1863-1934. [Philadelphia, Summer Press, c1934] [13] p. ports. E185.96.S83
147Troup, Cornelius V. Distinguished Negro Georgians. Dallas, Royal Pub. Co. [1962] 203 p. E185.93.G4T7Bibliography: p. 195-199.
148Washington, John E. They knew Lincoln. With an introduction by Carl Sandburg. New York, E. P. Dutton, 1942. 244, [21] p. facsims., plates, ports. E457.15.W32"Personal narrative of a Negro boy and man who sought all that could be possibly known about Abraham Lincoln from Negroes having impressions or facts he considered worth record."—Introduction.
149Wright, Richard R. The bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. [Nashville] Printed by the A.M.E. Sunday School Union, 1963. 389 p. BX8442.W7
150Young, Andrew S. N. Great Negro baseball stars, and how they made the major leagues. New York, A. S. Barnes [1953] 248 p. illus. [GV865.Y6A3] [TR: GV865.A1Y6]
151Allen, Walter C., and Brian A. L. Rust. King Joe Oliver. London, Sidgwick and Jackson [1958] 224 p. illus. ML419.O4A6 1958Biography of a great jazz musician.
152Anderson, Marian. My Lord, what a morning; an autobiography. New York, Viking Press, 1956. 312 p. illus. ML420.A6A3
153Armstrong, Henry. Gloves, glory, and God; an autobiography. [Westwood, N.J.] F. H. Revell Co. [1956] 256 p. illus. GV1132.A7A3
154Ashe, Arthur. Advantage Ashe, by Arthur Ashe, Jr., as told to Clifford George Gewecke, Jr. New York, Coward-McCann [1967] 192 p. illus. GV994.A7A3The achievements to date of an outstanding tennis player.
155Aunt Sally; or, The cross the way to freedom. A narrative of the slave-life and purchase of the mother of Rev. Isaac Williams, of Detroit, Michigan. Cincinnati, American Reform Tract and Book Society, 1862. 216 p. illus., ports. E444.W79Slave life in North Carolina and Alabama.
156Bailey, Pearl. The raw Pearl. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1968] 206 p. ports. ML420.B123A3
157[Ball, Charles] Fifty years in chains; or, The life of an American slave. New York, H. Dayton, 1859. 430 p. E444.B184Prepared by —— Fisher from the verbal narrative of Ball, a slave.Earlier editions published under title: Slavery in the United States.
158Bartlett, Irving H. Wendell Phillips, Brahmin radical. Boston, Beacon Press [1961] 438 p. E449.P5594Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 402-432).An abolitionist leader.
159Beckwourth, James P. The life and adventures of James P. Beckwourth [edited by] T. D. Bonner. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 537 p. illus. (The American Negro, his history and literature) F592.B388 1969Reprint of the 1856 ed.
160Bennett, Lerone. What manner of man; a biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. With an introduction by Benjamin E. Mays. [3d rev. ed.] Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1958. 251 p. illus., ports. E185.97.K5B4 1968
161Bernard, Jacqueline. Journey toward freedom; the story of Sojourner Truth. New York, Norton [1967] xiv, 265 p. illus., ports. E185.97.T82Bibliography: p. [255]-259.Upon gaining her freedom in 1828, Sojourner Truth became a lecturer advocating immediate emancipation for her people and the right to vote for women.
162Bibb, Henry. Narrative of the life and adventures of Henry Bibb, an American slave, written by himself. With an introduction by Lucius C. Matlack. New York, The author, 1949. 204 p. illus. E444.B58
163Bleiweiss, Robert M., Jacqueline L. Harris, and Joseph R. Marfuggi. Marching to freedom; the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Middletown, Conn., American Education Publications [1968] 152 p. illus., ports. E185.97.K5B55
164Bradford, Sarah E. H. Harriet Tubman, the Moses of her people. Introduction by Butler A. Jones. New York, Corinth Books [1961] 149 p. illus. (The American experience series) [E444.T894] [TR: E444.T82B73 1993]First ed. published in 1869 under title: Scenes in the Life of Harriet Tubman."Reprint of the expanded second edition of 1886."
165Branch, Hettye W. The story of "80 John," a biography of one of the most respected Negro ranchmen in the Old West. New York, Greenwich Book Publishers [1960] 59 p. F392.M6B7A brief story of Daniel Webster Wallace, a Negro rancher.
166Brawley, Benjamin G. Paul Laurence Dunbar, poet of his people. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1936. 159 p. port. PS1557.B7"Appendix. The Praise of Dunbar": p. 127-140.Bibliography: p. 141-151.
167Broderick, Francis L. W. E. B. DuBois, Negro leader in a time of crisis. Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press, 1959. 259 p. illus. E185.97.D73B7Bibliography: p. [233]-236.
168Brown, Claude. Manchild in the promised land. New York, Macmillan [1965] 415 p. E185.97.B86A3Autobiographical study of life in Harlem.
169Brown, John. Slave life in Georgia: a narrative of the life, sufferings, and escape of John Brown, a fugitive slave, now in England. Edited by L. A. Chamerovzow. London [W. M. Watts] 1855. 250 p. port. E444.B87
170Buckle, Richard, ed. Katherine Dunham, her dancers, singers, musicians. Illustrations by Roger Wood and other photographers. London, Ballet Publications [1949] xvi, 79 p. (chiefly illus.) GV1631.B8English and French.
171Buckler, Helen. Doctor Dan, pioneer in American surgery. Boston, Little, Brown [1954] 381 p. illus. R154.W5225B8Daniel Hale Williams was the first surgeon to operate on the heart.2d ed. published in 1968 under title: Daniel Hale Williams, Negro Surgeon.
172Byrd, James W. J. Mason Brewer, Negro folklorist. Austin, Tex., Steck-Vaughn Co. [1967] 44 p. (Southwest writers series, no. 12) GR55.B7B9Bibliography: p. 43-44.
173Cade, John B. Holsey, the incomparable. New York, Pageant Press [1964] 221 p. BX8473.H58C3Bibliography: p. 208-211.Lucius Henry Holsey was a bishop in the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church in America.
174Campanella, Roy. It's good to be alive. Boston, Little, Brown [1959] 306 p. illus. GV865.C3A3Life of one of the greatest baseball catchers.
175Chesnutt, Helen M. Charles Waddell Chesnutt, pioneer of the color line. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1952] 324 p. port. PS1292.C6Z68See Fiction section for his novels.
176Christian, Malcolm H. My country and I; the interracial experiences of an American Negro. With essays on interracial understanding. New York, Exposition Press [1963] 96 p. E185.97.C5A3
177Clark, Septima P., and LeGette Blythe. Echo in my soul. Foreword by Harry Golden. New York, Dutton, 1962. 243 p. illus. E185.97.C59A3An autobiography of Septima Clark.
177aConrad, Earl. Harriet Tubman. Washington, Associated Publishers [1943] xiv, 248 p. E444.T896"Documentation": p. 227-238.
178Cotton, Ella E. A spark for my people; the sociological autobiography of a Negro teacher. New York, Exposition Press [1954] 288 p. LA2317.C64A3
179Cronon, Edmund D. Black Moses; the story of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1955. 278 p. illus. E185.97.G3C7
180Cunningham, Virginia. Paul Laurence Dunbar and his song; illustrated with photographs. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1947. 283 p. illus. PS1557.C8Bibliography: p. 267-283.
181Daly, John J. A song in his heart. Introduction by Harry F. Byrd; illustrated by Marian L. Larer. Philadelphia, Winston [1951] 102 p. illus. ML410.B627D3Songs: p. 71-102.Biography of James A. Bland, composer of "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny."
182Dancy, John C. Sand against the wind; the memoirs of John C. Dancy. With a foreword by Frank Angelo. Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1966. 249 p. illus., ports. E185.97.D22A3The author was a political leader in Detroit.
183Davis, Edwin A., and William R. Hogan. The barber of Natchez, wherein a slave is freed and rises to a very high standing; wherein the former slave writes a two-thousand-page journal about his town and himself; wherein the free Negro diarist is appraised in terms of his friends, his code, and his community's reaction to his wanton murder. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1954] 272 p. illus., facsim., port. E185.97.J697D3A memoir of William Johnson.
184Davis, Sammy, Jane Boyar, and Burt Boyar. Yes I can; [the story of Sammy Davis, Jr. New York, Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1965] 612 p. ports. PN2287.D322A3
185Douglass, Frederick. Life and times of Frederick Douglass: his early life as a slave, his escape from bondage, and his complete history, written by himself. With a new introduction by Rayford W. Logan. New York, Collier Books [1962] 640 p. (Collier books, BS74) E449.D744 1962Reprinted from the rev. ed. of My Bondage and My Freedom, published in 1892.Includes bibliography.
186Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American slave, written by himself. Edited by Benjamin Quarles. Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Press, 1960. xxvi, 163 p. map, port. (The John Harvard library) E449.D74905
187Douty, Esther M. Forten, the sailmaker; pioneer champion of Negro rights. Chicago, Rand McNally [1968] 208 p. illus., ports. E185.97.F717D6Bibliography: p. 200-201.James Forten, an inventor and sailmaker, fought for civil rights of the Negro in the eighteenth century. He was a prominent Philadelphia Negro leader.
188DuBois, William E. B. The autobiography of W. E. B. DuBois; a soliloquy on viewing my life from the last decade of its first century. [New York] International Publishers [1968] 448 p. ports. E185.97.D73A3A selected bibliography of the published writings of W. E. B. DuBois: p. 431-437.
189DuBois, William E. B. John Brown. Centennial ed. New York, International Publishers [1962] 414 p. illus. E451.D81 1962First published in 1909.Bibliography: p. [405]-408.
190Dunham, Katherine. A touch of innocence. New York, Harcourt, Brace [1959] 312 p. GV1785.D82A3A well-known dancer and choreographer relates her experiences.
191Elliott, Lawrence. George Washington Carver: the man who overcame. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1966] 256 p. port. S417.C3E4Bibliography: p. 255-256.
192Emanuel, James A. Langston Hughes. New York, Twayne Publishers [1967] 192 p. (Twayne's United States authors series, TUSAS 123) PS3515.U274Z64Bibliography: p. 184-188.
193English, James W. Handyman of the Lord: the life and ministry of the Rev. William Holmes Borders. New York, Meredith Press [1967] 177 p. BX6455.B63E5
194Farr, Finis. Black champion; the life and times of Jack Johnson. New York, Scribner [1964] 245 p. ports. GV1132.J73F3The first Negro heavyweight champion of the world.
195Feldman, Eugene P. R. Black power in old Alabama; the life and stirring times of James T. Rapier, Afro-American Congressman from Alabama, 1839-1883. Illustrations by Margaret T. Burroughs [and] Jennie Washington. [Chicago] Museum of African American History [1968] 69 p. illus., map, port. E185.97.R3F4Bibliographical references included in "Footnotes" (p. [70]-[72]).Bibliography (annotated): p. [73]-[74].
196Fisher, Miles M. The Master's slave, Elijah John Fisher; a biography, by his son, Miles Mark Fisher. With an introduction by the Rev. Lacey Kirk Williams, and an appreciation by the Hon. Martin B. Madden. Philadelphia, Judson Press [1922] 194 p. plates, ports. BX6455.F5F5
197Flipper, Henry O. The colored cadet at West Point. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 322 p. illus. (The American Negro, his history and literature.) U410.P1F6 1969Reprint of the 1878 ed.
198Flipper, Henry O. Negro frontiersman: the Western memoirs of Henry O. Flipper, first Negro graduate of West Point. Edited with an introduction by Theodore D. Harris. El Paso, Texas Western College Press, 1963. 54 p. ports. E185.97.F5 1963"Sequel to ... The Colored Cadet at West Point ... published in 1878."
199Foley, Albert S. Bishop Healy: beloved outcaste; the story of a great priest whose life has become a legend. New York, Farrar, Straus and Young [1954] 243 p. illus. BX4705.H37F6The life of James Augustine Healy, a bishop in the Catholic Church.
200Foner, Philip S. Frederick Douglass, a biography. New York, Citadel Press [1964] 444 p. port. E449.D755"Reference notes": p. [377]-434.
201Forman, James. Sammy Younge, Jr.: the first black college student to die in the black liberation movement. New York, Grove Press [1968] 282 p. illus., map, ports. E185.97.Y64F6
202Garvey, Amy J. Garvey and Garveyism. [Kingston, Jamaica, c1963] 287 p. ports. E185.97.G3G3Biography of Marcus Garvey.
203Garvey, Marcus. Philosophy and opinions. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 102 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) [E185.97.G3A25] [TR: E185.97.G3A249]Reprint of 1923 ed. with a new introduction.
204Gibson, Althea. I always wanted to be somebody. Edited by Ed Fitzgerald. New York, Harper [1958] 176 p. illus. GV994.G5A3The story of the rise to fame of a Negro woman tennis star.
205Gilbert, Olive. Narrative of Sojourner Truth. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 320 p. illus., facsims., ports. (The American Negro; his history and literature) E185.97.T882First published in 1850.Reprint of the 1878 ed."Book of life [by Frances W. Titus]": p. [127]-320.Life of one of the few Negro women abolitionists.
206Graham, Shirley. Paul Robeson, citizen of the world. Foreword by Carl Van Doren. New York, J. Messner [1946] 264 p. ports. E185.97.R64 [TR: Du Bois, Shirley Graham E185.97.R635 1971]Bibliography: p. 259.The story of an all-American football star who became an internationally famous singer and actor.
207Graham, Shirley. Your most humble servant. New York, Messner [1949] 235 p. [QB36.B22G7] [TR: Du Bois, Shirley Graham QB36.B22D82]"Notes on sources": p. 227-235.The story of Benjamin Banneker, mathematician and astronomer, who helped L'Enfant plan the city of Washington.
208Gregory, Dick. Nigger; an autobiography, by Dick Gregory with Robert Lipsyte. New York, Dutton, 1964. 224 p. illus., ports. PN2287.G68A3
209Hammon, Briton. A narrative of the uncommon sufferings, and surprizing deliverance of Briton Hammon, a Negro man ... servant to General Winslow, of Marshfield, in New-England; who returned to Boston, after having been absent almost thirteen years. Containing an account of the many hardships he underwent from the time he left his master's house, in the year 1747, to the time of his return to Boston.—How he was cast away in the capes of Florida; ... the horrid cruelty ... of the Indians in murdering the whole ship's crew; ... the manner of his being carried by them into captivity. Also, an account of his being confined four years and seven months in a close dungeon. Boston, Printed and sold by Green & Russell, 1760. 14 p. F314.H22Probably the earliest imprint by an American Negro.
210Handy, William C. Father of the blues; an autobiography of W. C. Handy, edited by Arna Bontemps, with a foreword by Abbe Niles. New York, Macmillan, 1941. xiv, 317 p. plate, port. ML410.H18B6Includes music."Compositions, arrangements and books by W. C. Handy": p. 3O5-3O8.
211Hardwick, Richard. Charles Richard Drew, pioneer in blood research. New York, Scribner [1967] 144 p. QP26.D7H3
212Hare, Maud C. Norris Wright Cuney: a tribune of the Black people. Introduction by Robert C. Cotner. Austin, Tex., Steck-Vaughn [c1968] xv, 230 p. illus., ports. (Steck-Vaughn's Life and adventure series) E185.97.C97H3 1913aA facsimile reproduction of the 1913 edition with new introduction.The story of a prominent Texas politician in the 1870's.
213Harrison, Deloris. We shall live in peace: the teachings of Martin Luther King, Jr. Edited, and with commentary, by Deloris Harrison. Illustrated by Ernest Crichlow. New York, Hawthorn Books [1968] 64 p. illus. E185.97.K5H3
214Hawkins, Hugh, ed. Booker T. Washington and his critics; the problem of Negro leadership. Boston, Heath [1962] 113 p. (Problems in American civilization) E185.97.W235Includes bibliography.
215Hawkins, William G. Lunsford Lane; or, Another helper from North Carolina. Boston, Crosby & Nichols, 1863. 305 p. port. E444.L26Lane, an antislavery lecturer, spent 32 years in slavery. He served as "waiter and messenger" to two Governors of the State of North Carolina.
216Hayden, William. Narrative of William Hayden, containing a faithful account of his travels for a number of years, whilst a slave, in the South. Cincinnati [Published for the author] 1846. 156 p. plates, port. E444.H41
217Henson, Josiah. Father Henson's story of his own life. Introduction by Walter Fisher. New York, Corinth Books [1962] 212 p. illus. (The American experience series, AE18) E444.H523 1962First published in 1858 under title: Truth Stranger than Fiction: Father Henson's Story of His Own Life.
218Henson, Matthew A. A Negro explorer at the North Pole. With a foreword by Robert E. Peary and an introduction by Booker T. Washington; with illustrations from photographs. New York, F. A. Stokes Co. [1912] xx, 200 p. illus., plates, ports. G670.1909.H5Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
219Hickey, Neil, and Ed Edwin. Adam Clayton Powell and the politics of race. New York, Fleet Pub. Corp. [1965] 308 p. illus., ports. E748.P86H5Bibliography: p. 299-300.
220Holdredge, Helen O. Mammy Pleasant's partner. New York, Putnam [c1954] 300 p. illus. F869.S3B4 1954The story of Thomas Frederick Bell in San Francisco.
221Holt, Rackham. George Washington Carver, an American biography. Rev. ed. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1963] 360 p. illus. S417.C3H6 1963
222Holt, Rackham. Mary McLeod Bethune; a biography. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1964. 306 p. illus., ports. E185.97.B34H6An outstanding educator and political figure.
223Horne, Lena, and Richard Schickel. Lena. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1965. 300 p. illus., ports. ML420.H65A35
224Hoyt, Edwin P. Paul Robeson, the American Othello. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1967] 228 p. ML420.R73H7Bibliographical footnotes.
225Hughes, Langston. The big sea, an autobiography. New York, Hill and Wang [1963, c1940] 335 p. (American century series) PS3515.U274Z5 1963"AC65."
226Hughes, Langston. I wonder as I wander; an autobiographical journey. New York, Rinehart [1956] 405 p. PS3515.U274Z58
227Hughes, William H., and Frederick D. Patterson, eds. Robert Russa Moton of Hampton and Tuskegee. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1956] 238 p. illus. E185.97.M92H8"Volume of tributes to the life of Dr. Robert Russa Moton."
228Huie, William B. Ruby McCollum; woman in the Suwannee jail. Rev. ed. [New York] New American Library [1964] 190 p. illus., port. (A Signet book) DLC-LL [TR: LAW]
229Hunton, George K. All of which I saw, part of which I was; the autobiography of George K. Hunton as told to Gary MacEóin. Introduction by Roy Wilkins. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 283 p. E185.61.H96A crusader for racial justice.
230Jackson, Mahalia. Movin' on up. With Evan McLeod Wylie. New York, Hawthorn Books [1966] 212 p. illus., ports. ML420.J17A3Discography: p. [215], [218]-[219].Probably the best known gospel singer.
230aJefferson, Isaac. Memoirs of a Monticello slave, as dictated to Charles Campbell in the 1840's by Isaac, one of Thomas Jefferson's slaves. Edited by Rayford W. Logan. Charlottesville, Published by the University of Virginia Press for the Tracy W. McGregor Library, 1951. 45 p. port. E444.J4"Appeared simultaneously in the autumn 1951 William and Mary Quarterly.""Bibliographical note": p. 37-38.
231Johnson, James W. Along this way; the autobiography of James Weldon Johnson. New York, Viking Press, 1933. 418 p. plates, ports. [E185.97.J69] [TR: PS3519.O2625Z463 1933]Life of a diplomat, poet, and anthologist.
232Keckley, Elizabeth H. Behind the scenes; or, Thirty years a slave, and four years in the White House. New York, G. W. Carleton, 1868. xvi, 371 p. port. E457.15.K26An unusual portrait of Mary Todd Lincoln by her dressmaker and "confidante" who served her while in the White House.Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1968.
233Kitt, Eartha. Thursday's child. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce [1956] 250 p. illus. ML420.K5A3Autobiographical.
234Kytle, Elizabeth L. Willie Mae. New York, Knopf, 1958. 243 p. E185.97.W62K9Story of a Negro servant by one of her white employers.
235Lee, Reba, pseud. I passed for white, by Reba Lee as told to Mary Hastings Bradley. New York, Longmans, Green, 1955. 274 p. E185.97.Z9L4
236Lewis, Claude. Adam Clayton Powell. Greenwich, Conn., Fawcett Publications [1963] 127 p. (Gold medal books) E748.P86L4"K1361."
237Lichello, Robert. Pioneer in blood plasma: Dr. Charles Richard Drew. New York, J. Messner [1968] 190 p. R154.D75L5Bibliography: p. 185.
237aLittle, Malcolm. The autobiography of Malcolm X. With the assistance of Alex Haley. Introduction by M. S. Handler. Epilogue by Alex Haley. New York, Grove Press [1965] xvi, 455 p. illus., ports. [E185.61.L58] [TR: E185.97.L5A3]
238Lokos, Lionel. House divided; the life and legacy of Martin Luther King. New Rochelle, N.Y., Arlington House [1968] 567 p. E185.97.K5L6Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [505]-555).
239Louis, Joe. The Joe Louis story. [Written with the editorial aid of Chester L. Washington and Haskell Cohen] New York, Grosset & Dunlap [1953] 197 p. illus. GV1132.L6A3 1953First ed. published in 1947 under title: My Life Story.
240Love, Nat. The life and adventures of Nat Love. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 162 p. illus., ports. (The American Negro, his history and literature) F594.L89 1968Reprint of the 1907 ed., with new introduction by W. L. Katz.A pioneer in the westward movement.
241McFeely, William S. Yankee stepfather: General O. O. Howard and the freedmen. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1968. 351 p. port. (Yale publications in American studies, 15) E467.1.H8M3Bibliography: p. [329]-346.Oliver Otis Howard was one of the founders of Howard University.
242Magdol, Edward. Owen Lovejoy, abolitionist in Congress. New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers University Press [1967] 493 p. facsims., map, port. E415.9.L89M3Bibliography: p. [457]-468.
243Magoun, F. Alexander. Amos Fortune's choice; the story of a Negro slave's struggle for self-fulfillment. Photographs by the author. Freeport, Me., Bond Wheelwright Co. [1964] 237 p. illus., facsims., maps. E185.97.F73M3Bibliographical footnotes.
244Malvin, John. North into freedom; the autobiography of John Malvin, free Negro, 1795-1880. Edited and with an introduction by Allan Peskin. Cleveland, Press of Western Reserve University, 1966. 87 p. E185.97.M26A3 1966"A book from Cleveland State University."Bibliographical references included in "Notes to the introduction" (p. 22-24).
245Mann, Arthur W. The Jackie Robinson story. New York, Grosset & Dunlap [1951] 224 p. ports. (The Big league baseball library) GV865.R6M3 1951
246Marrant, John. A narrative of the life of John Marrant, of New York, in North America: giving an account of his conversion when only fourteen years of age: his leaving his mother's house from religious motives ... and being at last taken by an Indian hunter among the Cherokees. Leeds, Printed by Davies, 1810. 24 p. E99.C5M35Preface signed: W. Aldridge. London, July 19, 1786.
247Marshall, Herbert, and Mildred Stock. Ira Aldridge, the Negro tragedian. London, Rockliff [1958] 355 p. illus. PN2598.A52M3Includes bibliographies.
248Martin Luther King, Jr.; man and teacher. [Baltimore, Printed by Vinmar Lithographing Co., 1968] 1 v. (unpaged) illus., ports. E185.97.K5M34
249Mays, Willie. Born to play ball, by Willie Mays, as told to Charles Einstein. New York, Putnam [1955] 168 p. illus. GV865.M38A3
250Mays, Willie. Willie Mays: My life in and out of baseball, as told to Charles Einstein. New York, Dutton, 1966. 320 p. illus., ports. GV865.M38A32
251Melbourn, Julius. Life and opinions of Julius Melbourn; with sketches of the lives and characters of Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, John Randolph, and several other eminent American statesmen. Edited by a late member of Congress. Syracuse, Hall & Dickson, 1847. 239 p. port. E338.M51
252Meltzer, Milton. Langston Hughes; a biography. New York, Crowell [1968] 281 p. PS3515.U274Z68 1968Bibliography: p. 269-274.
253Miller, Floyd. Ahdoolo: The biography of Matthew A. Henson. New York, Dutton, 1963. 221 p. illus. G635.H4M5 1963
254Miller, Margery. Joe Louis: American. New York, Current Books, A. A. Wyn [1945] 181 p. plates, ports. GV1132.L6M5
255Moore, Archie. The Archie Moore story. New York, McGraw-Hill [1960] 240 p. illus. GV1132.M75A3
256Morrow, Everett F. Black man in the White House; a diary of the Eisenhower years by the administrative officer for special projects, the White House, 1955-1961. New York, Coward-McCann [1963] 308 p. E835.M58
257Moton, Robert R. Finding a way out; an autobiography. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Page, 1920. 295 p. E185.97.M9While president of Tuskegee Institute, Moton raised the standard of its secondary academic work to that of an accredited college.
258Mulzac, Hugh. A star to steer by; by Hugh Mulzac, as told to Louis Burnham and Norval Welch. New York, International Publishers [1963] 251 p. illus. E185.63.M8Life of a member of the merchant marine.
259Newman, Shirlee P. Marian Anderson: lady from Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Westminster Press [c1965] 175 p. ports. ML420.A6N5Bibliography: p. 163-165.
260Olsen, Otto H. Carpetbagger's crusade; the life of Albion Winegar Tourgée. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1965. xiv, 395 p. illus., facsims., ports. PS3088.O5"Bibliography of Tourgée's writings": p. 355-362. "General bibliography": p. 363-382.
261Ottley, Roi. The lonely warrior: the life and times of Robert S. Abbott. Chicago, H. Regnery Co., 1955. 381 p. illus. PN4874.A23O7Bibliography: p. 369-370.Abbott was editor for many years of the Chicago Defender, a major Negro newspaper.
262Parker, Robert A. The incredible messiah; the deification of Father Divine. Boston, Little, Brown, 1937. 323 p. port. BX7350.P3Bibliography: p. 321-323.Self-named Father Divine, George Baker was the leader for many years of a religious sect.
263Parks, Gordon. A choice of weapons. New York, Harper & Row [1966] 274 p. PS3566.A73C5The story of a successful photographer-historian for Life magazine.
264Parks, Lillian R. My thirty years backstairs at the White House [by] Lillian Rogers Parks in collaboration with Frances Spatz Leighton. New York, Fleet Pub. Corp. [1961] 346 p. E176.1.P37
265Patterson, Floyd. Victory over myself. With Milton Gross. [New York] B. Geis Associates; distributed by Random House [1962] 244 p. illus. GV1132.P3A3
266Pauli, Hertha E. Her name was Sojourner Truth. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1962] 250 p. E185.97.T89Bibliography: p. 242-244.An abolitionist and lecturer until her death in 1883.
267Pennington, James W. C. The fugitive blacksmith; or, Events in the history of James W. C. Pennington ... formerly a slave in the state of Maryland, United States. 3d ed. London, C. Gilpin, 1850. xix, 84 p. E444.P41
268Preston, Edward. Martin Luther King: fighter for freedom. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1968] 142 p. illus., ports. (Doubleday signal books) E185.97.K5P7
269Quarles, Benjamin, comp. Frederick Douglass. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1968] 184 p. (Great lives observed) E449.Q18A Spectrum book."Bibliographical note": p. 179-181. Bibliographical footnotes.
270Reddick, Lawrence D. Crusader without violence; a biography of Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, Harper [1959] 243 p. illus. E185.97.K5R4
271Reisner, Robert G. Bird: the legend of Charlie Parker, New York, Citadel Press [1962] 256 p. ports. ML419.P4R4Discography: p. 241-256.
272Robeson, Eslanda G. Paul Robeson, Negro. New York, Harper, 1930. 178 p. ports. E185.97.R65
273Robeson, Paul. Here I stand. New York, Othello Associates [1958] 128 p. E185.97.R62
274Robinson, James H. Road without turning, the story of Reverend James H. Robinson; an autobiography. New York, Farrar, Straus [1950] 312 p. BX9225.R715A3The founder of "Crossroads Africa" and religious leader of today.
275Robinson, John R. Jackie Robinson, my own story, as told to Wendell Smith; foreword by Branch Rickey. New York, Greenberg [1948] 170p. illus., ports. GV865.R6A3
276Robinson, John R., and Alfred Duckett. Breakthrough to the big league; the story of Jackie Robinson. New York, Harper & Row [1965] 178 p. ports. (A Breakthrough book) GV865.R6A27
277Roper, Moses. A narrative of the adventures and escape of Moses Roper, from American slavery; with a preface, by the Rev. T. Price. 4th ed. London, Harvey and Darton, 1840. 120 p. illus., port. E444.R785
278Rowan, Carl T. Wait till next year; the life story of Jackie Robinson, by Carl T. Rowan with Jackie Robinson. New York, Random House [1960] 339 p. illus. GV865.R6R64
279Rowland, Mabel, ed. Bert Williams, son of laughter; a symposium of tribute to the man and to his work, by his friends and associates, with a preface by David Belasco. New York, English Crafters [c1923] xvii, 218 p. illus., facsims., plates, ports. PN2287.W46R6Egbert Austin Williams was a comedian loved by theatergoers of the last generation.
280Rudwick, Elliott M. W. E. B. DuBois; a study in minority group leadership. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press [1960] 382 p. E185.97.D73R8Bibliography: p. 350-368.
281Rudwick, Elliott M. W. E. B. DuBois, propagandist of the Negro protest. With a new preface by Louis Harlan and an epilogue by the author. New York, Atheneum, 1968. 390 p. (Studies in American Negro life, NL6) E185.97.D73R8 1968Atheneum paperbacks.Bibliographical references included in "Notes": p. 319-376.
282Schuyler, George S. Black and conservative; the autobiography of George S. Schuyler. New Rochelle, N.Y., Arlington House [1966] 362 p. PN4874.S35A3Long-time columnist for the Pittsburgh Courier, a Negro newspaper.
283Schuyler, Philippa D. Adventures in black and white. Foreword by Deems Taylor. New York, R. Speller [1960] 302 p. illus. ML417.S42A3An account of the author's travels in sixty countries. This child prodigy, musician, and composer, died in Vietnam while on a visit to entertain the troops.
284Singleton, George A. The autobiography of George A. Singleton. Boston, Forum Pub. Co. [1964] 272 p. illus., ports. [BX8449.S5A3]The story of a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
285Smith, Amanda B. An autobiography; the story of the Lord's dealings with Mrs. Amanda Smith, the colored evangelist; containing an account of her life work of faith, and her travels in America, England, Ireland, Scotland, India and Africa, as an independent missionary. With an introduction by Bishop Thoburn. Chicago, Meyer, 1893. xvi, 506 p. plates, ports. BV3785.S56A3 1893
286Somerville, John A. Man of colour; an autobiography. With a foreword by P. M. Sherlock. Kingston, Jamaica, Pioneer Press [1951] 134 p. illus. E185.97.S65 1951
287Spencer, Samuel R. Booker T. Washington and the Negro's place in American life. Boston, Little, Brown [1955] 212 p. (The Library of American biography) E185.97.W272
288Sterling, Dorothy. Captain of the Planter; the story of Robert Smalls. Illustrated by Ernest Crichlow. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1958. 264 p. illus. E185.97.S6S8Bibliography: p. 247-264.The Planter was a Confederate gunboat seized and turned over to the Union by Smalls, a slave crewman.
289Steward, Austin. Twenty-two years a slave, and forty years a freeman; embracing a correspondence of several years, while president of Wilberforce Colony, London, Canada West. 3d ed. Rochester, N.Y., Allings & Cory, 1861. 360 p. plates, port. E444.S845
290Still, James. Early recollections and life of Dr. James Still. [Philadelphia] Printed for the author by J. B. Lippincott, 1877. 274 p. port. E185.97.S85James Still was the brother of William Still, the author of The Underground Railroad.
291Tarry, Ellen. The third door; the autobiography of an American Negro woman. New York, D. McKay Co. [1955] 304 p. E185.97.T37A3
292Tarry, Ellen. Young Jim; the early years of James Weldon Johnson. New York, Dodd, Mead [1967] 230 p. facsims., ports. PS3519.O2625Z89
293Tatum, E. Ray. Conquest or failure? Biography of J. Frank Norris. Dallas, Baptist Historical Foundation [1966] 295 p. illus., ports. BX6495.N59T3Bibliographical footnotes.
294Terrell, Mary C. A colored woman in a white world. Washington, Ransdell [c1940] 436 p. port. E185.97.T47
295Thomas, Jesse O. My story in black and white; the autobiography of Jesse O. Thomas. Foreword by Whitney M. Young, Jr. New York, Exposition Press [1967] 300 p. (An Exposition-banner book) E185.97.T49A3
296Thomas, Piri. Down these mean streets. New York, Knopf, 1967. 333 p. F128.9.P8T5Autobiographical account of life among the Puerto Ricans and Negroes in New York City.
297Thomas, Will. The seeking. New York, A. A. Wyn [1953] 290 p. E185.97.T52A3Autobiographical; the author is a journalist and writer from Vermont.
297aThompson, Era B. American daughter. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1946] 300 p. E185.97.T53Autobiographical.
298Thompson, John. The life of John Thompson, a fugitive slave; containing his history of 25 years in bondage, and his providential escape. Worcester, J. Thompson, 1856. 143 p. E444.T47
299Thornbrough, Emma L., comp. Booker T. Washington. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [c1969] 184 p. (Great lives observed) E185.97.W277A Spectrum book."Bibliographical note": p. 178-182.
300Ward, Samuel R. Autobiography of a fugitive Negro: his anti-slavery labours in the United States, Canada, & England. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 412 p. port. (The American Negro: his history and literature) E449.W27 1968Reprint of the 1855 ed.
301Washington, Booker T. Up from slavery; an autobiography. New York, Doubleday, Page, 1901. 330 p. port. E185.97.W3Originally published in the Outlook.An illustrated edition with an introduction by Langston Hughes was published by Dodd, Mead, New York, in 1965.
302Webb, Constance. Richard Wright; a biography. New York, Putnam [1968] 443 p. illus. PS3545.R815Z9Bibliography: p. 423-429.
303Wesley, Charles H. Richard Allen, apostle of freedom. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1935] 300 p. port. BX8449.A6W4Bibliography: p. 277-285.The first bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
304White, Walter F. A man called White, the autobiography of Walter White. New York, Viking Press, 1948. 382 p. E185.97.W6A3Writer and former director of the NAACP.
305Wright, Richard. Black boy; a record of childhood and youth. Illustrated by Ashley Bryan. Introductory note by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1950] 298 p. illus. (The Living library [L22]) PS3545.R815Z5 1950
306Wright, Richard R. 87 years behind the black curtain; an autobiography. Philadelphia, Rare Book Co., 1965. 351 p. [BX8449.W7A3]Richard Robert Wright was a leader in the African MethodistEpiscopal Church.
307Yates, Elizabeth. Howard Thurman, portrait of a practical dreamer. New York, John Day Co. [1964] 249 p. port. BX6455.T5Y3"Chronological bibliography of works by Howard Thurman": p. 241-242.A Negro philosopher, author, and religious leader.
308Young, Andrew S. N. Sonny Liston, the champ nobody wanted. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co. [1963] 224 p. illus. GV1132.L5Y6
309Ames, William C. The Negro struggle for equality in the twentieth century. [Teachers ed.] Boston, Heath [1965] 182, 16 p. illus., maps. (New dimensions in American history) E185.61.A49Bibliography: p. 177-179.
310Barbour, Floyd B., comp. The Black Power revolt; a collection of essays. Editor: Floyd B. Barbour. Boston, P. Sargent [1968] 287 p. (Extending horizons books) E185.615.B3Includes bibliographies.
311Belfrage, Sally. Freedom summer. New York, Viking Press [1965] 246 p. E185.93.M6B4A personal account of a civil rights worker who spent the summer of 1964 in Mississippi.
312Blaustein, Albert P., and Robert L. Zangrando, comps. Civil rights and the American Negro; a documentary history. New York, Trident Press [1968] xv, 671 p. E185.61.B665
313Brink, William J., and Louis Harris. Black and white; a study of U.S. racial attitudes today. New York, Simon and Schuster [1967] 285 p. E185.615.B7
314Bureau of National Affairs, Washington, D.C. The Civil Rights Act of 1964: text, analysis, legislative history; what it means to employers, businessmen, unions, employees, minority groups. Washington [1964] 424 p. forms. (A BNA operations manual) DLC-LL
315Burns, William H. The voices of Negro protest in America. With a foreword by John Hope Franklin. New York, Oxford University Press [1963] 85 p. E185.61.B96 1963b"Issued under the auspices of the Institute of Race Relations, London."Bibliography: p. [87]-[89].
316Cable, George W. The Negro question; a selection of writings on civil rights in the South. Edited by Arlin Turner. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1958. 286 p. (Doubleday anchor books) E185.61.C19 1958a
317Cable, George W. A southerner looks at Negro discrimination; selected writings of George W. Cable, edited, with a biographical sketch, by Isabel Cable Manes. With an introduction by Professor Alva W. Taylor. [New York, 1946] 48 p. E185.61.C197"References": p. 48.
318Carmichael, Stokely, and Charles V. Hamilton. Black Power: the politics of liberation in America. New York, Random House [1967] xii, 198 p. E185.615.C32Bibliography: p. 187-189.
319Carter, Wilmoth A. The new Negro of the South; a portrait of movements and leadership. New York, Exposition Press [1967] 58 p. (An Exposition-university book) E185.61.C285Bibliography: p. [57]-58.
320Chambers, Bradford, comp. Chronicles of Negro protest; a background book for young people, documenting the history of black power, compiled and edited with a commentary by Bradford Chambers. New York, Parents' Magazine Press [1968] 319 p. illus., facsims., ports. (Background books) E185.61.C5
321Clark, Mary T. Discrimination today; guidelines for civic action. Foreword by John J. Wright. New York, Hobbs, Dorman [1966] 372 p. [E185.61.C63] [TR: E185.615.C595]Includes bibliographies.
322Clarke, Jacquelyne J. These rights they seek; a comparison of goals and techniques of local civil rights organizations. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1962] 85 p. E185.93.A3C55 [TR: Clarke, Jacquelyne Mary Johnson]Bibliographical references included in "References" (p. 78-85).
323Commager, Henry S., comp. The struggle for racial equality: a documentary record, selected and edited by Henry Steele Commager. New York, Harper & Row [1967] 260 p. (Harper torchbooks. The Academy library, TB1300) E185.61.C72"Originally published as part 4, chapter 14, of Living Ideas in America ... revised and greatly expanded."
324Congressional Quarterly Service, Washington, D.C. Revolution in civil rights. 4th ed. Washington, 1968. 119 p. (CQ background) KF4757.Z9C6 1968
325Cooke, Paul P. Civil rights in the United States. [Washington] Meridian House Foundation [1966] 32 p. illus., ports. E185.61.C775
325aCox, Archibald, Mark D. Howe, and James R. Wiggins. Civil rights, the Constitution, and the courts, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1967. 76 p. KF4757.A5C6"Papers ... originally presented in 1965-1966 as a series of evening lectures at the Massachusetts Historical Society."Bibliographical footnotes.
326Dorman, Michael. We shall overcome. [New York, Delacorte Press]; distributed by the Dial Press [1964] 340 p. E185.61.D69
327Dumond, Dwight L. America's shame and redemption. Marquette, Northern Michigan University Press [1965] xvi, 171 p. port. E185.D9
328Facts on File, New York. Civil rights, 1960-63; the Negro campaign to win equal rights and opportunities in the United States, compiled by the editors of Facts on file and News year. New York [1964] 152 p. illus., ports. (Interim history) E185.61.F16A Facts on File publication.
329Farmer, James. Freedom, when? With an introduction by Jacob Cohen. New York, Random House [1966, c1965] xxiv, 197 p. E185.61.F19
330Fleishman, Stanley, and Sam Rosenwein. The new Civil Rights Act, what it means to you! [Los Angeles, Blackstone Book Co., 1964] 191 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF4750.F53]
331Franklin, John H., and Isidore Starr, comps. The Negro in twentieth century America; a reader on the struggle for civil rights. New York, Vantage Books [1967] xxii, 542 p. illus. E185.61.F79Bibliography: p. [539]-542.
332Friedman, Leon, comp. The civil rights reader; basic documents of the civil rights movement. Foreword by Martin Duberman. New York, Walker [1967] xxi, 348 p. E185.61.F857Bibliography: p. [347]-348.
333Golden, Harry L. Mr. Kennedy and the Negroes. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1964] 319 p. group port. E185.61.G58Bibliography: p. 309-314.
334Grant, Joanne, comp. Black protest; history, documents, and analyses, 1619 to the present, edited with introduction and commentary by Joanne Grant. [New York, Fawcett World Library, 1968] 505 p. (The Political perspectives series) E185.G75A Fawcett premier book.Bibliography: p. [506]-[507].
335Gregory, Dick. The shadow that scares me. Edited by James R. McGraw. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1968. 213 p. E185.615.G7
336Handlin, Oscar. Fire-bell in the night; the crisis in civil rights. Boston, Little, Brown [1964] 110 p. E185.61.H23
337Hansberry, Lorraine. The movement; documentary of a struggle for equality. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1964. 127 p. (chiefly illus., ports) E185.61.H24
338Harris, Janet. The long freedom road; the civil rights story. Foreword by Whitney M. Young, Jr. New York, McGraw-Hill [1967] 150 p. E185.61.H27Bibliography: p. 147.
339Hedgeman, Anna A. The trumpet sounds; a memoir of Negro leadership. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1964] 202 p. E185.97.H44
340Holt, Len. The summer that didn't end. New York, Morrow, 1965. 351 p. E185.61.H75The struggle for civil rights in Mississippi.
341Imari, Brother. War in America; the Malcolm X doctrine. Detroit, Malcolm X Society [1968] 64 p. port. E185.615.I45
342Isaacs, Harold R. The new world of Negro Americans. A study from the Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. New York, John Day Co. [1963] 366 p. E185.61.I75Includes bibliography.
343Jackson, Joseph H. Unholy shadows and freedom's holy light. Nashville, Townsend Press [1967] 270 p. group ports. E185.61.J15Bibliography: p. 264-266.
344Jacobs, Paul. Prelude to riot; a view of urban America from the bottom. New York, Random House [1968, c1967] 298 p. E185.615.J3 1968"Sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions."
345Kahn, Tom. Unfinished revolution. [With forewords by Norman Thomas and James Lawson] New York [Socialist Party-Social Democratic Federation] 1960. 64 p. illus. E185.61.K335Bibliography: p. 60-63.
346Kalven, Harry. The Negro and the First amendment. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1966, c1965] 244 p. (Phoenix books, P240) DLC-LL"Lectures ... originally given for the Ohio State law Forum on April 7, 8, and 9, 1964."Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [215]-244).
347Kennedy, Robert F. Rights for Americans; the speeches of Robert F. Kennedy. Edited and with commentary by Thomas A. Hopkins. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1964] 262 p. E185.61.K367
348Killian, Lewis M. The impossible revolution? Black power and the American dream. New York, Random House [1968] xx, 198 p. (Studies in sociology, SS40) E185.615.K48Bibliography: p. [189]-191.
349Killian, Lewis M., and Charles Grigg. Racial crisis in America; leadership in conflict. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1964] 144 p. (A Spectrum book) E185.61.K49Includes bibliographies.
350King, Martin Luther. A Martin Luther King treasury. Photographs by Roland Mitchell. Yonkers, N.Y., Educational Heritage [1964] 352 p. illus., ports. (Negro heritage library) E185.61.K535Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 338-348).Contents.—Stride toward freedom; the Montgomery story.—Strength to love.—The days of Martin Luther King, Jr.: a photographic diary.—An appeal to the President of the United States.
351King, Martin Luther. Where do we go from here: Chaos or community? New York, Harper & Row [1967] 209 p. E185.615.K5Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 203-204).London ed. (Hodder & Stoughton) has title: Chaos or Community?
352King, Martin Luther. Why we can't wait. New York, Harper & Row [1964] 178 p. illus., ports. E185.61.K54
353Konvitz, Milton R. A century of civil rights. With a study of State law against discrimination, by Theodore Leskes. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 293 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF4749.K626]"Table of statutes": p. [278]-280.Bibliographical footnotes.
354Kunstler, William M. Deep in my heart. Forewords by James Forman and Martin Luther King, Jr. New York, Morrow, 1966. xxvi, 384 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF373.K8A3]Autobiographical.
355Leinwand, Gerald, comp. The Negro in the city. New York, Washington Square Press [1968] 191 p. illus. (Problems of American society) E185.61.L513Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 179-182).
356Levy, Charles J. Voluntary servitude; whites in the Negro movement. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1968] 125 p. E185.92.L46Bibliographical footnotes.
357Lewis, Anthony. Portrait of a decade; the second American revolution [by] Anthony Lewis and the New York times. New York, Random House [1964] 322 p. illus. E185.61.L52 1964London ed. (Faber) has title: The Second American Revolution: a First-hand Account of the Struggle for Civil Rights.
358Lincoln, Charles Eric, comp. Is anybody listening to black America? New York, Seabury Press [1968] 280 p. (A Seabury paperback SP-54) E185.615.L48Includes bibliographical references.
359Lomax, Louis E. The Negro revolt. New York, Harper [1962] 271 p. E185.61.L668Includes bibliography.
360Mendelsohn, Jack. The martyrs: sixteen who gave their lives for racial justice. New York, Harper & Row [1966] 227 p. ports. E185.61.M54
361Moral crisis; the case for civil rights, as stated by John F. Kennedy [and others] Minnesota, Gilbert Pub. Co. [1964] 185 p. illus., ports. E185.61.M79On spine: The Case for Civil Rights.
362Muse, Benjamin. The American Negro revolution; from nonviolence to black power, 1963-1967. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1968] 345 p. E185.615.M83
363Nelson, Bernard H. The Fourteenth amendment and the Negro since 1920. New York, Russell & Russell [1967, c1946] 185 p. E185.61.N44 1967Bibliography: p. 172-181.
363aNye, Russel B. Fettered freedom; civil liberties and the slavery controversy, 1830-1860. [Rev. ed. East Lansing] Michigan State University Press [1964, c1963] 353 p. JC599.U5N9 1964Bibliography: p. 319-[343].
364Pain, William. To do justice, by the photographers and editors of Black star. [New York] Pyramid Publications, c1965. 104 p. illus., ports. (A Pyramid publication) E185.615.P3On cover: To Do Justice; the Heroic Struggle for Human Rights.
365Pettigrew, Thomas F. Epitaph for Jim Crow. New York, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith [1964] 59 p. illus. E185.61.P48"G415."
366Proctor, Samuel D. The young Negro in America, 1960-1980. New York, Association Press [1966] 160 p. E185.61.P76Bibliographical references included in "Notes by chapters" (p. 159-160).
367Saunders, Doris E., ed. The Kennedy years and the Negro, a photographic record. Introduction by Andrew T. Hatcher. Designed by Herbert Temple. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1964. 143 p. illus., ports. E185.6.S3
368Segal, Ben D., William Korey, and Charles N. Mason, eds. Civil rights in the Nation's Capital: a report on a decade of progress. [New York] National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 1959. 90 p. illus. E185.93.D6S4"Appeared originally as volume 1, no. 5, of the Journal of Inter-group Relations."
369Smith, Lillian E. Our faces, our words. New York, W. W. Norton [1964] 128 p. illus. E185.61.S647
370Sobel, Lester A., ed. Civil rights, 1960-66. New York, Facts on File [1967] 504 p. (Interim history) E185.61.S66A Facts on File publication.
371Southern, David W. The malignant heritage; Yankee progressives and the Negro question, 1901-1914. Chicago, Loyola University Press, 1968. 116 p. (William P. Lyons master's essay award, 1967) E185.61.S685Bibliography: p. 101-111.
372Stahl, David, Frederick B. Sussmann, and Neil J. Bloomfield, eds. The community and racial crises. New York, Practising Law Institute [1966] xvii, 364 p. E185.615.S7Outgrowth of a forum devoted to the community and racial crisis, held in New York City in December 1964.
373Sterling, Dorothy. Tear down the walls! A history of the American civil rights movement. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1968] 259 p. illus., facsims., ports. E185.6.S76Bibliography: p. [251]-252.
374Sugarman, Tracy. Stranger at the gates; a summer in Mississippi. Illustrated by the author. Foreword by Fannie Lou Hamer. New York, Hill and Wang [1966] xiv, 240 p. E185.93.M6S88
375Thomas, Howard E., and Sister Mary Peter. Organizing for human rights; a handbook for teachers and students. Dayton, Ohio, G. A. Pflaum [c1966] 64 p. illus. E185.615.T5"Resource section": p. 39-58.
376U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Freedom to the free: century of emancipation, 1863-1963; a report to the President. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1963] 246 p. E185.61.U582Bibliography: p. 209-240.
377U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Hearing held in Cleveland, Ohio, April 1-7, 1966. Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966. 888 p. illus., maps. F499.C6A43
378U.S. President, 1961-1963 (Kennedy) Civil rights. Message relative to civil rights, and a draft of a bill to enforce the constitutional right to vote, to confer jurisdiction upon the District Courts of the United States to provide injunctive relief against discrimination in public accommodations, to authorize the Attorney General to institute suits to protect constitutional rights in education, to establish a community relations service, to extend for four years the Commission on Civil Rights, to prevent discrimination in Federally assisted programs, to establish a Commission on Equal Employment Opportunity, and for other purposes. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1963] 24 p. (88th Congress, 1st session. House of Representatives. Document no. 124) E185.61.U5865
379Warren, Robert Penn. Who speaks for the Negro? New York, Vintage Books [1966] 454 p. E185.61.W22 1966
380Williams, Robert F. Negroes with guns. Edited by Marc Schleifer. New York, Marzani & Munsell [c1962] 128 p. illus. F264.M75W5Concerns the Monroe, North Carolina, confrontation.
381Wright, Nathan. Black power and urban unrest; creative possibilities. New York, Hawthorn Books [1967] 200 p. E185.615.W7Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 195).
382Young, Whitney M. To be equal. New York, McGraw-Hill [1964] 254 p. E185.61.Y73
383Bivins, S. Thomas. The southern cookbook; a manual of cooking and list of menus, including recipes used by noted colored cooks and prominent caterers. Hampton, Va., Press of the Hampton Institute, 1912. 239 p. TX715.B5
384Bowers, Lessie. Plantation recipes. [New York] R. Speller, 1959. 194 p. TX715.B76
385Campbell, Tunis G. Hotel keepers, head waiters, and housekeepers' guide. Boston, Printed by Coolidge and Wiley, 1848. 192 p. illus. TX925.C3
386De Knight, Freda. The Ebony cookbook: a date with a dish; a cookbook of American Negro recipes. With a foreword by Gertrude Blair. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1962. 390 p. illus. TX715.D326
387Gaskins, Ruth L. A good heart and a light hand; Ruth L. Gaskins' collection of traditional Negro recipes. [Alexandria, Va., Fund for Alexandria, c1968] 110 p. illus. TX715.G243
388Kaiser, Inez Y. Soul food cookery. New York, Pitman Pub. Co., 1968. 90 p. DHU
389Kaufman, William I., and Mary U. Cooper. The art of Creole cookery. Illustrated by Margot Tomes. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1962. 227 p. illus. TX725.K333
390[Mahammitt, Sarah H. T.] Recipes and domestic service; the Mahammitt School of Cookery. [Omaha, c1939] 160 p. TX715.M246"Copyright ... by Mrs. T. P. Mahammitt."
391National Council of Negro Women. The historical cookbook of the American Negro. Published under the auspices of the Council's Archives and Museum Dept. Compiled and edited by Sue Bailey Thurman, chairman. [Washington] Corporate Press, c1958. 144 p. illus. TX715.N326
392Negro Culinary Art Club of Los Angeles. Eliza's cook book; favorite recipes. Los Angeles, Wetzel Pub. Co. [c1936] 101 p. TX715.N387
393Ott, Eleanore. Plantation cookery of old Louisiana. With decorations by Mary Evans Isom. New Orleans, Harmanson [c1938] 96 p. illus., facsim. TX715.O85
394Porter, Mrs. M. E. Mrs. Porter's new southern cookery book, and companion for frugal and economical housekeepers; containing carefully prepared and practically tested recipes for all kinds of plain and fancy cooking. Philadelphia, J. E. Potter [c1871] 416 p. TX715.P844
395Smith, Myrtle E. A Civil War cook book; typical of the times but timely for today. Harrogate, Tenn., Priv. print., Lincoln Memorial University [1961] 268 p. illus. TX715.S666Bibliography: p. 267-268.
396Bell, William K. Fifteen million Negroes and fifteen billion dollars. New York, W. K. Bell Publications [1956] 147 p. E185.8.B46
397Blair, Lewis H. A Southern prophecy: The prosperity of the South dependent upon the elevation of the Negro (1889). Edited, with an introduction by C. Vann Woodward. Boston, Little, Brown [1964] xlvi, 201 p. facsim., port. E185.61.B66 1964Bibliographical footnotes.
398Bradford, Amory. Oakland's not for burning. New York, D. McKay Co. [1968] 248 p. HD5726.O22B7
399Bullock, Henry A. Pathways to the Houston Negro market. [Ann Arbor, Mich., Distributed by J. W. Edwards, 1957] 232 p. illus. F394.H8B9
400Davis, Robert E. The American Negro's dilemma; the Negro's self-imposed predicament. New York, Philosophical Library [1954] 147 p. E185.6.D35
401De Mond, Albert L. Certain aspects of the economic development of the American Negro, 1865-1900. Washington, Catholic University of America Press, 1945. 187 p. (Catholic University of America. Studies in economics, v. 18) E185.8.D4Thesis (Ph. D.)—Catholic University of America, 1945.Bibliography: p. 163-183.
402District of Columbia. Dept. of Public Welfare. The improving economic status of the Negro in the District of Columbia. Rev. Washington, Division of Research and Statistics, Dept. of Public Welfare, 1954. 1 v. (unpaged) illus. E185.93.D6A5 1954c
403DuBois, William E. B., ed. Economic co-operation among Negro Americans. Report of a social study made by Atlanta University under the patronage of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, D.C., together with the proceedings of the 12th Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, on Tuesday, May the 28th, 1907. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1907. 184 p. diagrs. (Atlanta University publications, no. 12) E185.5.A88 no. 12 [HD3446.Z5N3]"Select bibliography of economic co-operation among Negro Americans": p. [6]-9.
404Edwards, Paul K. The southern urban Negro as a consumer. New York, Prentice-Hall, 1932. xxiv, 323 p. illus., diagrs., maps. E185.6.E35Bibliography: p. [309]-315.
405Fein, Rashi. An economic and social profile of the Negro American. Washington, Brookings Institution, 1966 [c1965] 815-846 p. (Brookings Institution reprints, 110) E185.8.F4"Reprinted January 1966 ... from Daedalus, fall, 1965."Includes bibliographical references.
406Fleming, Walter L. The Freedmen's Savings Bank; a chapter in the economic history of the Negro race. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1927. 170 p. (Vanderbilt University publications) HG2613.W34F6 1927"An expansion of a paper ... published in the Yale Review in 1906."Bibliography: p. 17-18, 162-163.
407Ginzberg, Eli, ed. The Negro challenge to the business community. New York, McGraw-Hill [1964] 111 p. E185.8.G57"Highlights of a conference held at Arden House on January 15 to 17, 1964 under the auspices of the executive program of the Graduate School of Business, Columbia University."
408Harris, Abram L. The Negro as capitalist; a study of banking and business among American Negroes. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1968 [c1936] 205 p. illus. E185.8.H26 1968Bibliographical footnotes.
409Henry, Waights G. The Negro as an economic factor in Alabama. Nashville, Printed for the author, Publishing House M. E. Church, South, Smith & Lamar, agents, 1919. 111 p. E185.93.A3H5Thesis (Ph.D.)—Boston University."Reference books": p. [107]-111.
410Hill, Timothy A. The Negro and economic reconstruction. Washington, Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1937. 78 p. (Bronze booklet no. 5) E185.5.B85 no. 5"Selected readings" at end of each chapter.
411Holmes, Samuel J. The Negro's struggle for survival; a study in human ecology. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1966, c1965] 296 p. E185.88.H65 1966First published in 1937.Bibliography: p. 263-290.
412Johnson, Joseph T. The potential Negro market. New York, Pageant Press [1952] 185 p. HF3031.J6
413Miller, Herman P. Poverty and the Negro. [Los Angeles, Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of California, 1965?] 30 leaves. ([California. University. University at Los Angeles. Institute of Government and Public Affairs] MR-37) AS36.C2A35 no. 37"Paper presented at University of West Virginia Conference on Poverty, May 3, 1965."Bibliographical footnotes.
414National Urban League. Economic and social status of the Negro in the United States. [New York, 1961] 32 p. E185.6.N257Bibliography: p. 31-32.
415The Negro and the city. New York, Time-Life Books [1968] 159 p. col. illus. E185.8.N4 1968"Adapted from a special issue [Jan. 1968] of Fortune on: 'Business and the Urban Crisis.'"Contents.—Introduction, by R. C. Weaver.—The deeper shame of the cities, by M. Ways.—The new Negro mood, by R. Beardwood.—Business reclaims human resources, by G. Burck.—More dollars and more diplomas, by E. K. Faltermayer.—The St. Louis economic blues, by W. S. Rukeyser.—The case against unions, by T. O'Hanlon.—"Our war was with the police department," by E. Carruth.—Systems engineering invades the city, by L. Lessing.—Mortgages for the slums, by W. McQuade.—What business can do for the cities, by the editors of Fortune.
416Newman, Dorothy K. The Negroes in the United States, their economic and social situation. Washington, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics; for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966. 241 p. illus. (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bulletin no. 1511) HD8051.A62 no. 1511 E185.8.N47Bibliography: p. 49-53.
417Phillips, Ulrich B. The slave economy of the Old South; selected essays in economic and social history. Edited and with an introduction by Eugene D. Genovese. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1968] xiv, 304 p. HC107.A13P66"A bibliography of the printed writings of Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, compiled by David M. Potter": p. 291-300.Includes bibliographical references.
418Pitts, Nathan A. The cooperative movement in Negro communities of North Carolina. Washington, Catholic University of America Press, 1950. 201 p. maps. (The Catholic University of America. Studies in sociology, v. 33) HD3446.A3N85Thesis—Catholic University of America.Bibliography: p. [193]-196.
419Schuchter, Arnold. White power, black freedom; planning the future of urban America. Boston, Beacon Press [1968] xvii, 650 p. HT123.S38Includes bibliographical references.
420Sterner, Richard M., and others. The Negro's share; a study of income, consumption, housing and public assistance [by] Richard Sterner in collaboration with Lenore A. Epstein, Ellen Winston and others. New York, Harper [1943] 433 p. E185.8.S8
421Stuart, Merah S. An economic detour; a history of insurance in the lives of American Negroes. New York, W. Malliet, 1940. xxv, 339 p. facsims., plates, ports. HG8799.S75Bibliography: p. 337-338.
422U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The economic situation of Negroes in the United States. Rev. [Washington] U.S. Dept. of Labor; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1962. 32 p. tables. ([U.S. Dept. of Labor] Bulletin S-3) E185.8.U529
423U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Notes on the economic situation of Negroes in the United States. 1957+ [Washington] tables. E185.8.U527
424U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare. The Negro family's search for economic security, by Joseph H. Douglass, assistant to the Assistant Secretary for Program Analysis. [Washington] 1956. 1 v. (various pagings) diagrs., tables. E185.8.U558Bibliography: p. [1]-11.
425Washington, Booker T., and William E. B. DuBois. The Negro in the South, his economic progress in relation to his moral and religious development; being the William Levi Bull lectures for the year 1907. Philadelphia, G. W. Jacobs [1907] 222 p. E185.6.W316Contents.—1. The economic development of the Negro race in slavery, by B. T. Washington.—2. The economic development of the Negro race since its emancipation, by B. T. Washington.—3. The economic revolution in the South, by W. E. B. DuBois.—4. Religion in the South, by W. E. B. DuBois.—Notes to chapters 3 and 4 (Bibliography: p. 220-222).
426Whiting, Helen A. J. Climbing the economic ladder. [Atlanta, 1948] 100 p. illus. E185.8.W48"Selected references for understanding and improving Southern life": p. 99-100.
427Association for the Study of Negro life and History. The Negro as a business man, by J. H. Harmon, Jr., Arnett G. Lindsay, and Carter G. Woodson. Washington [c1929] 111 p. [E185.8.A84] [TR: E185.8.H25]Contents.—The Negro as a local business man.—The Negro in banking.—Insurance among Negroes.
428Business leadership and the Negro crisis. Edited by Eli Ginzberg. New York, McGraw-Hill [1968] 175 p. E185.8.B8Papers presented at a conference conducted by the Graduate School of Business of Columbia University at Arden House in 1968.
429Carter, Wilmoth A. The urban Negro in the South. New York, Vantage Press [1962] 272 p. illus. F264.R1C3Bibliography: p. 269-272.
430DuBois, William E. B., ed. The Negro in business; report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Fourth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, May 30-31, 1899. Atlanta [Atlanta University] 1899. 77 p. (Atlanta University publications, no. 4) E185.5.A88 no. 4 E185.8.D83
431Kinzer, Robert H., and Edward Sagarin. The Negro in American business; the conflict between separatism and integration. New York, Greenberg [1950] 220 p. E185.8.K5"An expansion of a thesis written by Robert H. Kinzer and submitted [under title: Separatism or Integration: the Dilemma of the Negro in American Business] to the Graduate School of Business Administration of New York University ... [for] the degree of master of arts."Bibliography: p. 203-210.
432National Conference on Small Business, Washington, D.C., 1961. Problems and opportunities confronting Negroes in the field of business; report. Chairman: Charles C. Diggs, Jr. Editor: H. Naylor Fitzhugh. [Washington] U.S. Dept. of Commerce, for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962. 102 p. E185.8.N23 1961c"Sponsored by an independent committee composed mainly of Negroes engaged in business and related activities in Government and education and some national organizations."
433Pierce, Joseph A. Negro business and business education, their present and prospective development. New York, Harper [1947] xiv, 338 p. tables. (Atlanta University publications, no. 24) [E185.5.A88 no. 24] E185.8.P5"References" at end of most of the chapters.
434Washington, Booker T. The Negro in business. Boston, Hertel, Jenkins [c1907] 379 p. plates, ports. [E185.8.W31] [TR: HD8081.A65W37 1907]
435Alexander, Richard D., and others. The management of racial integration in business; special report to management. Prepared under the supervision of Georges F. Doriot. New York, McGraw-Hill [1964] 147 p. E185.8.A55Bibliography: p. 139-147.
436Becker, Gary S. The economics of discrimination. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1957] 137 p. diagrs. (Studies in economics of the Economics Research Center of the University of Chicago) HD4903.5.U58B4Bibliographical footnotes.
437Blood, Robert O. Northern breakthrough. Belmont, Calif., Wadsworth Pub. Co. [1968] 157 p. F614.M6B55Bibliography: p. 151-152.
438Cayton, Horace R., and George S. Mitchell. Black workers and the new unions. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1939. xviii, 473 p. E185.8.C39"Three industries have been chosen for examination: iron and steel, meat packing, and railroad car shops."Bibliography: p. [458]-467.
439Conference of Community Leaders on Equal Employment Opportunity, Washington, D.C., 1962. The American dream—equal opportunity; report on the Community Leaders' Conference, sponsored by President's Committee on Equal Opportunity, Washington, D.C., May 19, 1962. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962] 56 p. illus. HD4903.5.U58C6 1962c
440Connecticut. Commission on Civil Rights. Training of Negroes in the skilled trades, prepared by Henry G. Stetler, supervisor, Research Division. Hartford, 1954. 62 p. LC2802.C8A52
441Daykin, Jon J. A study of southern Negro police officers in eleven selected major mid-south cities. [University, Miss.] 1965. 137 leaves. HV8145.A13D3Thesis (M.A.)—University of Mississippi.Bibliography: leaves [128]-137.
442Donald, Henderson H. The Negro migration of 1916-1918. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1921. 116 p. E185.6.D67"Reprinted from the Journal of Negro History, v. 6, no. 4, October 1921."
443Durham, Philip, and Everett L. Jones. The Negro cowboys. New York, Dodd, Mead [1965] 278 p. illus., maps, ports. F596.D8
444Edwards, Gilbert Franklin. The Negro professional class. With a foreword by Otis Dudley Duncan. Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1959] 224 p. E185.82.E23"A development of the author's doctoral dissertation at the University of Chicago."Bibliography: p. 215-219.
445Ferman, Louis A. The Negro and equal employment opportunities; a review of management experiences in twenty companies. New York, Praeger [1968] xv, 195 p. (Praeger special studies in U.S. economic and social development) E185.8.F44
446Ferman, Louis A., Joyce L. Kornbluh, and Joe A. Miller, comps. Negroes and jobs; a book of readings. Foreword by A. Philip Randolph. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press [1968] xv, 591 p. E185.8.F45Includes bibliographies.
447Foley, Eugene P. The achieving ghetto. [Washington, National Press, 1968] 156 p. E185.8.F6Bibliographical references included in "Source notes" (p. 153-156).
448Franklin, Charles L. The Negro labor unionist of New York; problems and conditions among Negroes in the labor unions in Manhattan with special reference to the N.R.A. and post-N.R.A. situations. New York, 1936. 417 p. [E185.8.F732] [TR: H31.C7 no. 420]Thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University, 1936.Published also as Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, edited by the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia University, no. 420.Bibliography: p. 398-402.
449Garfinkel, Herbert. When Negroes march; the March on Washington Movement in the organizational politics for FEPC. Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1959] 224 p. E185.61.G23Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 194-220).
450Ginzberg, Eli. The Negro potential, by Eli Ginzberg assisted by James K. Anderson, Douglas W. Bray [and] Robert W. Smuts. New York, Columbia University Press, 1956. xvi, 144 p. tables. [E185.8.G58] [TR: HD8081.A44G56 1956]Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [139]-144).
451Gourlay, Jack G. The Negro salaried worker. [New York] American Management Association [1965] 103 p. illus. (AMA research study 70) HD21.A6 no. 70Bibliographical footnotes.
452Greene, Lorenzo J., and Myra C. Callis. The employment of Negroes in the District of Columbia. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [1931] 89 p. E185.8.G78
453Greene, Lorenzo, J., and Carter G. Woodson. The Negro wage earner. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1930] 388 p. diagrs., tables. E185.8.G79Bibliography: p. [369]-380.
454Hayes, Laurence J. W. The Negro Federal Government worker; a study of his classification status in the District of Columbia, 1883-1938. Washington, Graduate School, Howard University, 1941. 156 p. diagr., tables. (The Howard University studies in the social sciences, v. 3, no. 1) [E185.8.H38] [TR: H31.H66 vol. 3, no. 1]Thesis (M.A.)—Howard University, 1941.Bibliographical footnotes.
455Haynes, George E. The Negro at work in New York City; a study in economic progress. New York, 1912. 159 p. diagrs., tables. E185.93.N56H41Thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University, 1912.Published also as Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, edited by the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia University, v. 49, no. 3, whole no. 124."Select bibliography": p. 154-156.
456Hiestand, Dale L. Economic growth and employment opportunities for minorities. Foreword by John F. Henning. Introduction by Eli Ginzberg. New York, Columbia University Press, 1964. xx, 127 p. HD4903.5.U58H5 1964"Another version of this study [is titled] Economic Growth and the Opportunities of Minorities: an Analysis of Changes in the Employment of Negroes and Women."Bibliography: p. [125]-127.
457Huson, Carolyn F., and Michael E. Schiltz. College, color, and employment; racial differentials in postgraduate employment among 1964 graduates of Louisiana colleges. Chicago, National Opinion Research Center, 1966. xx, 124 p. (National Opinion Research Center. Report no. 116) HM261.A1N3 no. 116"Research ... supported by the Office of Manpower Policy, Evaluation, and Research, U.S. Department of Labor, under grant no. 91-15-66-01."
458Jackson, Luther P. Free Negro labor and property holding in Virginia, 1830-1860. New York, D. Appleton-Century Co. [1942] xix, 270 p. tables. E185.93.V8J18At head of title: The American Historical Association.Bibliography: p. 230-238.
459Jackson, Luther P. Negro office-holders in Virginia, 1865-1895. Norfolk, Va., Guide Quality Press, 1945, c1946. 88 p. port. E185.93.V8J19
460Jacobson, Julius, ed. The Negro and the American labor movement. Garden City, N.Y., Anchor Books, 1968. 430 p. E185.8.J3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 401-426).
461Krislov, Samuel. The Negro in Federal employment: the quest for equal opportunity. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press [1967] 157 p. JK723.N4K7 1967Bibliographical footnotes.
462Marshall, F. Ray, and Vernon M. Briggs. The Negro and apprenticeship. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press [1967] 283 p. E185.8.M24"Based on a report prepared under a contract with the Office of Manpower Policy, Evaluation and Research, U.S. Department of Labor."Bibliographical footnotes.
463Marshall, F. Ray. The Negro and organized labor. New York, Wiley [1965] 327 p. E185.8.M25Bibliographical footnotes.
464Marshall, F. Ray. The Negro worker. New York, Random House [1967] 180 p. (Studies in labor) [E185.8.M27]"SLE5."Bibliography: p. [171]-174.
465Mayhew, Leon H. Law and equal opportunity; a study of the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1968. 313 p. (A Publication of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University) KFM2811.5.N4M3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 297-308).
466National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Labor Dept. The Negro wage-earner and apprenticeship training programs; a critical analysis with recommendations. New York [1961] 59 p. E185.8.N2Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 51-59).
467National Conference on Equal Employment Opportunity, Washington, D.C., 1962. A time for action; proceedings. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1963] 70 p. ports. JK765.N32 1962Sponsored by the Dept. of the Army.
468National Industrial Conference Board. Company experience with Negro employment. [New York, 1966] 2 v. illus., forms, maps. (Its Studies in personnel policy, no. 201) HF5549.A2N27 no. 201"A research report from the Conference Board."Bibliography: v. 1, p. 172.
469National Planning Association. Committee of the South. Selected studies of Negro employment in the South, prepared for the NPA Committee of the South. Washington, National Planning Association [1953-54] 5 v. (483 p.) illus. (Its Reports, no. 6) HN79.A2N35 no. 6 1953 E185.8.N29Bibliographical footnotes.Contents.—1. Negro employment in 3 southern plants of International Harvester Company, by J. Hope, II.—2. 4 studies of Negro employment in the Upper South, by D. Dewey.—3. Negro employment in the Birmingham metropolitan area, by L. T. Hawley.—4. 2 plants: Little Rock, by E. W. Eckard and B. U. Ratchford. 3 companies: New Orleans area, by H. W. Wissner.—5. Negro employment practices in the Chattanooga area, by W. H. Wesson, Jr.—— —— Another issue. [1955] 483 p. illus. (Its Report no. 6) HN79.A2N35 no. 6 1955
470National Urban League. Dept. of Research and Community Projects.Negro membership in American labor unions. New York [1930] 175 p. E185.8.N337Issued by the agency under a variant name: Department of Research and Investigations.
471New York (State) State Commission for Human Rights. Research Division. Apprentices, skilled craftsmen, and the Negro: an analysis. [New York, New York State Commission Against Discrimination, 1960] 137 p. tables. HD4885.U52N42Bibliography: p. 135-137.
472Nicol, Helen O. Negro women workers in 1960 [by Helen O. Nicol with the assistance of Merci L. Drake. Washington] U.S. Dept. of Labor, Women's Bureau; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1964] 55 p. illus., maps. (U.S. Women's Bureau. Bulletin 287) HD6093.A35 no. 287"Supersedes Women's Bureau publication [Leaflet no. 19] Negro Women and Their Jobs, dated 1954." By Miriam Keeler.
473Norgren, Paul H., and others. Employing the Negro in American industry; a study of management practices. New York, Industrial Relations Counselors, 1959. xiv, 171 p. (Industrial relations monographs, no. 17) E185.8.N64
474Norgren, Paul H., and Samuel E. Hill. Toward fair employment. With the assistance of F. Ray Marshall. New York, Columbia University Press, 1964. xiv, 296 p. HD4903.5.U58N6Bibliography: p. [281]-283.
475Northrup, Herbert R., and Richard L. Rowan, eds. The Negro and employment opportunity; problems and practices. Ann Arbor, Bureau of Industrial Relations, Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Michigan [1965] 411 p. illus., map. E185.8.N649Papers presented at a conference held on November 13, 1964, and sponsored by the Labor Relations Council of the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, University of Pennsylvania.Includes bibliographical references.
476Northrup, Herbert R. The Negro in the aerospace industry. Philadelphia, Industrial Research Unit, Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, University of Pennsylvania; distributed by University of Pennsylvania Press [1968] 90 p. illus. (The Racial policies of American industry. Report no. 2) E185.5.R3 no. 2Bibliographical footnotes.
477Northrup, Herbert R. The Negro in the automobile industry. Philadelphia, Industrial Research Unit, Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, University of Pennsylvania; distributed by University of Pennsylvania Press [1968] 75 p. (The Racial policies of American industry. Report no. 1) E185.5.R3 no. 1University of Pennsylvania. Wharton School of Finance and Commerce. Industrial Research Unit. Research report series.Bibliographical footnotes.
477aNorthrup, Herbert R. Organized labor and the Negro. Foreword by Sumner H. Slichter. New York, Harper [1944] xviii, 312 p. tables. E185.8.N65Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [259]-288). "Selected bibliography": p. 289-302.
478Paynter, John H. Horse and buggy days with Uncle Sam. New York, Margent Press, 1943. 190 p. ports. E185.8.P38Employment of Negroes under Civil Service.
479Ringe, Helen H. Negroes in the United States: their employment and economic status. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1952 [i.e. 1953] 58 p. diagrs., maps. (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bulletin no. 1119) [HD8051.A62 no. 1119] E185.8.R55Bibliography: p. 53-55.
480Ross, Arthur M., and Herbert Hill, eds. Employment, race, and poverty. [New York, Harcourt, Brace & World, 1967] 598 p. E185.8.R6One of a series of books from the four-year program of research and conferences on the subject of unemployment and the American economy supported by a Ford Foundation grant to the Institute of Industrial Relations at the Berkeley campus of the University of California.
481Ross, Malcolm H. All manner of men. New York, Reynal & Hitchcock [1948] 314 p. HD4903.R63A study of racial prejudice in employment. The author served as chairman of the Fair Employment Practices Committee during the Second World War.
482Rowan, Richard L. The Negro in the steel industry. Philadelphia, Industrial Research Unit, Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, University of Pennsylvania; distributed by University of Pennsylvania Press [1968] 148 p. (The Racial policies of American industry. Report no. 3) E185.5.R3 no. 3Bibliographical footnotes.
483Ruchames, Louis. Race, jobs & politics; the story of FEPC. New York, Columbia University Press, 1953. 255 p. HD4903.5.U58R8Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [215]-240).
484Rutledge, Aaron L., and Gertrude D. Z. Gass. Nineteen Negro men; personality & manpower retraining. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass, 1967. xv, 109 p. E185.8.R8
485Sovern, Michael I. Legal restraints on racial discrimination in employment. New York, Twentieth Century Fund, 1966. 270 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF3464.S6]"Notes" (54 p.) in pocket.Bibliography: p. 259-264.
486Spero, Sterling D., and Abram L. Harris. The black worker; the Negro and the labor movement. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1966, c1959] 509p. E185.8.S74 1966First published in 1931.Bibliography: p. 485-496.
487Staupers, Mabel K. No time for prejudice; a story of the integration of Negroes in nursing in the United States. New York, Macmillan [1961] 206 p. illus. RT83.5.S75
488U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. State Advisory Committees Division. Reports on apprenticeship by the Advisory Committees to the United States Commission on Civil Rights in California, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Florida, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. [Washington] 1964. 158 p. E185.8.U553Bibliographical footnotes.
489U.S. Dept. of Labor. Division of Negro Economics. The Negro at work during the world war and during reconstruction; statistics, problems, and policies relating to the greater inclusion of Negro wage earners in American industry and agriculture. Second study on Negro labor. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1921. 144 p. diagrs., plates, tables. E185.8.U57
490Wachtel, Dawn. The Negro and discrimination in employment. Ann Arbor, Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, University of Michigan-Wayne State University [c1965] 96, [16] p. [E185.8.W2] [TR: E185.8.D33]Bibliography: p. [97]-[122].
491Wesley, Charles H. Negro labor in the United States, 1850-1925; a study in American economic history. New York, Russell & Russell [1967, c1927] 343 p. map. E185.8.W4 1967Bibliography: p. 321-330.
492Woodson, Carter G. The Negro professional man and the community, with special emphasis on the physician and the lawyer. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1934] xviii, 365 p. E185.82.W88
493Abrams, Charles. Forbidden neighbors; a study of prejudice in housing. New York, Harper [1955] 404 p. HD7293.A616
494Abrams, Charles. Race bias in housing. [New York? 1947] 31 p. E185.89.H6A2"Sponsored jointly by the American Civil Liberties Union, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People [and] American Council on Race Relations."
495Arter, Rhetta M. WINS pilot preview; report of an action-research, demonstration project on the process of achieving equal housing opportunities, Women's Integrating Neighborhood Services, sponsored by the Educational Foundation of National Council of Negro Women. [New York, Research and Action Associates, c1961] 202 p. illus. E185.89.H6A7
496Avins, Alfred, ed. Open occupancy vs. forced housing under the Fourteenth amendment; a symposium on anti-discrimination legislation, freedom of choice, and property rights in housing. New York, Book-mailer [c1963] 316 p. maps. DLC-LL [TR: KF5740.A75A48 1963]Bibliographical footnotes.
497Chicago. Mayor's Commission on Human Relations. The Trumbull Park Homes disturbances; a chronological report, August 4, 1953, to June 30,1955. [Chicago, 1955?] 63 p. E185.89.H6C5
498Clark, Henry. The church and residential desegregation; a case study of an open housing covenant campaign. New Haven, College & University Press [1965] 254 p. E185.89.H6C55Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 234-254).
499Commission on Race and Housing. Where shall we live? Report. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1958. 77 p. HD7293.C6427
500Connecticut. Commission on Civil Rights. Racial integration in private residential neighborhoods in Connecticut, by Henry G. Stetler, supervisor, Research Division. Hartford, 1957. 55 p. E185.89.H6C6
501Connecticut. Commission on Civil Rights. Racial integration in public housing projects in Connecticut, prepared by Henry G. Stetler, supervisor, Research Division. Hartford, 1955 [i.e. 1956] 72 p. E185.89.H6C63
502Deutsch, Morton, and Mary E. Collins. Interracial housing; a psychological evaluation of a social experiment. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press [1951] xv, 173 p. E185.89.H6D4Reprint issued by Russell & Russell, 1968.Bibliography: p. 149.
503Duncan, Otis D., and Beverly Duncan. The Negro population of Chicago; a study of residential succession. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1957] xxiv, 367 p. diagrs., maps (part fold.), tables. (Monograph series of the Chicago Community Inventory of the University of Chicago) F548.9.N3D8Bibliography: p. 355-358.
504Foote, Nelson N., and others. Housing choices and housing constraints. New York, McGraw-Hill, 1960. 450 p. illus. (ACTION series in housing and community development) HD7293.F62Includes bibliography.
505Glazer, Nathan, and Davis McEntire, eds. Studies in housing & minority groups. With an introduction by Nathan Glazer. Special research report to the Commission on Race and Housing. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1960. xvii, 228 p. maps, tables. (Publications of the Commission on Race and Housing) E185.89.H6G55
506Goldblatt, Harold S. Westchester real estate brokers, builders, bankers & Negro home-buyers; a report to the Housing Council of the Urban League of Westchester County, Inc. on opportunities for private open-occupancy housing in Westchester. [n.p.] 1954. 51 leaves. E185.89.H6G6
507Grier, Eunice S., and George W. Grier. Discrimination in housing; a handbook of fact. [New York, Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1960] 67 p. (Freedom pamphlets) HD7293.G7
508Grier, Eunice S., and George W. Grier. Privately developed interracial housing; an analysis of experience. Special research report to the Commission on Race and Housing. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1960. 264 p. E185.89.H6G69Bibliography: p. [251]-257.
509Grier, George W., and Eunice S. Grier. Equality and beyond; housing segregation and the goals of the Great Society. Chicago, Quadrangle Books, 1966. 115 p. maps. HD7293.G72"Published in cooperation with the Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith."Based on the authors' Discrimination in Housing.Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 101-109).
510Johnson, Philip A. Call me neighbor, call me friend: the case history of the integration of a neighborhood on Chicago's south side. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1965. 184 p. illus. F548.9.N3J6Bibliography: p. [177]-183.
511Jones, William H. The housing of Negroes in Washington, D.C.; a study in human ecology. Washington, Howard University Press, 1929. 191 p. diagrs., form, maps, plates, port. E185.93.D6J6"An investigation made under the auspices of the Interracial Committee of the Washington Federation of Churches."Bibliography: p. [157]-158.
512Knight, Charles L. Negro housing in certain Virginia cities. Richmond, Va., William Byrd Press, 1927. 158 p. illus. (Publications of the University of Virginia. Phelps-Stokes fellowship papers, no. 8) E185.93.V8K6
513Kraus, Henry. In the city was a garden; a housing project chronicle. New York, Renaissance Press, 1951. 255 p. F869.S38K7Housing of Negroes in San Pedro, California.
514Laurenti, Luigi. Property values and race; studies in seven cities. Special research report to the Commission on Race and Housing [prepared under the direction of Davis McEntire] Berkeley, University of California Press, 1960. xix, 256 p. diagrs., maps, tables. E185.89.H6L3Bibliography: p. [249]-252.
515Leaman, Samuel H. A study of housing decisions by Negro home owners and Negro renters. Chapel Hill [N.C.] 1967. 136 leaves. (Environmental policies and urban development thesis series, no. 8) E185.89.H6L4Thesis (Master of Regional Planning)—University of North Carolina.Bibliography: leaves [132]-136.
516Long, Herman H., and Charles S. Johnson. People vs. property; race restrictive covenants in housing. Nashville, Fisk University Press, 1947. 107 p. diagrs., maps. E185.89.H6L7Bibliographical footnotes.
517Messner, Stephen D. Minority groups and housing; a selected bibliography, 1950-67. Selected and edited under the direction of Stephen D. Messner. [Storrs, Center for Real Estate and Urban Economic Studies, University of Connecticut, 1968] 60 p. (University of Connecticut. Center for Real Estate and Urban Economic Studies. General series, no. 1) HD251.C745 no. 1
518Meyerson, Martin, and Edward C. Banfield. Politics, planning, and the public interest; the case of public housing in Chicago. Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1955] 353 p. illus. HD7304.C4M4
519Needham, Maurice D. Negro Orleanian: status and stake in a city's economy and housing. New Orleans, Tulane Publications [1962] 278 p. illus. F379.N5N33 [TR: Needham, Maurice d'Arlan]
520New York (State) State Commission for Human Rights. In search of housing; a study of experiences of Negro professional and technical personnel in New York State, by Eunice and George Grier. [New York] State Commission Against Discrimination, 1958. 52 p. E185.93.N56N44
521Northwood, Lawrence K., and Ernest A. T. Barth. Urban desegregation; Negro pioneers and their white neighbors. Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1965. xv, 131 p. map. E185.89.H6N6Bibliography: p. 121-131.
522Potomac Institute, Washington, D.C. The Federal role in equal housing opportunity; an affirmative program to implement Executive Order 11063. [Prepared by Arthur J. Levin, staff director. Washington, 1964] 28 p. [HD7293.P626]
523President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership, Washington, D.C., 1931. Negro housing; report of the Committee on Negro Housing, Nannie H. Burroughs, chairman; prepared for the committee by Charles S. Johnson; edited by John M. Gries and James Ford. Washington [c1932] xiv, 282 p. plates. E185.86.P87On cover: Physical Aspects; Social and Economic Factors; Home Ownership and Financing.Bibliography: p. 260-271.
524Rapkin, Chester, and William G. Grigsby. The demand for housing in racially mixed areas; a study of the nature of neighborhood change. Special research report to the Commission on Race and Housing and the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1960. xx, 177 p. illus., maps, tables. (Publications of the Commission on Race and Housing) F158.9.N3R3Bibliographical footnotes.
525Reid, Margaret G. Housing and income. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1962] xx, 415 p. diagrs., tables. HD7293.A3R4Bibliography: p. 406-409. Bibliographical footnotes.
526Schorr, Alvin L. Slums and social insecurity, an appraisal of the effectiveness of housing policies in helping to eliminate poverty in the United States. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off. [1963] 168 p. (U.S. Social Security Administration. Division of Research and Statistics. Research report no. 1) HD7123.A39 no. 1Bibliography: p. 151-168.
527Sternlieb, George. The tenement landlord. New Brunswick, N.J., Urban Studies Center, Rutgers, State University [c1966] xvii, 269 p. illus., plates. HD7304.N6S7Includes bibliographies.
528Taeuber, Karl E., and Alma F. Taeuber. Negroes in cities; residential segregation and neighborhood change. Chicago, Aldine Pub. Co. [1965] xvii, 284 p. illus., maps. (Population Research and Training Center monographs) E185.89.H6T3Bibliography: p. 267-277.
529Tillman, James A. Not by prayer alone; a report on the Greater Minneapolis Interfaith Fair Housing Program. Philadelphia, United Church Press [1964] 223 p. E185.89.H6T5
530Tilly, Charles, Wagner D. Jackson, and Barry Kay. Race and residence in Wilmington, Delaware. [New York] Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1965. 145 p. illus., maps. E185.89.H6T56Bibliography: p. 135-140.
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532U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Civil rights U.S.A.; housing in Washington, D.C. [Washington, 1962] 45 p. tables. E185.89.H6U47Bibliographical footnotes.
533U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Family housing and the Negro serviceman; 1963 staff report. Submitted to the United States Commission on Civil Rights, October 1963. [Washington, 1964] 48 p. E185.89.H6U47 1964Bibliographical footnotes.
534U.S. Housing and Home Finance Agency. Office of Program Policy. Our nonwhite population and its housing: the changes between 1950 and 1960. Washington [U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1963. 104 p. tables. E185.89.H6U5 1963a
535Vose, Clement E. Caucasians only: the Supreme Court, the NAACP, and the restrictive covenant cases. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1959. 296 p. illus., maps, ports. DLC-LL [TR: KF662.Z9V67]Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [253]-286).
536Weaver, Robert C. The Negro ghetto. New York, Russell & Russell [1967, c1948] xviii, 404 p. illus., maps. E185.89.H6W4 1967Bibliography: p. 371-375.
537West Virginia. Bureau of Negro Welfare and Statistics. Negro housing survey of Charleston, Keystone, Kimball, Wheeling and Williamson. Prepared and issued by Bureau of Negro Welfare and Statistics of the State of West Virginia, 1938. Isaac M. Carpenter, director. [Charleston, Jarrett Print. Co., 1938] 35 p. illus., diagrs., maps, tables. E185.6.W42
538Wolff, Reinhold P., and David K. Gillogly. Negro housing in the Miami area; effects of the postwar building boom. [Coral Gables, Fla.] c1951. 22 p. illus. (Bureau of Business and Economic Research, University of Miami. Area development series, no. 1) HC107.F62D52 no. 1
539Woofter, Thomas J., and Madge H. Priest. Negro housing in Philadelphia, a study made for the Institute of Social and Religious Research and the Interracial Commission. [Philadelphia] 1927. 30 p. maps. E185.86.W905"Published for distribution in Philadelphia by the Friends' Committee on Interests of the Colored Race, Whittier Center Housing Company, Philadelphia Housing Association."
540Alabama. University. Bureau of Educational Research. A study of Stillman Institute, a junior college for Negroes, conducted by the Bureau of Educational Research, College of Education, University of Alabama; edited by Paul W. Terry, director [and] L. Tennent Lee, associate director. University, University of Alabama Press [1947] xxx, 304 p. illus., plates, ports. (Its Studies in education, no. 8 [i.e. 9]) [LC2852.T8652A6]
541Anderson, Margaret. The children of the South. With a foreword by Ralph McGill. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1966] xiv, 208 p. LC2801.A83
542Ashmore, Harry S. The Negro and the schools. Foreword by Owen J. Roberts. [2d ed.] Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1954] xv, 239 p. illus., maps. NcU [TR: LC2801.A87]"This edition contains the full text of the Court decision (except for technical footnotes) and has been revised to bring the legal history of segregation up to date."Bibliography: p. 218-220.
543Badger, Henry G. Statistics of Negro colleges and universities: students, staff, and finances, 1900-1950. Washington, Federal Security Agency, Office of Education, 1951. 16 p. tables. ([U.S. Office of Education] Circular no. 293) [L111.A72 no. 293 LC2781.B3] [TR: L111.A72 no. 448]Also designated Statistical Circular.—— —— [Supplement] Statistics of Negro colleges and universities, 1951-52 and fall of 1954. [Washington] U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, Office of Education [1955] 16 p. tables. ([U.S. Office of Education] Circular no. 448) L111.A72 no. 448
544Bates, Daisy G. The long shadow of Little Rock, a memoir. New York, D. McKay Co. [1962] 234 p. illus. F419.L7B3The Little Rock school crisis.
545Beam, Lura. He called them by the lightning; a teacher's odyssey in the Negro South, 1908-1919. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1967] 230 p. E185.93.S8B4
546Bede, Brother. A study of the development of Negro education under Catholic auspices in Maryland and the District of Columbia, by Michael Francis Rouse (Brother Bede, C.F.X.). Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1935. 125 p. (The Johns Hopkins University studies in education, no. 22) LB5.J6 no. 22 LC2802.M3B4 1935Thesis (Ph.D.)—Johns Hopkins University."A selected and annotated bibliography": p. 115-121.
547Berman, Daniel M. It is so ordered: the Supreme Court rules on school segregation. New York, Norton [1966] 161 p. facsims. DLC-LL [TR: KF4155.B4]Appendixes (p. [131]-149): The texts of the Supreme Court opinions: Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1945); Bolling v. Sharpe (1945).—The implementation decision: Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1955).Bibliographical footnotes.
548Bernstein, Abraham A. The education of urban populations. Consulting editor, Paul Nash. New York, Random House [1967] xvi, 398 p. LC5119.B4Bibliography: p. [379]-386.
549Blaustein, Albert P. Civil rights U.S.A.: public schools; cities in the North and West, 1963: Camden and environs. Staff report submitted to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. [Washington, 1964] 55 p. maps, tables. LA332.C3B55Bibliographical references included in "Footnotes" (p. 46-48).
550Blaustein, Albert P., and Clarence C. Ferguson. Desegregation and the law; the meaning and effect of the school segregation cases. [2d ed. rev.] New York, Vintage Books [1962] 359 p. (Caravelle editions) DLC-LL [KF4155.B55 1962]Bibliographical references included in "Table of authorities" (p. 313-345).
551Blossom, Virgil T. It has happened here. New York, Harper [1959] 209 p. F419.L7B53Concerns desegregation of public schools in Little Rock.
552Bond, Horace M. The education of the Negro in the American social order. With a new preface and an additional chapter by the author. New York, Octagon Books, 1966. xxvi, 531 p. illus. LC2801.B65 1966First published in 1934.Bibliography: p. 491-511.
553Bond, Horace M. Negro education in Alabama; a study in cotton and steel. Washington, Associated Publishers, 1939. 358 p. illus., diagrs., maps. LC2802.A2B6 1939"The Susan Colver Rosenberger prize essay, 1937, the University of Chicago."Issued also as thesis (Ph.D.), University of Chicago, under title: Social and Economic Influences on the Public Education of Negroes in Alabama, 1865-1930.Bibliography: p. 293-304.
554Bouma, Donald H., and James Hoffman. The dynamics of school integration; problems and approaches in a northern city. Grand Rapids, W. B. Erdmans Pub. Co. [1968] 158 p. LB3062.B6Bibliography: p. 149-154.
555Brickman, William W., and Stanley Lehrer, eds. The countdown on segregated education. New York, Society for the Advancement of Education, 1960. 175 p. LB3062.B7
556Brown, Charles A. The origin and development of secondary education for Negroes in the metropolitan area of Birmingham, Alabama. [Birmingham, Commercial Print. Co., c1959] 98 p. illus. LC2803.B5B7
557Brown, Hugh V. E-qual-ity education in North Carolina among Negroes. [Raleigh, N.C., Irving-Swain Press, 1964] 198 p. illus., ports. LC2802.N8B69Bibliographical footnotes.
558Brown, Hugh V. A history of the education of Negroes in North Carolina. [Raleigh, Irving Swain Press, 1961] 167 p. illus. LC2802.N8B7
559Brown, Robert R. Bigger than Little Rock. Greenwich, Conn., Seabury Press, 1958. 150 p. F419.L7B7
559aBrownlee, Frederick L. Heritage of freedom, a centenary story of ten schools offering education in freedom. Philadelphia, United Church Press [1963] 108 p. illus. LC2801.B85
560Bullock, Henry A. A history of Negro education in the South; from 1619 to the present. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1967. 399 p. illus. LC2801.B9Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 291-314).
561Caldwell, Dista H. The education of the Negro child. New York, Carlton Press, 1961. 51 p. (A Reflection book) LC2731.C3
562Caliver, Ambrose. A background study of Negro college students, by Ambrose Caliver, senior specialist in the education of Negroes, Office of Education. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1933. 132 p. diagrs., tables. (U.S. Office of Education. Bulletin, 1933, no. 8) L111.A6 1933 no. 8 LC2801.C28At head of title: United States Department of the Interior. Harold L. Ickes, Secretary. Office of Education. William John Cooper, Commissioner.Bibliography: p. 116-117.
563Caliver, Ambrose. A personnel study of Negro college students; a study of the relations between certain background factors of Negro college students and their subsequent careers in college. New York, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1931. 146 p. diagrs., forms. (Teachers College, Columbia University. Contributions to education, no. 484) LC2801.C3 1931 [LB5.C8 no. 484]"The study includes 450 cases, comprising the entering students at Fisk University for the years 1926, 1927, and 1928."—p. 9.Issued also as thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 124-128.
564Campbell, Ernest Q. When a city closes its schools, by Ernest Q. Campbell, with the assistance of Charles E. Bowerman [and] Daniel O. Price. Chapel Hill, Institute for Research in Social Science, University of North Carolina, 1960. 195 p. tables. (University of North Carolina, Institute for Research in Social Science. Monographs) LA381.N8C3
565Clark, Kenneth B., and Lawrence Plotkin. The Negro student at integrated colleges. [New York] National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students, 1963. 59 p. LC2801.C55Bibliography: p. 53-54.
566Clift, Virgil A., Archibald W. Anderson, and Henry Gordon Hullfish, eds. Negro education in America; its adequacy, problems, and needs. New York, Harper [1962] xxiii, 315 p. (Yearbook of the John Dewey Society, 16th) L101.U6J6 16th, 1962Bibliographical footnotes.
567[Coleman, James S.] Equality of educational opportunity; [summary report. Washington] U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, Office of Education; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966] 33 p. illus. [LA209.2.C58] [TR: LC213.2.C65]"OE-38000."A slightly different version of the summary included, as section 1, in the main report of the survey."The survey was carried out by the National Center for Educational Statistics of the U.S. Office of Education."
568Coles, Robert. The desegregation of southern schools: a psychiatric study. New York, Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1963. 25 p. LB3062.C6Bibliographical footnotes.
569Conant, James B. Slums and suburbs; a commentary on schools in metropolitan areas. New York, McGraw-Hill [1961] 147 p. LC5115.C6
570Crain, Robert L. The politics of school desegregation; comparative case studies of community structure and policy-making. With the assistance of Morton Inger, Gerald A. McWorter [and] James J. Vanecko. Chicago, Aldine Pub. Co. [1968] xviii, 390 p. (National Opinion Research Center. Monographs in social research, 14) LA209.2.C7Bibliography: p. 373-377.
571Cuthbert, Marion V. Education and marginality; a study of the Negro woman college graduate. New York, 1942. xviii, 167 p. tables. LC2781.C8Thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University, 1942.Bibliography: p. 161-166.
572Dabney, Lillian G. The history of schools for Negroes in the District of Columbia, 1807-1947. Washington, Catholic University of America Press, 1949. 287 p. LC2802.D65D3Thesis—Catholic University of America.Bibliography: p. 255-277.
573Damerell, Reginald G. Triumph in a white suburb; the dramatic story of Teaneck, N.J., the first town in the Nation to vote for integrated schools. Introductions by Robert J. Havighurst and Neil V. Sullivan. New York, W. Morrow, 1968. 351 p. maps. LA333.T4D3
574Davis, William R. The development and present status of Negro education in east Texas. New York, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1934. 150 p. illus., diagrs., maps. (Teachers College, Columbia University. Contributions to education, no. 626) LC2802.T4D3 1934a LB5.C8 no. 626Issued also as thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 139-150.
575Day, Richard E. Civil rights, U.S.A.; public schools, Southern States, 1963: North Carolina. Staff report submitted to the United States Commission on Civil Rights [Washington? 1963?] 60 p. maps. LA340.D3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 42-48).
576Derbigny, Irving A. General education in the Negro college. Stanford University, Stanford University Press [1947] 255 p. LC2781.D4Bibliography: p. 245-249.
577DuBois, William E. B., ed. The college-bred Negro; report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Fifth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, May 29-30, 1900. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1900. 115 p. (Atlanta University publications, no. 5) E185.5.A88 no. 5 LC2781.D8 1900"A select bibliography of the American Negro for general readers": p. 6-9.
578DuBois, William E. B., and Augustus G. Dill, eds. The common school and the Negro American; report of a social study made by Atlanta University under the patronage of the trustees of the John F. Slater Fund, with the Proceedings of the 16th Annual Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, on Tuesday, May 30th, 1911. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1911. 140 p. (The Atlanta University publications, no. 16) [LC2771.D7] [TR: E185.5.A88 no. 16]"A select bibliography of common school education for NegroAmericans": p. [9]-12.
579Florida. Attorney General. Oliver Brown, et al., appellants, v. Board of Education of Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, et al. Harry Briggs, Jr., et al., appellants, v. R. W. Elliott, et al. Dorothy E. Davis, et al., appellants, v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, Virginia, et al. Frances B. Gebhart, et al., petitioners, v. Ethel Louise Belton, et al. Amicus curiae brief of the attorney general of Florida. Richard W. Ervin, attorney general of the State of Florida. Ralph E. Odum, assistant attorney general, State of Florida. [Tallahassee, 1954] 243 p. FUAt head of title: In the Supreme Court of the United States. October term, 1954. No.-.
580Forten, Charlotte L. Journal; with an introduction and notes by Ray Allen Billington. New York, Dryden Press [1953] 248 p. maps. LA2317.F67A3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [205]-244).The life of the Sea Islands Negroes is described in this diary of a Negro teacher during 1854-64.
581Gallagher, Buell G. American caste and the Negro college. With a foreword by William H. Kilpatrick. New York, Gordian Press, 1966 [c1938] 463 p. illus. LC2781.G3 1966Issued also as thesis, Columbia University.Bibliography: p. [419]-443.
582Gates, Robbins L. The making of massive resistance; Virginia's politics of public school desegregation, 1954-1956. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1964] xx, 222 p. illus., maps. LA379.G3Bibliography: p. 215-218.
583Ginzberg, Eli, and others. The middle-class Negro in the white man's world. New York, Columbia University Press, 1967. 182 p. E185.82.G5Findings from case studies initiated in 1964 by the Conservation of Human Resources Project, Columbia University.
584Gordon, Edmund W., and Doxey A. Wilkerson. Compensatory education for the disadvantaged; programs and practices, preschool through college. New York, College Entrance Examination Board, 1966. 209 p. LC4091.G57Bibliography: p. 194-198.
585Green, Donald R., and Warren E. Gauerke. If the schools are closed: a critical analysis of the private school plan. Atlanta, Southern Regional Council, 1959. 40 p. LB3062.G73
586Green, Robert L., and others. The educational status of children during the first school year following four years of little or no schooling. [East Lansing] School for Advanced Studies, College of Education, Michigan State University, 1966. 126 leaves. forms. LC2802.V8G7Cooperative research project no. 2498 supported by the Cooperative Research Program of the Office of Education, U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare.Includes bibliographies.
587Greene, Harry W. Holders of doctorates among American Negroes: an educational and social study of Negroes who have earned doctoral degrees in course, 1876-1943. Boston, Meador Pub. Co. [1946] 275 p. LC2781.G7Bibliography: p. 247-254.
588Greene, Mary F., and Orletta Ryan. The schoolchildren growing up in the slums. New York, Pantheon Books [1966, c1965] 227 p. LC5133.N4G7
589Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry. Committee on Social Issues. Emotional aspects of school desegregation; a report by psychiatrists. [New York, Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, 1960] 47 p. LB3062.G75 1960"An abbreviated and less technical version of Report no. 37, Psychiatric Aspects of School Desegregation, May, 1957."Includes bibliographical references.
590Gurin, Patricia, and Daniel Katz. Motivation and aspiration in the Negro college. Ann Arbor, Mich., Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, 1966. xvi, 346 p. LC2781.G8Final report.Project no. 5-0787. Contract no. OE-4-10-095. Research performed under contract with the U.S. Office of Education.Bibliography: p. 341-346.
591Guzman, Jessie P. Some achievements of the Negro through education. 2d rev. ed. Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Dept. of Records and Research, 1951. 41 leaves. (Records and research pamphlet, no. 1) E185.96.G8 1951Bibliography: p. 39-40.
592Guzman, Jessie P. Twenty years of court decisions affecting higher education in the South, 1938-1958. [Tuskegee Institute, Ala.] 1960. 36 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4153.36.G8]
593Hansen, Carl F. Miracle of social adjustment: desegregation in the Washington, D.C. schools. [New York, Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1957] 70 p. illus. (Freedom pamphlets) LB3062.H3—— Addendum: a five year report. [New York, Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1960] 31 p. LB3062.H3 Suppl.
594Hayes, Rutherford B., Pres. U.S. Teach the freeman; the correspondence of Rutherford B. Hayes and the Slater Fund for Negro Education, 1881-1887. Edited by Louis D. Rubin. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press [1959] 2 v. LC2707.J6
595Hill, Herbert, and Jack Greenberg. Citizen's guide to desegregation; a study of social and legal change in American life. Boston, Beacon Press [1955] 185 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4155.Z9H54]
596Holley, Joseph W. Education and the segregation issue; a program of education for the economic and social regeneration of the southern Negro. New York, William-Frederick Press, 1955. 62 p. illus. E185.97.H714
597Holley, Joseph W. You can't build a chimney from the top; the South through the life of a Negro educator. New York, William-Frederick Press, 1948. 226 p. illus., ports. E185.97.H715
598Holmes, Dwight O. W. The evolution of the Negro college. New York, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1934. 221 p. (Teachers College, Columbia University. Contributions to education, no. 609) LC2801.H57 1934a LB5.C8 no. 609Thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 211-221.
599Humphrey, Hubert H., ed. School desegregation: documents and commentaries. New York, Crowell [1964] 314 p. LB3062.H8 1964a"Also published under the title Integration vs. Segregation."Bibliography: p. 305-308.
600Hundley, Mary G. The Dunbar story, 1870-1955. With an introduction by Robert C. Weaver. New York, Vantage Press [1965] 179 p. [4] plates. LD7501.W3D8About Dunbar High School, Washington, D. C."Alma mater. Words by Dr. A. J. Cooper. Music by Miss M. L. Europe": (close score, for chorus SATB): plate [4].Includes bibliographies.
601In their own words; a student appraisal of what happened after school desegregation. Analysis by Mark A. Chesler. Atlanta, Southern Regional Council [1967] 76 p. LB3062.I45
602Integrated Education. Learning together; a book on integrated education. Edited by Meyer Weinberg. Chicago, Integrated Education Associates, 1964. 222 p. LB3062.I5Contains all the articles published in the first six numbers of Integrated Education, which started publication in January 1963.Bibliography: p. 211-222.
603International Research Associates. Access to public libraries; a research project prepared for the Library Administration Division, American Library Association. Chicago, American Library Association, 1963. xxiii, 160 p. map, tables. Z711.9.I5Bibliography: p. 154-156.
604Jaffe, Abram J., Walter Adams, and Sandra G. Meyers. Negro higher education in the 1960's. New York, Praeger [1968] xxvii, 290 p. illus. (Praeger special studies in U.S. economic and social development) LC2781.J3Bibliography: p. [285]-290.
605Johnson, Charles S. The Negro college graduate. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1938. xvii, 399 p. diagrs., maps (part fold.), tables. LC2781.J6Bibliography: p. 378-384.
606Kendall, Robert. White teacher in a black school. New York, Devin-Adair [1964] 241 p. LC2803.L6K4
607Kilpatrick, James J. The Southern case for school segregation. [New York] Crowell-Collier Press [1962] 220 p. E185.61.K5"A bibliographical note": p. 213-220.
608Knapp, Robert B. Social integration in urban communities; a guide for educational planning. New York, Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1960. 196 p. (Teachers College studies in education) LB3062.K55Bibliography: p. 192-196. Bibliographical footnotes.
609Kohl, Herbert R. Teaching the unteachable; the story of an experiment in children's writing. Introduction by John Holt. [New York, New York Review, 1967] 63 p. illus. (A New York review book) LC2803.N5K6 1967
610Kohl, Herbert R. 36 children. Illustrations by Robert George Jackson. [New York] New American Library [1967] 227 p. illus. LC2803.H3K6 1967Includes letters, stories, etc., by the author's students in an East Harlem elementary school.
611Kornhauser, Stanley H. Planning for the achievement of quality integrated education in desegregated schools; a composite report on the recommendations of workshop participants. Report writer and coordinator: Stanley H. Kornhauser. Editor: Martin Silverman. [New York, Board of Education, City of New York, Office of Intergroup Education] 1968. 100 p. HT1506.K65Report of a workshop for teachers held May 6, 13, and 20, 1967, and sponsored by the Board of Education's Office of Integration and Human Relations.
612Kozol, Jonathan. Death at an early age; the destruction of the hearts and minds of Negro children in the Boston public schools. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1967. 240 p. LC2803.B7K6Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [235]-240).
613McGinnis, Frederick A. The education of Negroes in Ohio. Wilberforce, Ohio, 1962. 104 p. LC2802.O5M2
614McGinnis, Frederick A. A history and an interpretation of Wilberforce University. Wilberforce, Ohio [Blanchester, Ohio, Printed at the Brown Pub. Co.] 1941. 215 p. plates, ports. LC2851.W62M2Bibliography: p. 203-208.
615McGrath, Earl J. The predominantly Negro colleges and universities in transition. [New York] Published for the Institute of Higher Education by the Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University [1965] xv, 204 p. map. (Publications of the Institute of Higher Education.) LC2801.M28Bibliography: p. 194-204.
616McMillan, Lewis K. Negro higher education in the State of South Carolina. [Orangeburg? S.C., 1953, c1952] 296 p. facsims. LC2802.S6M25
617Mallery, David. Negro students in independent schools. Boston, National Association of Independent Schools [1963] 93 p. LC2731.M25"This monograph is no. 8 in a series of studies initiated by the Committee on Educational Practices of the National Council of Independent Schools and ... continued under the direction of its successor, the Committee on Research [later Committee on Educational Practices] of the National Association of Independent Schools."
618Maryland. Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations. Desegregation in the Baltimore city schools. [Study sponsored by the Maryland Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations and the Baltimore Commission on Human Relations. Baltimore, 1955] 32 p. LB3062.M32
619Maryland. Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations. The report of a study on desegregation in the Baltimore city schools, by Elinor Pancoast and others. [Baltimore, 1956] 114 p. LB3062.M34Prepared under the direction of a joint committee representing the Maryland Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations and the Baltimore Commission on Human Relations.Bibliographical footnotes.
620Meece, Leonard E. Negro education in Kentucky; a comparative study of white and Negro education on the elementary and secondary school levels. Lexington, Ky., University of Kentucky [1938] 180 p. diagrs., maps. (Bulletin of the Bureau of School Service, College of Education, University of Kentucky. v. 10, no. 3) LC2802.K4M4Bibliography: p. [176]-178.
621Meredith, James H. Three years in Mississippi. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1966] 328 p. LD3412.9.M4A3Autobiographical.An account of the experiences of the first Negro to gain admission to the University of Mississippi.
622Meyer, Gladys E. Parent action in school integration; a New York experience. New York, United Parents Associations of New York City [1961] 46 p. LB3062.M4
623Morgan, John W. The origin and distribution of the graduates of the Negro colleges of Georgia. Milledgeville, Ga., Priv. print., 1940. 118 p. map, tables. E185.82.M84Bibliography: p. 117-118.
624Muse, Benjamin. Ten years of prelude: the story of integration since the Supreme Court's 1954 decision. New York, Viking Press [1964] 308 p. E185.61.M989Bibliography: p. 289-291. "Reference notes": p. 292-297.
625National Education Association of the United States. Research Division. Studies of educational problems involved in school integration. [Washington, 1960] 31 p. LB3062.N3
626National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students. Opportunities in inter-racial colleges, edited by Richard L. Plaut, executive vice-chairman. New York, 1951. 240 p. LC2801.N3
627Noble, Jeanne L. The Negro woman's college education. New York, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1956. 163 p. tables. (TC studies in education) LC1605.N6Bibliography: p. 145-150.
628Norfleet, Marvin B. Forced school integration in the U.S.A. New York, Carlton Press, 1961. 248 p. LB3062.N57
629North Carolina. Division of Negro Education. Some tasks of union school principals in North Carolina, by S. E. Duncan, Division of Negro Education. Raleigh [1955] 141 p. LC2802.N8A52 1955
630Pennington, Edgar L. Thomas Bray's Associates and their work among the Negroes. Worcester, Mass., The Society, 1939. 95 p. LC2801.P45At head of title: American Antiquarian Society."Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society for Oct., 1938."
631Phelps-Stokes Fund. Ladders to improvement; report of a project for the improvement of instruction in secondary schools. Aaron Brown, editor. New York, 1960. 249 p. illus., diagrs., maps. LC2707.P45Bibliography: p. 231-249.
632Plaut, Richard L. Blueprint for talent searching; America's hidden manpower. [New York] National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students [1957] 41 p. LB2338.P56
633Poverty, education, and race relations; studies and proposals. [By] William C. Kvaraceus, John S. Gibson [and] Thomas J. Curtin. With contributions by Minna K. Barnett [and others] Boston [Published for the Lincoln Filene Center, Tufts University, Medford, Mass. by] Allyn and Bacon [1967] 226 p. LC2801.P63"Most of these selected papers were drawn from the educational television course, Education and Race Relations."Bibliographical footnotes. Bibliography: p. 201-210.
634Range, Willard. The rise and progress of Negro colleges in Georgia, 1865-1949. Athens, University of Georgia Press [1951] 254 p. [Phelps-Stokes fellowship studies, no. 15] E185.5.G35 no. 15 LC2802.G4R35Bibliography: p. 236-248.
635Record, Wilson, and Jane C. Record, eds. Little Rock, U.S.A. San Francisco, Chandler Pub. Co. [1960] 338 p. illus. (Materials for analysis) LA242.L5R4A chronological account of the integration of Central High School, Little Rock, Arkansas.
636Sexton, Patricia C. Education and income; inequalities of opportunity in our public schools. Foreword by Kenneth B. Clark. New York, Viking Press, 1961. 298 p. illus. LA210.S4
637Smith, Robert C. They closed their schools; Prince Edward County, Virginia, 1951-1964. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1965] 281 p. LA380.P74S6Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [267]-281).
638Southern Education Reporting Service. Southern schools: progress and problems, prepared by staff members and associates of Southern Education Reporting Service. Edited by Patrick McCauley and Edward D. Ball. Data collection directed by Bennie Carmichael. Chapters contributed by Tom Flake [and others] With introductions by Relman Morin [and] John A. Griffin. Nashville [1959] 174 p. illus., tables. LA201.S6
639Southern Education Reporting Service. A statistical summary, State by State, of segregation-desegregation activity affecting southern schools from 1954 to present, together with pertinent data on enrollment, teachers, colleges, litigation and legislation. Rev. Nashville, 1961. 49 p. LB3062.S58 1961
640Southern Education Reporting Service. With all deliberate speed; segregation-desegregation in southern schools. Prepared by staff members and associates of Southern Education Reporting Service: Bert Collier [and others] Edited by Don Shoemaker. New York, Harper [1957] 239 p. LB3062.S6Bibliography: p. 218-224.
641Spellman, Cecil L. Rough steps on my stairway; the life history of a Negro educator. New York, Exposition Press [1953] 273 p. LC2731.S65
642Swint, Henry L. The northern teacher in the South, 1862-1870. New York, Octagon Books, 1967. 221 p. map. LC2801.S9 1967Reprint of the 1941 ed.Bibliography: p. 201-207.
643Trillin, Calvin. An education in Georgia; the integration of Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes. New York, Viking Press [1964] 180 p. LB3062.T7
644Trubowitz, Sidney. A handbook for teaching in the ghetto school. Chicago, Quadrangle Books [1968] 175 p. LC4091.T7Bibliography: p. 147-168.
645U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Civil rights U.S.A.: public schools, cities in the North and West, 1962; staff reports. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962] 309 p. illus., maps (part fold.) LB3062.U63
646U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Civil rights U.S.A.: public schools, Southern States, 1962; staff reports. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962] 217 p. LA209.2.A47Includes bibliographical notes.
647U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Equal protection of the laws in public higher education, 1960. [Washington, 1961] xv, 355 p. diagrs., maps, tables. DLC-LL [TR: KF4155.A35 1961]Bibliography: p. 329-332.
648U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Racial isolation in the public schools; a report. Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off. [1967] 2 v. LA210.A45Bibliographical footnotes.
649U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Southern school segregation, 1966-67; a report. [Washington] 1967. 163 p. [LA210.A46]Bibliographical footnotes.
650U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Education and Labor. Integration in public education programs. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Integration in Federally Assisted Public Education Programs of the Committee on Education and Labor, House of Representatives, Eighty-seventh Congress, second session, on H.R. 6890 [and others]. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962. 2 pts. (720 p.) illus. [LB3062.U635] [TR: KF27.E3 1962f]Hearings held Feb. 27-June 15, 1962.
651U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Education and Labor. Integration in public education programs. Report of the Subcommittee on Integration in Federally Assisted Public Education Programs. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1962. 138 p. illus. LB3062.U636At head of title: 87th Cong., 2d sess. Committee print.Bibliography: p. 98.
651aU.S. Office of Education. Negro education; a study of the private and higher schools for colored people in the United States. Prepared in cooperation with the Phelps-Stokes Fund under the direction of Thomas Jesse Jones, specialist in the education of racial groups, Bureau of Education. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1917. 2 v. illus., maps (1 fold.), plates, tables (part fold.) (Bulletin, 1916, no. 38-39) [L111.A6 1916 no. 38-39 LC2801.U64] LC2801.A5 1917 [TR: E185.82.U58]At head of title: Department of the Interior. Bureau of Education.
652U.S. Office of Education. Survey of Negro colleges and universities, prepared in the Division of Higher Education, Arthur J. Klein, chief. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1929. 964 p. tables. (Its Bulletin, 1928, no. 7) L111.A6 1928 no. 7 LC2801.A38At head of title: Department of the Interior. Bureau of Education.Each chapter also issued separately in 1928.Contents.—1, 2, and 3. Introduction, control and finance, education service.—4. Alabama.—5. Arkansas.—6. Delaware and Maryland.—7. District of Columbia.—8. Florida.—9. Georgia.—10. Kentucky.—11. Louisiana.—12. Mississippi and Oklahoma.—13. Missouri.—14. North Carolina.—15. Ohio and West Virginia.—16. Pennsylvania.—17. South Carolina.—18. Tennessee.—19. Texas.—20. Virginia.
653U.S. Office of Education. Division of Vocational Education. Negro farm families can feed themselves; a handbook for teachers. Federal Security Agency, Paul V. McNutt, administrator. U.S. Office of Education, John W. Studebaker, commissioner. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1942. 52 p. illus., diagrs., tables. [Its Leaflet no. 8] [LC1045.A27 no. 8]Text continued on p. [3] of cover."Prepared jointly by the Agricultural Education Service and Home Economics Education Service.""Prepared in the interest of the national nutrition program by the Vocational Division of the U.S. Office of Education. Issued by the Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services."—Verso of title page.Revision of U.S. Office of Education. Vocational Division.Misc[ellany] 2563, "Negro Farm Families Can Feed Themselves.""Suggested references on teaching units": p. 49-[53].
654Virginia. Commission on Constitutional Government. Did the Court interpret or amend? The meaning of the Fourteenth amendment, in terms of a State's power to operate racially separate public schools, as defined by the courts. [Richmond, 1960] 43 p. (Historic statements and papers expounding the role of the States in their relation to the central government, 5) [Vi] [TR: LAW]
655Washington, Booker T. My larger education; being chapters from my experience. Illustrated from photographs. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Page, 1911. 313 p. plates, ports. [E185.97.W28] [TR: E185.97.W4A35 1911]
656Washington, Booker T., ed. Tuskegee & its people: their ideals and achievements. New York, Appleton, 1905. xiv, 354 p. illus. LC2851.T82W2Reprint issued by Negro Universities Press, 1969.Contents.—1. The school and its purposes.—2. Autobiographies by graduates of the school.
657Washington Center for Metropolitan Studies, Washington, D.C. In search of a future; a pilot study of career-seeking experiences of selected high school graduates in Washington, D.C. Washington [196-] 117 leaves. LC2803.W3W35
658Weinberg, Meyer, comp. Integrated education, a reader. Beverly Hills, Calif., Glencoe Press [1968] 376 p. illus., maps. LB3062.W42Consists of selections from the magazine, Integrated Education.Includes bibliographies.
659Wiggins, Samuel P. The desegregation era in higher education [by] Sam P. Wiggins, director, Southern Study in Higher Education. Berkeley, Calif., McCutchan Pub. Corp. [1966] 106 p. illus. LB2341.W54 [TR: Wiggins, Sam P.]Includes bibliographical references.
660Wilkerson, Doxey A. Special problems of Negro education. Prepared for the Advisory Committee on Education. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1939. xvi, 171 p. tables. ([U.S.] Advisory Committee on Education. Staff study no. 12) L111.A93 no. 12 LC2801.W5"Publications of the committee": p. 171.
661Wilson, Charles H. Education for Negroes in Mississippi since 1910. Boston, Meador Pub. Co. [1947] 641 p. illus., ports. LC2802.M7W5Bibliography: p. 595-607.
662Woodson, Carter G. The education of the Negro prior to 1861. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 454 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) LC2741.W7 1968Reprint of the 2d ed., 1919.Bibliography: p. 399-434.
663Work Conference on Curriculum and Teaching in Depressed Urban Areas, Columbia University, 1962. Education in depressed areas; [papers]. A. Harry Passow, editor. New York, Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1963. 359 p. tables. LC5105.W6 1962Includes bibliographies.
664Wright, Marion M. T. The education of Negroes in New Jersey. New York, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1941. 227 p. (Teachers College, Columbia University. Contributions to education, no. 815) LC2802.N5W7 1941Thesis (Ph.D.)—Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 212-227.
665Bond, Frederick W. The Negro and the drama; the direct and indirect contribution which the American Negro has made to drama and the legitimate stage, with the underlying conditions responsible. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1940] 213 p. PS338.N4B6Bibliography: p. 202-208.
666Fletcher, Tom. 100 years of the Negro in show business; the Tom Fletcher story. New York, Burdge [1954] 337 p. illus. [ML3561.N4F5] [TR: ML3556.F63 1954]
667Hughes, Langston, and Milton Meltzer. Black magic; a pictorial history of the Negro in American entertainment. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1967] 375 p. illus., ports. PN2286.H75
668Isaacs, Edith J. R. The Negro in the American theatre. New York, Theatre Arts, 1947. 143 p. illus., ports. PN2286.I8
669Jerome, Victor J. The Negro in Hollywood films. New York, Masses & Mainstream [1950] 64 p. PN1995.9.N4J4"An expansion of a lecture ... delivered at a public forum held under the auspices of the Marxist cultural magazine, Masses & Mainstream ... New York, on February 3, 1950."Bibliographical footnotes.
670Mitchell, Loften. Black drama; the story of the American Negro in the theatre. New York, Hawthorn Books [1967] 248 p. illus., ports. PS338.N4M5
671Patterson, Lindsay, comp. Anthology of the American Negro in the theatre; a critical approach. New York, Publishers Co. [1967] xiv, 306 p. illus., facsims., ports. (International library of Negro life and history) PN2226.P3Published under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.Bibliography: p. [293]-294.
672Sandle, Floyd L. The Negro in the American educational theatre: anorganizational development, 1911-1964. [Grambling? La.] 1964. xviii, 202 p. illus., ports. PN3182.S3Bibliography: p. 199-202.
673Abrahams, Roger D. Deep down in the jungle ...; Negro narrative folklore from the streets of Philadelphia. Hatboro, Pa., Folklore Associates, 1964. 287 p. illus. GR103.A2Bibliography: p. 269-275.
674Adams, Edward C. L. Congaree sketches; scenes from Negro life in the swamps of the Congaree and tales by Tad and Scip of heaven and hell with other miscellany. With an introduction by Paul Green. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1927. xvii, 116 p. PZ3.A2114Co
675Ballowe, Hewitt L. The Lawd sayin' the same; Negro folk tales of the Creole country. Introduction by Donald Joseph. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press [1947] xvi, 254 p. illus. PZ3.B2162Law
676Bennett, John. The doctor to the dead; grotesque legends & folk tales of old Charleston. New York, Rinehart [1946] xv, 260 p. illus. GR103.B4
677Botkin, Benjamin A., ed. A treasury of Mississippi River folklore; stories, ballads, traditions, and folkways of the mid-American river country. Foreword by Carl Carmer. New York, Crown Publishers [1955] xx, 620 p. illus. GR109.B58Includes melodies with words.Bibliographical footnotes.
677aBradford, Roark. Ol' man Adam and his chillun; being the tales they tell about the time when the Lord walked the earth like a natural man. With drawings by A. B. Walker. New York, Harper, 1928. xxiv, 264 p. illus. PS3503.R2215O6 1928
678Bradford, Roark. This side of Jordan. With drawings by Erich Berry. New York, Harper, 1929. 255 p. illus. PZ3.B7254Th
679Brewer, John Mason, comp. American Negro folklore. Illustrations by Richard Lowe. Chicago, Quadrangle Books, 1968. xviii, 386 p. illus., music. GR103.B66
680Brewer, John Mason. Aunt Dicy tales; snuff-dipping tales of the Texas Negro. Foreword by Roy Bedichek. Illustrations by John T. Biggers. [Austin? Tex.] 1956. 80 p. illus. GR103.B67
681Brewer, John Mason. Dog ghosts, and other Texas Negro folk tales. Drawings by John T. Biggers. Foreword by Chapman J. Milling. Austin, University of Texas Press [1958] 124 p. illus. GR103.B68
682Brewer, John Mason. The Word on the Brazos; Negro preacher tales from the Brazos bottoms of Texas. Foreword by J. Frank Dobie; illustrations by Ralph White, Jr. Austin, University of Texas Press, 1953. 109 p. illus. GR103.B7
683Brewer, John Mason. Worser days and better times; the folklore of the North Carolina Negro. With preface & notes by Warren E. Roberts. Drawings by R. L. Toben. Chicago, Quadrangle Books [1965] 192 p. illus. GR103.B72Bibliography: p. 17-18.
684Carmer, Carl L. Stars fell on Alabama. New York, Hill and Wang [1961, c1934] 291 p. illus. (American century series, AC37) F326.C275 1961
685Chappell, Louis W. John Henry; a folk-lore study. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1968] 144 p. (Kennikat Press series in Negro culture and history) PS461.J6C5 1968Reprint of the 1933 ed.Bibliography: p. [144]. Bibliographical footnotes.
686Christensen, Mrs. A. M. H. Afro-American folk lore; told round cabin fires on the Sea Islands of South Carolina. Boston, J. G. Cupples Co. [1892] xiv, 116 p. plates. PZ8.1.C462A
687Courlander, Harold. Terrapin's pot of sense. Illustrated by Elton Fax. New York, Holt [1957] 125 p. illus. PZ8.1.C8TeShort stories.
688Dobie, James Frank, ed. Follow de drinkin' gou'd. Austin, Texas Folk-Lore Society, c1928. 201 p. music. (Publications of the Texas Folk-Lore Society, no. 7) [ICN] [TR: GR109.D6 1965]"Proceedings of the thirteenth annual session (1927) of the Texas Folk-Lore Society": p. [181]-182.Bibliographical footnotes.
689Dobie, James Frank, ed. Tone the bell easy. [Facsim. ed.] Dallas, Southern Methodist University Press [1965, c1932] 199 p. illus., music. (Texas Folklore Society. Publication no. 10) GR108.D55 1965a"Proceedings of the Texas Folk-Lore Society, 1932": p. [186]-187.
690Dorson, Richard M., comp. American Negro folktales, collected with introduction and notes by Richard M. Dorson. Greenwich, Conn., Fawcett Publications [1967] 378 p. (A Fawcett premier book, t357) GR103.D58Selected primarily from the compiler's Negro Folktales in Michigan, 1956, and Negro Tales from Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and Calvin, Michigan, 1958.Bibliography: p. [379]-[381].
691Dorson, Richard M., ed. Negro folktales in Michigan. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1956. 245 p. illus. GR103.D6
692Dorson, Richard M., ed. Negro tales from Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and Calvin, Michigan. Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1958. xviii, 292 p. (Indiana University publication. Folklore series, no. 12) GR108.D6In 2 pts.; pt. 1 consists of tales by various informants; pt. 2, tales by James Douglas Suggs.Bibliography: p. 289-292. Includes bibliographical references.
693Duncan, Eula G. Big Road Walker. Based on stories told by Alice Cannon; illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg. New York, F. A. Stokes Co., 1940. 121 p. illus. PZ8.1.D87Bi
694Gonzales, Ambrose E. The black border; Gullah stories of the Carolina coast (with a glossary). Columbia, S.C., State Co., 1922. 348 p. E185.93.S7G6 [GR103.G6]
694aGonzales, Ambrose E. With Aesop along the black border. Columbia, S.C., State Co., 1924. xiv, 298 p. GR103.G65"The fables contained in this volume were ... published in the State between August 1923 and February 1924."
695Harris, Joel Chandler. Uncle Remus: his songs and his sayings. With a foreword by Marc Connelly and woodcuts by Seong Moy. New York, For the members of the Limited Editions Club, 1957. xviii, 158 p. illus. PZ7.H242Un45
696Hughes, Langston, and Arna W. Bontemps, eds. The book of Negro folklore. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1958. 624 p. illus. GR103.H74
697Hurston, Zora N. Mules and men; with an introduction by Frank Boas. 10 illustrations by Miguel Covarrubias. Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1935. 342 p. illus., plates. GR103.H8Contents.—pt. 1. Folk tales.—pt. 2. Hoodoo.—Appendix. 1. Negro songs with music (p. 309-[331]). 2. Formulae of hoodoo doctors. 3. Paraphernalia of conjure. 4. Prescriptions of root doctors.
698Jackson, Bruce, comp. The Negro and his folklore in nineteenth-century periodicals, edited, with an introduction, by Bruce Jackson. Austin, Published for the American Folklore Society by the University of Texas Press [1967] xxiii, 374 p. (Publications of the American Folklore Society. Bibliographical and special series, v. 18) GR103.J3Includes spirituals (principally unaccompanied).Bibliography: p. 353-367.
699Johnson, Guy B. Folk culture on St. Helena Island, South Carolina. Foreword by Don Yoder. Hatboro, Pa., Folklore Associates, 1968 [c1930] xxi, 183 p. E185.93.S7J67 1968Includes music.Bibliography: p. 174-179.
700Johnson, Guy B. John Henry; tracking down a Negro legend. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1929. 155 p. facsim. (University of North Carolina. Social study series) PS461.J6J6 [ML3556.J7J7]Includes music."Bibliography of John Henry": p. [152]-155.
701Jones, Charles C. Negro myths from the Georgia coast told in the vernacular. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1888. 171 p. GR103.J6
702Love, Rose L., ed. A collection of folklore for children in elementary school and at home. New York, Vantage Press [1964] 83 p. illus. GR105.L6Includes music.
702aOwen, Mary A. Voodoo tales, as told among the Negroes of the Southwest; collected from original sources by Mary Alicia Owen; introduction by Charles Godfrey Leland; illustrated by Juliette A. Owen and Louis Wain. New York, G. P. Putnam, 1893. xv, 310 p. illus. GR103.O82Published in London the same year under title: Old Rabbit, the Voodoo, and Other Sorcerers.
703Parsons, Elsie W. C., ed. Folk-lore of the Sea Islands, South Carolina. Cambridge, Mass., American Folk-Lore Society, 1923. xxx, 219 p. map. (Memoirs of the American Folk-Lore Society, v. 16) GR1.A5 v. XVIContains music."List of informants or writers of the tales": p. xxiii-xxvi."Bibliography and abbreviations": p. xxvii-xxx.
704Puckett, Newbell N. Folk beliefs of the southern Negro. Montclair, N.J., Patterson Smith, 1968 [c1926] xiv, 644 p. illus. (Patterson Smith reprint series in criminology, law enforcement, and social problems, publication no. 22) GR103.P8 1968Bibliography: p. [583]-598.
705Robb, Bernard. Welcum hinges, with a foreword by Alexander William Armour and an introduction by Thomas Lomax Hunter; gravure illustrations by Woodi Ishmael. New York, E. P. Dutton, 1942. 215 p. illus., plates. GR103.R6Plantation folk tales and sayings, in the Negro dialect and idiom of "Uncle Woodson," at Gay Mont, the Robb estate in Caroline County, Va.
706Sale, John B. The tree named John. With twenty-two silhouettes by Joseph Cranston Jones. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1929. 151 p. illus., plates. GR103.S3
707Stoney, Samuel G., and Gertrude M. Shelby. Black Genesis; a chronicle. Illustrations by Martha Bensley Bruère. New York, Macmillan, 1930. xxix, 192 p. illus. GR103.S8"Tales of the Gullah Negroes of the Carolina low country [told in the Gullah dialect]"—Foreword."The family tree of Gullah folk speech and folk tales": p. ix-xxv.
708Writers' Program. Georgia. Drums and shadows; survival studies among the Georgia coastal Negroes [by the] Savannah unit, Georgia Writers' Project, Work Projects Administration; foreword by Guy B. Johnson, photographs by Muriel and Malcolm Bell, Jr. Athens, University of Georgia Press, 1940. xx, 274 p. plates, ports. E185.93.G4W7Bibliography: p. 259-263.
709Writers' Program. South Carolina. South Carolina folk tales; stories of animals and supernatural beings, compiled by workers of the Writers' Program of the Works Projects Administration in the State of South Carolina. Sponsored by the University of South Carolina. Columbia, S.C. [1941] 122 p. (Bulletin of the University of South Carolina. October 1941) GR110.S6W7"Bibliography for South Carolina folk tales": p. 118-122.
710Writers' Program. Tennessee. God bless the devil! Liars' bench tales [by] James R. Aswell, Julia Willhoit, Jennette Edwards [and others] of the Tennessee Writers' Project; with illustrations by Ann Kelley of the Tennessee Art Project. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1940. 254 p. illus. GR110.T4W7"Arranged and edited by James R. Aswell."—Preface.
711Aplin, Norita, Shirley Seaton, and Juanita Storey. The Negro American: his role, his quest. Clyde F. Varner, editor. Cleveland, Cleveland Public Schools, 1968. 246 p. map. E185.A56Bibliography: p. 220-238.
712Aptheker, Herbert, ed. A documentary history of the Negro people in the United States. Preface by W. E. B. DuBois. New York, Citadel Press [1951] xvi, 942 p. E185.A58
713Aptheker, Herbert. Essays in the history of the American Negro. New York, International Publishers [1964] 216 p. E185.A6 1964Bibliography: p. 211-216.
714Aptheker, Herbert. To be free; studies in American Negro history. New York, International Publishers [1948] 256 p. E185.A63"Reference notes": p. 193-248.
715Bennett, Lerone. Before the Mayflower; a history of the Negro in America, 1619-1966. 3d ed. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1966. 449 p. illus., maps, ports. E185.B4 1966Bibliography: p. [428]-442.
716Bennett, Lerone. Black Power, U.S.A., the human side of Reconstruction, 1867-1877. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1967. 401 p. illus., ports. E185.2.B38Bibliography: p. 390-393.
717Bittle, William E., and Gilbert Geis. The longest way home; Chief Alfred C. Sam's back-to-Africa movement. With the research assistance of Donald F. Parker. Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1964. 229 p. E448.B615Includes bibliographical "Notes" (p. 213-221).
718Bontemps, Arna W. Story of the Negro; illustrated by Raymond Lufkin. 2d ed., enl. New York, Knopf, 1955. 243 p. illus. E29.N3B6 1955
719Boykin, James H. The Negro in North Carolina prior to 1861; an historical monograph. New York, Pageant Press [1958] 84 p. E185.93.N6B6Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 77-84).
720Broderick, Francis L., and August Meier, eds. Negro protest thought in the twentieth century. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Co. [1966, c1965] xliii, 444 p. (The American heritage series) E185.B87
721Broom, Leonard, and Norval D. Glenn. Transformation of the Negro American. New York, Harper & Row [1965] 207 p. E185.6.B84Bibliography: p. 193-199.
722Brown, Ina C. The story of the American Negro. Decorations by Aaron Douglas. Rev. ed. New York, Friendship Press [1950] 212 p. illus. E185.6.B85 1950Bibliography: p. 191-200.
723Brown, William W. The rising son; or, The antecedents and advancement of the colored race. Boston, A. G. Brown, 1874. 552 p. port. E185.B884"Representative men and women": p. 418-552.
724Cain, Alfred E., ed. The winding road to freedom; a documentary survey of Negro experiences in America. Drawings: Horace Varela. Yonkers [N.Y.] Educational Heritage [1965] 384 p. illus., facsims., maps, ports. (Negro heritage library) [E185.C14] [TR: E184.6.C34]Bibliography: p. 374-377.
725Caughey, John W., John H. Franklin, and Ernest R. May. Land of the free; a history of the United States. Educational advisers: Richard M. Clowes [and] Alfred T. Clark, Jr. [Rev.] New York, Benziger Bros., 1966. 658 p. illus. (part col.), ports. E178.1.C36 1966Includes bibliographies.
726Chambers, Lucille A., ed. America's tenth man; a pictorial review of one-tenth of a nation, presenting the Negro contribution to American life today. Foreword by Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. New York, Twayne Publishers [1957] 351 p. illus. E185.6.C46
727Christian, Kathryn. The history of the Negro American; resource material. [Des Moines] Des Moines Public Schools, 1968. 43 p. E185.C52Bibliography: p. 43.
728Cincinnati. Public Schools. The Negro in American life [by] Mabel Morsbach. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1967] 273 p. illus., maps, ports. E185.C56 1967Bibliography: p. 255-260.
729Conrad, Earl. The invention of the Negro. New York, P. S. Eriksson [1967, c1966] 244 p. E185.C74Bibliography: p. [232]-236.
730Coulter, Ellis M. The Civil War and readjustment in Kentucky. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1966 [c1926] 468 p. maps. E509.C83 1966 [TR: Coulter, E. Merton]Bibliography: p. 449-458.
731Cromwell, John W. The Negro in American history; men and women eminent in the evolution of the American of African descent. Washington, American Negro Academy, 1914. 284 p. plates, ports. E185.C92Bibliography: p. 257-262.Reprint issued by Johnson Reprint Corp., 1969.
732Davie, Maurice R. Negroes in American society. New York, Whittlesey House [1949] 542 p. maps. E185.6.D3Includes "References."
733Delany, Martin R. The condition, elevation, emigration, and destiny of the colored people of the United States. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 214 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.D33 1968Reprint of the 1852 ed., with a new introduction.
734Drotning, Phillip T. A guide to Negro history in America. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1968. xiv, 247 p. E185.D72
735Eisenstadt, Murray. The Negro in American life. New York, Oxford Book Co. [1968] 380 p. (Oxford readings in social studies) E184.6.E35Includes bibliographies.
736Eppse, Merl R. A guide to the study of the Negro in American history. Nashville, National Publication Co. [1943] 181 p. E185.E69 1943"First printing, June, 1937.... Third printing, revised and enlarged, September, 1943."Bibliography: p. 180-181.
737Eppse, Merl R. The Negro, too, in American history. Nashville, National Publication Co., 1949. xxii, 644 p. illus., maps, ports. E185.E696 1949Bibliographical references included in introduction. "Reading material": p. 551-572.
738Ferris, William H. The African abroad; or, His evolution in western civilization, tracing his development under Caucasian milieu. New Haven, Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Press, 1913. 2 v. illus., plates, ports. E185.F39
739Fishel, Leslie H., and Benjamin Quarles. The Negro American; a documentary history. Glenview, Ill., Scott, Foresman [1967] 536 p. illus., facsims., maps, ports. E185.F5Bibliographical footnotes.
740Foster, William Z. The Negro people in American history. New York, International Publishers [1954] 608 p. E185.F6Bibliography: p. 567-592.
741Franklin, John H. The free Negro in North Carolina, 1790-1860. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1943. 271 p. maps, tables. E185.93.N6F7Bibliography: p. [247]-258.
742Franklin, John H. From slavery to freedom; a history of Negro Americans. 3d ed. [rev. and enl.] New York, Knopf, 1967. xxii, 686, xliii p. illus., ports. E185.F825 1967"Bibliographical notes": p. [653]-686.
743Franklin, John H. The militant South, 1800-1861. Cambridge, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1956. 317 p. F213.F75Includes bibliography.
744Frazier, Edward Franklin. The Negro in the United States. Rev. ed. New York, Macmillan [1957] xxxiii, 769 p. diagrs., maps, tables. E185.F833 1957Bibliography: p. 707-752.
745Freidel, Frank B. The Negro and Puerto Rican in American history. Boston, Heath [1964] 27 p. illus., ports. E185.F85
746Fuller, Thomas O. Pictorial history of the American Negro; a story of progress and development along social, political, economic, educational and spiritual lines. Memphis, Tenn., Pictorial History, 1933. xxiii, 375 p. illus. (part col.), maps, ports. E185.F97Bibliography: p. 361-363.
747Goldston, Robert C. The Negro revolution. New York, Macmillan [1968] 247 p. illus., ports. E185.G6
748Greene, Lorenzo J. The Negro in colonial New England, 1620-1776. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1966, c1942] 404 p. E445.N5G7 1966Reprint of a thesis, Columbia University, 1942.Bibliography: p. [361]-384.
749Harlan, Louis R. The Negro in American history. Washington, American Historical Association [1965] 29 p. (Service Center for Teachers of History. Publication no. 61) E175.1.H3Bibliography: p. 26-29.
750Hartshorn, William N., ed. An era of progress and promise, 1863-1910; the religious, moral, and educational development of the American Negro since his emancipation. George W. Penniman, associate editor. Boston, Priscilla Pub. Co., 1910. 576 p. illus., ports. E185.6.H33 [TR: Hartshorn, W. N.]
751Hesseltine, William B., ed. The tragic conflict; the Civil War and Reconstruction. Selected and edited with introduction and notes by William B. Hesseltine. New York, G. Braziller, 1962. 528 p. (The American epochs series) E464.H4Bibliography: p. [527]-528.
752Hodges, Carl G., and Helene H. Levene, comps. Illinois Negro historymakers. Compiled with the assistance of Helen Horney, Julia Wanless and the Illinois State Historical Library staff. Chicago, Illinois Emancipation Centennial Commission, 1964. 91 p. illus., ports. E185.93.I2H6
753Hughes, Langston, and Milton Meltzer. A pictorial history of the Negro in America. 3d rev. ed. New York, Crown Publishers [1968] 380 p. illus., maps, ports. E185.H83 1968"Third revision by C. Eric Lincoln and Milton Meltzer."Bibliography: p. 375.
754Jordan, Winthrop D. White over black: American attitudes toward the Negro, 1550-1812. Chapel Hill, Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture at Williamsburg, Va., by the University of North Carolina Press [1968] xx, 651 p. map. E185.J69Bibliography: p. 610-614. Bibliographical footnotes.
755Katz, William L., comp. Eyewitness; the Negro in American history. New York, Pitman Pub. Corp. [1967] xix, 554 p. illus., facsims., ports. E185.K28
756Katz, William L. Teachers' guide to American Negro history. Chicago, Quadrangle Books [1968] 192 p. illus., ports. E185.K285Includes bibliographies.
757Lincoln, Charles Eric. The Negro pilgrimage in America. New York, Bantam Books [1967] 184 p. illus., facsims., ports. (Bantam pathfinder editions) E185.L47 [TR: Lincoln, C. Eric]
758Little, Malcolm. Malcolm X on Afro-American history. [New York, Merit Publishers, 1967] 48 p. E185.L5"Speech ... from ... a public meeting on January 24, 1965."
759Litwack, Leon F. North of slavery; the Negro in the free States,1790-1860. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1961] 318 p. E185.9.L5"Bibliographical essay": p. 280-303.
760Logan, Rayford W., and Irving S. Cohen. The American Negro; old world background and new world experience. With the editorial assistance of Howard R. Anderson. Boston, Houghton Mifflin [1967] 278 p. illus., maps, ports. (Houghton Mifflin social studies program; history) E185.L84Bibliography: p. 266-268.
761Logan, Rayford W. The betrayal of the Negro, from Rutherford B. Hayes to Woodrow Wilson. New enl. ed. New York, Collier Books [1965] 447 p. E185.61.L64 1965"Originally published as The Negro in American Life and Thought: the Nadir, 1877-1901."Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 397-430).
762Logan, Rayford W. The Negro in the United States, a brief history. Princeton, D. Van Nostrand [1957] 191 p. (An Anvil original, no. 19) E185.L85Includes bibliography.
763McPherson, James M. The Negro's Civil War; how American Negroes felt and acted during the war for the Union. New York, Pantheon Books [1965] 358 p. illus., ports. E540.N3M25"A note on sources": p. [343]-347.
764McPherson, James M. The struggle for equality; abolitionists and the Negro in the Civil War and Reconstruction. Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1964. 474 p. illus. E449.M176"Bibliographical essay": p. 433-450.
765Mazyck, Walter H. George Washington and the Negro. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1932] 180 p. E312.17.M38
766Meier, August, and Elliott M. Rudwick. From plantation to ghetto; an interpretive history of American Negroes. New York, Hill and Wang [1966] 280 p. map. E185.M4
767Meier, August. Negro thought in America, 1880-1915; racial ideologies in the age of Booker T. Washington. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press [1963] 336 p. E185.6.M5"Bibliographical note": p. 280-282. Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 283-316).
768Meltzer, Milton. In their own words; a history of the American Negro. New York, Crowell [1964-67] 3 v. illus., facsims., ports. E185.M54Includes bibliographies.Contents.—[1.] 1619-1865.—[2.] 1865-1916.—[3.] 1916-1966.
769Meltzer, Milton, and August Meier. Time of trial, time of hope; the Negro in America, 1919-1941. Illustrated by Moneta Barnett. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1966. 120 p. illus., ports. (Zenith books) E185.6.M54
770The Negro in American history. [Mortimer J. Adler, general editor; Charles Van Doren, editor; George Ducas, executive editor] With an introduction by Saunders Redding. [Chicago] Encyclopaedia Britannica Educational Corp. [1969] 3 v. illus. E185.N4Contents.—1. Black Americans, 1928-1968.—2. A taste of freedom, 1854-1927.—3. Slaves and masters, 1567-1854.
771New York (City) Board of Education. The Negro in American history. Albany, Reprinted by the University of the State of New York, Bureau of Secondary Curriculum Development, 1965. 158 p. E185.N56Bibliography: p. 151-158.A curriculum guide which includes the African heritage.
772Ottley, Roi. Black odyssey, the story of the Negro in America. New York, C. Scribner's Sons, 1948. 340 p. E185.O85Bibliography: p. 315-322.
773Pease, Frederick H. Found wanting. [Richmond, Va., 1968] 214 p. E185.P35
774Pease, William H., and Jane H. Pease. Black Utopia; Negro communal experiments in America. Madison, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1963. 204 p. E448.P36Bibliography: p. [191]-200.
775Pennington, James W. C. Text book of the origin and history, &c. &c. of the colored people. Hartford, L. Skinner, Printer, 1841. 96 p. E185.P41Earliest attempt to write the history of the Negro.
776Pinkney, Alphonso. Black Americans. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1959] xvii, 226 p. (Ethnic groups in American life series) E185.P5Includes bibliographies.
777Powell, Adam Clayton. Marching blacks, an interpretive history of the rise of the black common man. New York, Dial Press, 1945. 218 p. E185.6.P8Bibliography: p. 215-218.
778Quarles, Benjamin. Black abolitionists. New York, Oxford University Press [1969] 310 p. E449.Q17"Note on bibliographical literature": p. 251-252. Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 253-292).
779Quarles, Benjamin. The Negro in the making of America. New York, Collier Books [1964] 288 p. (A Collier books original) E185.Q2"AS 534."Bibliography: p. 267-271.
780Redding, Jay Saunders. The Negro. Washington, Potomac Books, 1967. 101 p. illus. (The U.S.A. survey series) E185.R42 [TR: Redding, J. Saunders]Bibliography: p. 91-94.
781Redding, Jay Saunders. On being Negro in America. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1951] 156 p. E185.61.R3 [TR: Redding, J. Saunders]
782Redding, Jay Saunders. They came in chains; Americans from Africa. Philadelphia, Lippincott [1950] 320 p. (The Peoples of America series) E185.R4 [TR: Redding, J. Saunders]Bibliography: p. 304-308.
783Rogers, Joel A. Africa's gift to America; the Afro-American in the making and saving of the United States. New York [1959] 254 p. illus. E185.R74 [TR: Rogers, J. A.]
784Rogers, Joel A. 100 amazing facts about the Negro, with complete proof; a short cut to the world history of the Negro. [24th rev. ed.] New York [1963] 58 p. illus., ports. HT1581.R62 1963Stamped on t.p.: Distributed by Sportshelf, New Rochelle, N.Y.
785Rose, Arnold M., ed. Assuring freedom to the free; a century of emancipation in the USA. With an introduction by Lyndon B. Johnson. Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1964. 306 p. E185.6.R74Bibliographical footnotes.
786Sloan, Irving J. The American Negro; a chronology and fact book. 2d ed. Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., Oceana Publications, 1968. 112 p. E185.S57 1968Bibliography: p. 71-[74].
787Staudenraus, P. J. The African colonization movement, 1816-1865. New York, Columbia University Press, 1961. 323 p. E448.S78Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [252]-304). "Bibliographical essay": p. [305]-310.
788Tannenbaum, Frank. Slave and citizen, the Negro in the Americas. New York, Knopf, 1947 [i.e. 1946] 128 p. double table. E29.N3T3Bibliographical footnotes.
789Thorpe, Earl E. The mind of the Negro; an intellectual history of Afro-Americans. Baton Rouge, La., Printed by Ortlieb Press [1961] 562 p. E185.82.T5Bibliographical references included in "Footnotes" (p. [496]-548).
790Thorpe, Earl E. Negro historians in the United States. Baton Rouge, La., Fraternal Press [1958] 188 p. E175.T5Bibliography: p. 169-180.
791Townsend, William H. Lincoln and the Bluegrass; slavery and civil war in Kentucky. [Lexington] University of Kentucky Press [1955] xiv, 392 p. illus., facsims., ports. E457.T78"Bibliographical notes": p. [359]-385.
792U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Education and Labor. Select Subcommittee on Labor. To establish a National Commission on Negro History and Culture. Hearing, Ninetieth Congress, second session, on H.R. 12962. March 18, 1968. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1968. 127 p. illus. KF27.E345 1968bBibliographical footnotes.
793Van Deusen, John G. The black man in white America. Washington, Associated Publishers, 1938. 338 p. E185.6.V28Bibliography: p. 301-318.
794Voegeli, V. Jacque. Free but not equal; the Midwest and the Negro during the Civil War. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1967] 215 p. E185.9.V6Includes bibliographical references.
795Wade, Richard C., ed. The Negro in American life; selected readings, edited and annotated by Richard C. Wade with the editorial assistance of Howard R. Anderson. Boston, Houghton Mifflin [1965] 182 p. illus., ports. (Life in America series) E185.W17Houghton Mifflin social studies program; history.
796Wagandt, Charles L. The mighty revolution; Negro emancipation in Maryland, 1862-1864. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press [1964] 299 p. illus., maps. E512.W2Bibliography: p. 269-284.
797Washington, Booker T. The story of the Negro; the rise of the race from slavery. New York, P. Smith, 1940. 2 v. port. E185.W316 1940"Published, November, 1909. Reprinted 1940."Bibliographical footnotes.Contents.—v. 1. pt. 1. The Negro in Africa. pt. 2. The Negro as a slave.—v. 2. pt. 3. The Negro as a freeman.
798Wesley, Charles H. Neglected history; essays in Negro history by a college president: Charles H. Wesley. Wilberforce, Ohio, Central State College Press, 1965. 200 p. E185.W46Bibliographical references included in "Historical notes" (p. 164-187).
799Wesley, Charles H., ed. The Negro in the Americas. Washington, Graduate School, Howard University [1940] 86 p. (Public lectures of the Division of the Social Sciences of the Graduate School, Howard University. v. 1) H31.H65 v. 1 [E29.N3W5]Contents.—The Negro in the British West Indies, by Eric Williams.—Notes on the Negro in the French West Indies, by L.T. Achille.—The Negro in Spanish America, by R. W. Logan.—The Negro in Brazil, by Richard Pattee.—The Haitian nation, by Dantes Bellegarde.—Race, migration and citizenship, by Ira De A. Reid.—The Negro in the United States and Canada, by C. H. Wesley.
800Weyl, Nathaniel. The Negro in American civilization. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1960] 360 p. E185.W5"References": p. 322-351.
801Williams, George W. History of the Negro race in America. New York, Bergman Publishers [1968] 2 v. port. E185.W7 1968 [TR: Williams, George Washington]Reprint of the 1883 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
802Woodson, Carter G. Free Negro heads of families in the United States in 1830, together with a brief treatment of the free Negro. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1925] lviii, 296 p. E185.W887"Second of a series of documentary studies of the free Negro provided for by a grant ... from the Laura Spelman Rockefeller memorial in 1921."—Foreword.Bibliographical footnotes.
803Woodson, Carter G., ed. The mind of the Negro as reflected in letters written during the crisis, 1800-1860. New York, Russell & Russell [1969] xxxii, 672 p. E185.W8877 1969Reprint of the 1926 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
804Woodson, Carter G., and Charles H. Wesley. The Negro in our history. 10th ed., further rev. and enl. Washington, Associated Publishers [1962] 833 p. illus. E185.W89 1962Bibliography: p. 775-803.
805Woodson, Carter G. Negro makers of history. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1928] 362 p. illus., facsims., map, ports. E185.W895"An adaptation of [the author's] The Negro in Our History to the capacity of children in the elementary schools."—Preface.
806Woodward, Comer Vann. The burden of southern history. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1960] 205 p. F209.W6 [TR: Woodward, C. Vann]Essays.
807Wynes, Charles E., ed. The Negro in the South since 1865; selected essays in American Negro history. University, University of Alabama Press [1965] 253 p. (Southern historical publications, no. 10) E185.6.W97Bibliographical footnotes.
808Aptheker, Herbert. American Negro slave revolts. New York, International Publishers [1963] 409 p. E447.A67 1963Issued also as thesis (Ph.D.), Columbia University.Includes bibliography.
809Aptheker, Herbert. Nat Turner's slave rebellion. Together with the full text of the so-called "confessions" of Nat Turner made in prison in 1831. New York, Published for A.I.M.S. by Humanities Press [1966] 152 p. facsim. F232.S7A8Thesis (M.A.)—Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 111-125.
810Aptheker, Herbert. One continual cry; David Walker's Appeal to the colored citizens of the world, 1829-1830, its setting & its meaning, together with the full text of the third, and last, edition of the Appeal. New York, Published for A.I.M.S. by Humanities Press [1965] 150 p. E446.W2A6Bibliography: p. 149-150.
811Bancroft, Frederic. Slave-trading in the Old South. Baltimore, J. H. Furst Co., 1931. 415 p. facsims., plates, table. E442.B21
812Barnes, Gilbert H. The antislavery impulse, 1830-1844. With a new introduction by William G. McLoughlin. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1964] xxxv, 298 p. E449.B264 1964First published in 1933.Includes bibliographical references.
813Brackett, Jeffrey R. The Negro in Maryland; a study of the institution of slavery. Baltimore, N. Murray, publication agent, Johns Hopkins University, 1889. 268 p. (Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science. Extra v. 6) H31.J62 v. 6 E445.M3B7
814Bruce, Kathleen. Virginia iron manufacture in the slave era. New York, A. M. Kelley, 1968. 482 p. illus., facsim., map, port. (Library of early American business and industry, 22) HD9517.V52B7 1968Reprints of economic classics.Reprint of the 1930 ed.Bibliography: p. 431-451.
815Buckmaster, Henrietta, pseud. Let my people go; the story of the underground railroad and the growth of the abolition movement. New York, Harper [c1941] 398 p. map, plates, ports. E450.B89 1941London edition (V. Gollancz) has title: Out of the House of Bondage.Bibliography: p. 375-388.
816Coffin, Levi. Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the reputed president of the underground railroad. New York, A. M. Kelley, 1968. 712 p. ports. (Reprints of economic classics) E450.C64 1968Reprint of the 1876 ed.
817Coleman, John Winston. Slavery times in Kentucky. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1940. xiv, 351 p. facsims., plates, ports. E445.K5C7 [TR: Coleman, J. Winston]"Selected bibliography": p. 327-332.
818Davis, David B. The problem of slavery in Western culture. Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell University Press [1966] xiv, 505 p. HT871.D3Bibliographical footnotes.
819Dillon, Merton L. Benjamin Lundy and the struggle for Negro freedom. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1966. 285 p. port. E446.D54Bibliography: p. [263]-267.
820Donnan, Elizabeth, ed. Documents illustrative of the history of the slave trade to America. Washington, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1930-35. 4 v. map, tables. (Carnegie Institution of Washington. Publication no. 409) E441.D68 AS32.A5 no. 409On verso of t.p.: Division of Historical Research, Carnegie Institution of Washington.Contents.—1. 1441-1700.—2. The eighteenth century.—3. New England and the middle colonies.—4. The border colonies and the southern colonies.
821Donovan, Frank R. Mr. Lincoln's proclamation; the story of the Emancipation Proclamation. New York, Dodd, Mead [1964] 146 p. illus., ports. E457.2.D68
822Douglas, William O. Mr. Lincoln & the Negroes; the long road to equality. New York, Atheneum, 1963. 237 p. E457.2.D7Appendix (p. 117-232) contains texts of documents from 1776 to 1963.
823Drewry, William S. The Southampton Insurrection. Murfreesboro, N.C., Johnson Pub. Co., 1968. 240 p. illus., maps, ports. (A Virginia heritage book) F232.S7D7 1968Reprint of the 1900 ed., with biographical notes on the author and an index.Bibliography: p. 198-201.
824Duberman, Martin B., ed. The antislavery vanguard: new essays on the abolitionists. Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1965. 508 p. E449.D84Bibliographical footnotes.
825DuBois, William E. B. The suppression of the African slave-trade to the United States of America, 1638-1870. New York, Longmans, Green, 1896. 335 p. diagrs. (Harvard historical studies, v. 1) E441.D81Appendixes.—A. A chronological conspectus of colonial and State legislation restricting the African slave-trade, 1641-1787.—B. A chronological conspectus of State, national, and international legislation, 1788-1871.—C. Typical cases of vessels engaged in the American slave-trade, 1619-1864.—D. Bibliography (p. [299]-325).
826Dumond, Dwight L. Antislavery origins of the Civil War in the United States. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1939. 143 p. E449.D87"Commonwealth Foundation lectures, University College, London, second term, 1938-39.""List of additional readings": p. 131-134. "Selected bibliography of proslavery and antislavery publications": p. 135-139.
827Dumond, Dwight L. Antislavery; the crusade for freedom in America. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press [1961] 422 p. illus., facsims., maps, ports. E441.D84Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [373]-413).
828Elkins, Stanley M. Slavery; a problem in American institutional and intellectual life. 2d ed. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1968] 263 p. E443.E4 1968Bibliographical footnotes.
829Federal Writers' Project. Lay my burden down; a folk history of slavery, edited by B. A. Botkin. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1945] xxi, 285 p. plates. E444.F26"A selection and integration of excerpts and complete narratives from the Slave Narrative Collection of the Federal Writers' Project."
830Filler, Louis. The crusade against slavery, 1830-1860. New York, Harper [1960] 318 p. illus. (The New American nation series) E449.F49Bibliography: p. 281-303.
831Fisk University, Nashville. Social Science Institute. Unwritten history of slavery, autobiographical account of Negro ex-slaves. Nashville, 1945. 322 (i.e. 323) leaves. (Its Social science source documents, no. 1) E444.F5"The interviews with these ex-slaves were conducted during 1929 and 1930 by Mrs. Ophelia Settle Egypt."—Introductory note.
832Fitzhugh, George. Cannibals all! or, Slaves without masters. Edited by C. Vann Woodward. Cambridge, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1960. 264 p. (The John Harvard library) E449.F555 1960
833Foner, Philip S. Business & slavery: the New York merchants & the irrepressible conflict. New York, Russell & Russell [1968] 356 p. F128.44.F67 1968Reprint of the 1941 ed.Bibliography: p. 323-336.
834Gara, Larry. The liberty line; the legend of the underground railroad. Lexington, University of Kentucky Press [1961] 201 p. E450.G22Bibliographical footnotes.
835Genovese, Eugene D. The political economy of slavery; studies in the economy & society of the slave South. New York, Pantheon Books [1965] xiv, 304 p. E442.G45Includes bibliographies.
836Halasz, Nicholas. The rattling chains; slave unrest and revolt in the antebellum South. New York, D. McKay Co. [1966] 274 p. E447.H3Bibliography: p. 257-266.
837Helper, Hinton R. The impending crisis of the South; how to meet it. Edited by George M. Fredrickson. Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1968. lxiii, 429 p. (The John Harvard library) E449.H483 1968Reprint of the 1857 ed. with a new introduction by the editor.Bibliographical footnotes.
838Hollander, Barnett. Slavery in America. New York, Barnes & Noble [1963] 212 p. DLC-LL [TR: London, Bowes & Bowes [c1962] KF4545.S5H59]
839Jenkins, William S. Pro-slavery thought in the Old South. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1960 [c1935] 381 p. E441.J46 1960Bibliography: p. 309-358.
839aJernegan, Marcus W. Laboring and dependent classes in colonial America, 1607-1783; studies of the economic, educational, and social significance of slaves, servants, apprentices, and poor folk. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [c1931] 256 p. (Social service monographs, no. 17) E188.J57"Bibliographical note": p. 211-212. "Notes": p. 213-248.
840Johnson, Frank R. The Nat Turner slave insurrection. Murfreesboro, N.C., Johnson Pub. Co. [1966] 248 p. illus., maps. F232.S7J6 [TR: Johnson, F. Roy]"The confessions of Nat Turner": p. 225-248.Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 187-210).
841Kemble, Frances A. Journal of a residence on a Georgian plantation in 1838-1839. Edited, with an introduction, by John A. Scott. New York, Knopf, 1961. lxx, 415 p. facsim., maps, port. F290.K332 1961 [TR: Kemble, Fanny]"Bibliographical notes": p. 406-415. Bibliographical footnotes.
842Korn, Bertram W. Jews and Negro slavery in the Old South, 1789-1865. Elkins Park, Pa., Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel, 1961. 68 p. illus. E441.K65"Delivered as the presidential address at the fifty-ninth annual meeting of the American Jewish Historical Society, February 18, 1961, and reprinted from the March, 1961, issue of its quarterly Publication."Bibliographical footnotes.
843Lader, Lawrence. The bold Brahmins; New England's war against slavery, 1831-1863. New York, Dutton, 1961. 318 p. illus. E449.L12Bibliography: p. 293-312.
844Latham, Frank B. The Dred Scott decision, March 6, 1857; slavery and the Supreme Court's self-inflicted wound. New York, F. Watts [1968] 54 p. illus., facsims., ports. (A Focus book) KF4545.S5L3Bibliography, p. 52.
845Lester, Julius, comp. To be a slave. Illustrated by Tom Feelings. New York, Dial Press [1968] 160 p. illus. E444.L47A compilation, selected from various sources and arranged chronologically, of the reminiscences of slaves and ex-slaves about their experiences from the leaving of Africa through the Civil War and into the early twentieth century.Bibliography: p. 159-160.
846Lloyd, Arthur Y. The slavery controversy, 1831-1860. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1939. 337 p. E449.L76"Selected bibliography": p. [287]-322.
847Lofton, John. Insurrection in South Carolina: the turbulent world of Denmark Vesey. Yellow Springs, Ohio, Antioch Press [1964] 294 p. maps. F279.C4L6Bibliography: p. [274]-286.
848Loguen, Jermain W. The Rev. J. W. Loguen as a slave and as a freeman. A narrative of real life. Syracuse, N.Y., J. G. K. Truair, Printers, 1859. 454 p. port. E444.L83Written in the third person, but apparently the work of Loguen."Testimony of Rev. E. P. Rogers," including a poem "Loguen's Position": p. 445-450.
849McKitrick, Eric L., ed. Slavery defended: the views of the Old South. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1963] 180 p. (A Spectrum book) E449.M16"Suggestions for further reading, and acknowledgments": p. 179-180.
850McManus, Edgar J. A history of Negro slavery in New York. Foreword by Richard B. Morris. [Syracuse, N.Y.] Syracuse University Press [1966] 219 p. E445.N56M3"Bibliographical note": p. 201-212.
851May, Samuel J. Some recollections of our antislavery conflict. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 408 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E449.M461 1968Reprint of the 1869 ed., with a new introduction.
852Moore, George H. Notes on the history of slavery in Massachusetts. New York, Negro Universities Press [1968] 256 p. E445.M4M8 1968Reprint of the 1866 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
853Olmsted, Frederick L. Journey through Texas; a saddle-trip on the southwestern frontier. Edited by James Howard. Austin, Tex., Von Boeckmann-Jones Press [distributed by University Cooperative Bookstore] 1962. 299 p. illus. F391.O512 1962Bibliography: p. 291-295.
854Owens, William A. Slave mutiny; the revolt on the schooner Amistad. New York, J. Day Co. [1953] 312 p. illus. E447.O9
855Phillips, Ulrich B. American Negro slavery; a survey of the supply, employment and control of Negro labor as determined by the plantation regime. New York, Appleton, 1918. 529 p. E441.P549Bibliographical footnotes.
856Phillips, Ulrich B. Life and labor in the Old South. Boston, Little, Brown [1963] 375 p. illus. F209.P563Bibliographical footnotes.
857Pickard, Kate E. R. The kidnapped and the ransomed. [New York] Negro Publication Society of America, 1941. 315 p. ([Negro Publication Society of America. Publications] Series 1, History, no. 1) E444.S855"The first edition ... appeared in 1856."—Editor's note."Appendix. Seth Conklin [by W. H. Furness]": p. 293-315.
858Postell, William D. The health of slaves on southern plantations. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1951] 231 p. illus. (Louisiana State University studies. Social science series, no. 1) E443.P78Bibliography: p. 214-226.
859Rozwenc, Edwin C., ed. Slavery as a cause of the Civil War. Rev. ed. Boston, Heath [1963] 120 p. (Problems in American civilization; readings selected by the Dept. of American Studies, Amherst College) E459.R6 1963"Suggestions for additional reading": p. 103-104.
860Ruchames, Louis, ed. The abolitionists; a collection of their writings. New York, Putnam [1963] 259 p. E449.R88
861Sanborn, Franklin B. Recollections of seventy years. Boston, R. G. Badger, 1909. Detroit, Gale Research Co., 1967. 2 v. (607 p.) illus., facsims., ports. (The Gale library of lives and letters: American writers series) E449.S21 1967Contents.—v. 1. Political life.—v. 2. Literary life.
862Scarborough, Ruth. The opposition to slavery in Georgia prior to 1860. New York, Negro Universities Press [1968, c1933] 257 p. E445.G3S25 1968Bibliography: p. 252-257.
863Sellers, James B. Slavery in Alabama. University, University of Alabama Press, 1950. 426 p. illus., ports. E445.A3S4Bibliography: p. [399]-409.
864Sherrard, Owen A. Freedom from fear; the slave and his emancipation. New York, St. Martin's Press [1961, c1959] 200 p. HT1162.S45 1961Bibliography: p. [191]-193.
865Shugg, Roger W. Origins of class struggle in Louisiana; a social history of white farmers and laborers during slavery and after, 1840-1875. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press [1968] xiv, 372 p. (Louisiana paperbacks, L-36) F374.S58 1968Bibliography: p. 332-363.
866Siebert, Wilbur H. The underground railroad from slavery to freedom. With an introduction by Albert Bushnell Hart. New York, Russell & Russell [1967] xxv, 478 p. illus., facsim., maps (part fold.), ports. E450.S57 1967Reprint of the 1898 ed.Bibliography: p. 380-402.
867Spears, John R. The American slave trade; an account of its origin, growth, and suppression. Abridged ed. New York, Ballantine Books [1960] 158 p. illus. (Ballantine books, 392K) E441.S736
868Stampp, Kenneth M. The peculiar institution: slavery in the ante-bellum South. New York, Knopf, 1956. 435 p. E441.S8"Manuscripts consulted, and their locations": p. 431-[436]. Bibliographical footnotes.
869Starkey, Marion L. Striving to make it my home; the story of Americans from Africa. New York, Norton [1964] 256 p. E441.S82Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 251-256).
870Starling, Marion W. The slave narrative; its place in American literary history. New York, New York University, 1949. 19 p. E444.S8Abridgement of thesis—New York University.Bibliographical footnotes.
871Stephenson, Clarence D. The impact of the slavery issue on Indiana County. Marion Center, Pa., Mahoning Mimeograph & Pamphlet Service [1964] 155 p. illus., facsims., ports. (Indiana County historical series, no. 2) F157.I3S78Bibliography: p. 151-155.
872Still, William. The underground rail road. A record of facts, authentic narratives, letters &c., narrating the hardships, hair-breadth escapes and death struggles of the slaves in their efforts for freedom, as related by themselves and others, or witnessed by the author; together with sketches of some of the largest stockholders, and most liberal aiders and advisers, of the road. Philadelphia, Porter & Coates, 1872. 780 p. illus., plates, ports. E450.S85Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1968.
873Strother, Horatio T. The underground railroad in Connecticut. Middletown, Conn., Wesleyan University Press [1962] 262 p. illus. E450.S93
874The Suppressed book about slavery. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 432 p. illus. (The American Negro; his history and literature) E449.S9592 1968Reprint of the 1864 ed.
875Sydnor, Charles S. Slavery in Mississippi. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1965 [c1933] 270 p. map. E445.M6S92 1965At head of title: The American Historical Association.Bibliography: p. 255-262.
876Taylor, Joe G. Negro slavery in Louisiana. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana Historical Association [1963] 260 p. E445.L8T3Bibliography: p. 239-252.
877Trefousse, Hans L. The radical Republicans; Lincoln's vanguard for racial justice. New York, Knopf, 1969 [c1968] xiv, 492, xvii p. illus., ports. E449.T79Bibliography: p. 471-492.
877aTurner, Edward R. The Negro in Pennsylvania, slavery—servitude—freedom, 1639-1861. Washington, American Historical Association, 1911. 314 p. (Prize essays of the American Historical Association, 1910) E185.93.P41T9To this essay was awarded the Justin Winsor Prize in American History for 1910.Bibliography: p. 255-294.
878Turner, Nat. The confessions of Nat Turner, the leader of the late insurrection in Southampton, Va., as fully and voluntarily made to Thomas R. Gray, in the prison where he was confined. Richmond, T. R. Gray, 1832. 24 p. F232.S7T9
879Wade, Richard C. Slavery in the cities; the South, 1820-1860. New York, Oxford University Press, 1964. 340 p. E443.W3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [287]-323).
880Walker, David. David Walker's appeal, in four articles, together with a preamble, to the coloured citizens of the world, but in particular, and very expressly, to those of the United States of America. Edited and with an introduction by Charles M. Wiltse. New York, Hill and Wang [1965] 78 p. (American century series, AC73) E446.W178Reprint of the 1929 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
881Wish, Harvey, ed. Slavery in the South; first-hand accounts of the ante-bellum American Southland from northern & southern whites, Negroes, & foreign observers. New York, Farrar, Straus [1964] xxi, 290 p. facsim. (Materials of American history series) E441.W78Bibliography: p. [xxiii].
882Zilversmit, Arthur. First emancipation; the abolition of slavery in the North. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1967] 262 p. E446.Z5"Bibliography essay": p. [245]-250.
883Abbott, Martin. The Freedmen's Bureau in South Carolina, 1865-1872. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1967] 162 p. F274.A23Bibliography: p. [145]-158.
884Allen, James S. Reconstruction; the battle for democracy (1865-1876). New York, International Publishers [c1937] 256 p. illus. [A history of the American people] E668.A45"Selected bibliography": p. 249-252.
884aAndrews, Sidney. The South since the war, as shown by fourteen weeks of travel and observation in Georgia and the Carolinas. Boston, Ticknor and Fields, 1866. 400 p. F216.A56
885Bentley, George R. A history of the Freedmen's Bureau. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, 1955. 298 p. E185.2.B4Thesis—University of Wisconsin.Bibliography: p. 266-279.
886Botume, Elizabeth H. First days amongst the contrabands. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 286 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.93.S7B7 1968Reprint of the 1893 ed., with a new introduction.
887Brock, William R. An American crisis: Congress and Reconstruction, 1865-1867. [New York] St. Martin's Press [1963] 312 p. E668.B85"Bibliographical note": p. 305.
888Bruce, Philip A. The plantation Negro as a freeman; observations on his character, condition, and prospects in Virginia. New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1889. 262 p. (Questions of the day, no. 57) E185.6.B88
889Buckmaster, Henrietta, pseud. Freedom bound. New York, Macmillan [1965] 185 p. E185.2.B9Bibliography: p. 183-184.
890Carter, Hodding. The angry scar; the story of Reconstruction. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1959. 425 p. (Mainstream of America series) E668.C3Bibliography: p. [411]-414.
891Coulter, Ellis M. The South during Reconstruction, 1865-1877. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press, 1947. 426 p. illus., maps (1 fold.) (A History of the South, v. 8) F216.C6 [TR: Coulter, E. Merton]"Critical essay on authorities": p. 392-407.
892Craven, Avery O. Reconstruction: the ending of the Civil War. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1969] 330 p. E668.C9Bibliography: p. 308-315.
893Crowe, Charles R., ed. The age of Civil War and Reconstruction, 1830-1900; a book of interpretative essays. Homewood, Ill., Dorsey Press, 1966. 479 p. (The Dorsey series in American history) F209.C7Includes bibliographies.
894Current, Richard N., ed. Reconstruction, 1865-1877. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1965] 183 p. (A Spectrum book, S-114: Eyewitness accounts of American history) E668.C98
895Dennett, John R. The South as it is: 1865-1866. Edited and with an introduction by Henry M. Christman. New York, Viking Press [1965] 370 p. F216.D4 1965A series of articles written for The Nation, July 1865-Apr. 1866.
896Donald, Henderson H. The Negro freedman; life conditions of the American Negro in the early years after emancipation. New York, H. Schuman, 1952. 270 p. E185.2.D65Bibliography: p. [255]-258.
897Drisko, Carol F., and Edgar A. Toppin. The unfinished march; the Negro in the United States, Reconstruction to World War I. Illustrated by Tracy Sugarman. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 118 p. col. illus. (Zenith books) E185.6.D7
898DuBois, William E. B. Black Reconstruction in America; an essay toward a history of the part which black folk played in the attempt to reconstruct democracy in America, 1860-1880. New York, Russell & Russell [1966, c1935] 746 p. E668.D83 1966bBibliography: p. 731-737.
899Dunning, William A. Reconstruction, political and economic, 1865-1877. New York, Harper, 1907. xvi, 378 p. maps, port. (The American nation; a history, v. 22) E178.A54 v. 22"Critical essay on authorities": p. [342]-357.
900Evans, William McKee. Ballots and fence rails; Reconstruction on the lower Cape Fear. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1967] 314 p. maps. F262.C2E9 1967Bibliography: p. [291]-301.
901Ficklen, John R. History of Reconstruction in Louisiana, through 1868. Gloucester, Mass., P. Smith, 1966 [c1910] 234 p. (Johns Hopkins University. Studies in historical and political science, ser. 28, no. 1) H31.J6 ser. 28, no. 1 1966Bibliographical footnotes.
902Fleming, Walter L., ed. Documentary history of Reconstruction, political, military, social, religious, educational & industrial, 1865 to the present time. Cleveland, A. H. Clark Co., 1906-7. 2 v. facsims., plates, port. E668.F58
903Fleming, Walter L., ed. Documents relating to Reconstruction. Morgantown, W. Va., 1904. [269] p. E668.F59Contents.—no. 1. The constitution and the ritual of the Knights of the White Camelia.—no. 2. Revised and amended prescript of Ku Klux Klan.—no. 3. Union League documents.—no. 4-5. Public frauds in South Carolina. The constitution of the Council of Safety. Local Ku Klux constitution. The '76 Association.—no. 6-7. Freedmen's Bureau documents. The Freedmen's Savings Bank.—no. 8. Laws relating to freedmen, 1865-6.
904Franklin, John H. The Emancipation Proclamation. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1963. 181 p. illus. E453.F8 [TR: Franklin, John Hope]"Sources": p. 157-162. Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [163]-173).
905Franklin, John H. Reconstruction: after the Civil War. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1961] 258 p. illus. (The Chicago history of American civilization) E668.F7 [TR: Franklin, John Hope]"Suggested reading": p. 232-242.
906Henry, Robert S. The story of Reconstruction. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Co. [c1938] 633 p. map (on lining papers), plates. E668.H516Bibliography included in "Acknowledgments."
907Hyman, Harold M., ed. New frontiers of the American Reconstruction. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1966. 156 p. E668.H98Papers presented at a conference held at the University of Illinois in April 1965.Includes bibliographical footnotes.
908Hyman, Harold M., comp. The radical Republicans and Reconstruction, 1861-1870. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1967] lxxxvi, 538 p. (The American heritage series, 47) E668.H985Bibliography: lxix-lxxxvi.
909Lynch, John R. The facts of Reconstruction. New York, Neale Pub. Co., 1913. 325 p. ports. E668.L98"The state of Mississippi is made the pivotal one in the presentation of the facts and historical points touched upon in this work."—Preface.
910McCarthy, Charles H. Lincoln's plan of reconstruction. New York, McClure, Phillips, 1901. xxiv, 504 p. E456.M23
911McKitrick, Eric L. Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1960] 533 p. E668.M156"Selected bibliography, with notes": p. 511-521.
912McWhiney, Grady, ed. Reconstruction and the freedmen. Chicago, Rand McNally [1963] 54 p. (The Berkeley series in American history) E185.2.M3Bibliography: p. 54.
913Nunn, William C. Texas under the carpetbaggers. Austin, University of Texas Press [1962] 304 p. illus. F391.N965Bibliography: p. 263-269.
914Pollard, Edward A. The lost cause regained. New York, G. W. Carleton, 1868. 214 p. E666.P77
915Randall, James G. The Civil War and Reconstruction. Boston, D. C. Heath [c1937] xvii, 959 p. illus., diagrs., facsims., maps, ports. E468.R26 [TR: Randall, James Garfield]"Bibliographical note": p. 881-883. Bibliography: p. 885-924.
916Richardson, Joe M. The Negro in the reconstruction of Florida, 1865-1877. Tallahassee, Florida State University, 1965. 255 p. (Florida State University studies, no. 46) AS36.F57 no. 46Bibliography: p. 241-249.
917Shenton, James P., ed. The Reconstruction; a documentary history of the South after the war: 1865-1877. New York, Putnam [1963] 314 p. E668.S543
918Sinclair, William A. The aftermath of slavery; a study of the condition and environment of the American Negro. With an introduction by Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Boston, Small, Maynard, 1905. 358 p. E185.6.S61
919Skaggs, William H. The southern oligarchy; an appeal in behalf of the silent masses of our country against the despotic rule of the few. New York, Devin-Adair Co., 1924. 472 p. F209.S62
920Stampp, Kenneth M. The era of Reconstruction, 1865-1877. New York, Knopf, 1965. 228 p. E668.S79"Bibliographical note": p. 217-[229].
921Sterling, Dorothy. Forever free, the story of the Emancipation Proclamation. Illustrated by Ernest Crichlow. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1963] 208 p. illus. E453.S83 1963Bibliographical references included in "Note to the reader" (p. [199]-204).
922Straker, David Augustus. The new South investigated. Detroit, Ferguson Print. Co., 1888. 230 p. port. F215.S89 [TR: Straker, D. Augustus]
923Swint, Henry L., ed. Dear ones at home; letters from contraband camps. Nashville, Vanderbilt University Press, 1966. 274 p. map. E185.2.S98Letters written 1861-1870, chiefly by Lucy and Sarah Chase.Bibliography: p. 259-267.
924Taylor, Alrutheus A. The Negro in South Carolina during the Reconstruction. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1924] 341 p. E185.93.S7T3Bibliography: p. 314-322.
925Taylor, Alrutheus A. The Negro in the reconstruction of Virginia. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [c1926] 300 p. E185.93.V8T3Bibliography: p. 287-292.
926Wallace, John. Carpet-bag rule in Florida; the inside workings of the reconstruction of civil government in Florida after the close of the Civil War. A facsimile reproduction of the 1888 ed., with introduction & notes by Allan Nevins. Gainesville, University of Florida Press, 1964. xxxii, 444 p. col. coat of arms, ports. (Quadricentennial edition of the Floridiana facsimile & reprint series) F316.W19 1888aBibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. xxv-xxvi).
927Whyte, James H. The uncivil war; Washington during the Reconstruction, 1865-1878. New York, Twayne Publishers [1958] 316 p. illus. F198.W45Bibliography: p. 296-305.
928Williams, George W. 1862—emancipation day—1884. The Negro as a political problem. Oration ... at the Asbury Church, Washington, D.C., April 16, 1884. Boston, A. Mudge, Printers, 1884. 40 p. E185.6.W72
929Williamson, Joel. After slavery; the Negro in South Carolina during the Reconstruction, 1861-1877. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1965] 442 p. E185.93.S7W73Bibliography: p. [419]-430.
930Wilson, Joseph T. Emancipation: its course and progress; from 1481 B.C. to A.D. 1875, with a review of President Lincoln's proclamations, the XIII amendment, and the progress of the freed people since emancipation; with a history of the emancipation monument. Hampton, Va., Normal School Steam Power Press Print, 1882. 242 p. port. E453.W77Revised and enlarged from a pamphlet published in 1881.
931Avins, Alfred, comp. The Reconstruction amendments' debates: the legislative history and contemporary debates in Congress on the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. Richmond, Virginia Commission on Constitutional Government, 1967. xxxii, 764 p. KF4756.A29A9Selections from the Congressional Globe and the Congressional Record, covering the years 1849 to 1875.Bibliography: p. i-ii.
932Berger, Morroe. Equality by statute; the revolution in civil rights. Rev. ed. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1967. 253 p. KF4757.B4 1967Bibliography: p. [230]-236.
933Catterall, Helen H. T., ed. Judicial cases concerning American slavery and the Negro. New York, Octagon Books, 1968. 5 v. KF4545.S5C3 1968Reprint of the 1926 ed.Vols. 4-5, "with additions by James J. Hayden."Bibliographical footnotes.Contents.—v. 1. Cases from the courts of England, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky.—v. 2. Cases from the courts of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.—v. 3. Cases from the courts of Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana.—v. 4. Cases from the courts of New England, the middle States, and the District of Columbia.—v. 5. Cases from the courts of States north of the Ohio and west of the Mississippi Rivers, Canada and Jamaica.
934Collins, Charles W. The Fourteenth amendment and the States: a study of the operation of the restraint clauses of section one of the Fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Boston, Little, Brown, 1912. xxi, 220 p. diagrs., tables. [JK169 14th 1912] [TR: KF4558 14th.C64 1912]Some of these studies "have within recent months appeared, in substantially their present form" in the American Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, the Columbia Law Review, and the South Atlantic Quarterly.—Preface.
935Conference on Discrimination and the Law, University of Chicago, 1963. Discrimination and the law; [papers] edited by Vern Countryman. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1965] xiv, 170 p. DLC-LL [TR: KF4755.A75C6 1963]Sponsored by the University of Chicago Law School and others.Bibliography: p. 145-152.
936Georgia. Laws, statutes, etc. Compilation of Georgia laws and opinions of the attorney general relating to segregation of the races. Compiled and edited by State Law Dept. [Atlanta, 1956] 93 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: LAW]
937Greenberg, Jack. Race relations and American law. New York, Columbia University Press, 1959. 481 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4757.G7]Bibliography: p. [421]-437. Bibliographical footnotes.
938Higbee, Jay A. Development and administration of the New York State law against discrimination. University, University of Alabama Press [1967, c1966] xxii, 396 p. KFN5697.H5Bibliography: p. [337]-354.
939Mangum, Charles S. The legal status of the Negro. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1940. 436 p. [DLC-LL E185.6.M33] [TR: KF4757.M3]"Selected bibliography": p. [425]-426.
940Miller, Loren. The petitioners; the story of the Supreme Court of the United States and the Negro. New York, Pantheon Books [1966] xv, 461 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4757.M5]Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [435]-455).
941Murray, Pauli, ed. States' laws on race and color, and appendices containing international documents, Federal laws and regulations, local ordinances and charts. [Cincinnati, Woman's Division of Christian Service, Board of Missions and Church Extension, Methodist Church] 1950 [i.e. 1951] 746 p. forms. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4757.S73 1950][TR: Accompanied by] —— —— 1955 supplement, compiled and edited by Verge Lake and Pauli Murray. Cincinnati, Woman's Division of Christian Service, Board of Missions of the Methodist Church, 1955. 256 p. [DLC-LL]
942Snethen, Worthington G., comp. The black code of the District of Columbia, in force September 1st, 1848. New York, Published for the A. & F. Anti-slavery Society, by W. Harned, 1848. 61 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KFD1611.5.A34A3 1848]Contents.—The District of Columbia.—Ordinances of the corporation of Washington.—Ordinances of the corporation of Georgetown.
943Stephenson, Gilbert T. Race distinctions in American law. New York, D. Appleton, 1910. xiv, 388 p. [JK1781.S8] [TR: KF4757.S74 1910]
944Styles, Fitzhugh L. Negroes and the law in the race's battle for liberty, equality and justice under the Constitution of the United States; with causes celebres. Boston, Christopher Pub. House [c1937] 320 p. port. DLC-LL E185.61.S92The manuscript of the author's address before the National Bar Association at Baltimore, August 1934, on the battle of the Negro at the bar of justice, is the basis of this book.Bibliography: p. 320.
945TenBroek, Jacobus. Equal under law. New, enl. ed. New York, Collier Books [1965] 352 p. E449.T4 1965First ed. published in 1951 under title: The Antislavery Origins of the Fourteenth Amendment."Source materials": p. 344-347.
946U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court on racial discrimination. Edited by Joseph Tussman. New York, Oxford University Press, 1963. 393 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: LAW]
947Wilson, Theodore B. The black codes of the South. University, University of Alabama Press [1965] 177 p. (Southern historical publications, no. 6) [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4757.W54]Bibliography: p. 167-174.
948Abramson, Doris E. Negro playwrights in the American theatre, 1925-1959. New York, Columbia University Press, 1969. 335 p. PS351.A2Bibliography: p. [307]-317.
949Bone, Robert A. The Negro novel in America. [Rev. ed.] New Haven, Yale University Press [1965] 289 p. PS153.N5B6 1965Bibliography: p. 255-270.
950Brawley, Benjamin G., ed. Early Negro American writers; selections with biographical and critical introductions. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1935. 305 p. PS508.N3B7
951Brawley, Benjamin G. The Negro genius; a new appraisal of the achievement of the American Negro in literature and the fine arts. New York, Biblo and Tannen, 1966 [c1937] 366 p. E185.82.B816 1966Bibliography: p. 331-350.
952Brawley, Benjamin G. The Negro in literature and art in the United States. 3d ed. New York, Duffield, 1929. 231 p. plates, ports. E185.82.B824Bibliography: p. 213-228.Contents.—The Negro genius.—Phillis Wheatley.—A hundred years of striving.—Orators. Douglass and Washington.—Paul Laurence Dunbar.—Charles W. Chesnutt.—W. E. Burghardt DuBois.—William Stanley Braithwaite.—James Weldon Johnson.—Other writers.—The new realists.—The stage.—Painters. Henry O. Tanner.—Sculptors. Meta Warrick Fuller.—Music.—Appendix: The Negro in American fiction. The Negro in American literature.—The Negro in contemporary literature.
953Bronz, Stephen H. Roots of Negro racial consciousness; the 1920's: three Harlem Renaissance authors. New York, Libra [1964] 101 p. PS508.N3B73Bibliography: p. 95-101.Contents.—Introduction.—James Weldon Johnson.—Countee Cullen.—Claude McKay.—Conclusion.—Notes.
954Brown, Sterling A. The Negro in American fiction. Washington, Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1937. 209 p. (Bronze booklet no. 6) [E185.5.B85] no. 6 PS374.N4B7"Selected reading list": p. 207-209.
955Butcher, Margaret J. The Negro in American culture; based on materials left by Alain Locke. New York, Knopf, 1956. 294 p. E185.82.B89
956Dreer, Herman. American literature by Negro authors. New York, Macmillan, 1950. xvii, 334 p. ports. PS508.N3D7Bibliography: p. 327-332.
957Ellison, Ralph. Shadow and act. New York, Random House [1964] xxii, 317 p. PS153.N5E4 1964
958Ferguson, Blanche E. Countee Cullen and the Negro renaissance. New York, Dodd, Mead [1966] 213 p. illus., ports. PS3505.U287Z6Bibliography: p. 205-206.
959Ford, Nick A. The contemporary Negro novel; a study in race relations. College Park, Md., McGrath Pub. Co., 1968 [c1936] 108 p. PS374.N4F6 1968Bibliography: p. 107-108.
960Gloster, Hugh M. Negro voices in American fiction. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1948. xiv, 295 p. PS374.N4G5Bibliography: p. 273-288.
961Green, Elizabeth A. L. The Negro in contemporary American literature; an outline for individual and group study. College Park, Md., McGrath Pub. Co. [1968, c1928] 92 p. PS153.N5G7 1968Includes bibliographical references.
962Gross, Seymour L., and John E. Hardy, eds. Images of the Negro in American literature. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1966] 321 p. (Patterns of literary criticism) PS173.N4G7Bibliography: p. 289-315.
963Hughes, John M. C. The Negro novelist; a discussion of the writings of American Negro novelists, 1940-1950, by Carl Milton Hughes [pseud.]. New York, Citadel Press [1953] 288 p. PS374.N4H8Bibliography: p. [279]-285.
964Littlejohn, David. Black on white; a critical survey of writing by American Negroes. New York, Grossman, 1966. 180 p. PS153.N5L5
965Loggins, Vernon. The Negro author, his development in America to 1900. Port Washington, N. Y., Kennikat Press [1964, c1959] 480 p. (Columbia University studies in English and comparative literature) PS153.N5L65 1964Issued also as thesis, Columbia University, 1931."Bibliographies": p. [408]-457.
966Margolies, Edward. Native sons; a critical study of twentieth-century Negro American authors. Philadelphia, Lippincott [1968] 210 p. PS153.N5M26Contents.—Perspectives.—The first forty years: 1900-1940; [W. E. B. DuBois and others]—Migration: William Attaway and Blood on the Forge.—Richard Wright: Native Son and three kinds of revolution.—Race and sex; the novels of Chester Himes.—The Negro church; James Baldwin and the Christian vision.—History as blues: Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man.—The new nationalism: Malcolm X.—The expatriate as novelist: William Demby.—Prospects: LeRoi Jones?—Bibliography (p. 201).
967McCall, Dan. The example of Richard Wright. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [c1969] 202 p. PS3545.R815Z7
968Mays, Benjamin E. The Negro's God as reflected in his literature. Lithographs by James L. Wells. Boston, Chapman & Grimes [c1938] 269 p. PS153.N5M3Bibliography: p. 257-263.
969Nelson, John H. The Negro character in American literature. Lawrence, Kan., Dept. of Journalism Press, 1926. 146 p. (Bulletin of the University of Kansas, v. 27, no. 15. Humanistic studies. v. 4, no. 1) PS173.N4N4 1926aIssued also in bound form as Humanistic Studies, v. 4, no. 1, without the cover having series note, Bulletin of the University of Kansas, v. 27, no. 15.
970Nilon, Charles H. Faulkner and the Negro. Boulder, University of Colorado Press, 1962. 111 p. (University of Colorado studies. Series in language and literature, no. 8) P25.C64 no. 8Bibliographical footnotes.
971Redding, Jay Saunders. To make a poet black. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1939. 142 p. PS153.N5R4 [TR: Redding, J. Saunders]"Factual material and critical opinion on American Negro literature."—Preface.Bibliography: p. [131]-136.
972Turner, Darwin T., and Jean M. Bright, eds. Images of the Negro in America. Boston, D. C. Heath [1965] 113 p. (Selected source materials for college research papers) PS508.N3T8Bibliographical references included in "Suggestions for library work" (p. 112-113).
973Turner, Lorenzo D. Anti-slavery sentiment in American literature prior to 1865. Port Washington, N. Y., Kennikat Press [1966] 188 p. PS169.S47T8 1966Reprint of a thesis, University of Chicago, 1926.Bibliography: p. 153-182.
974Wagner, Jean. Les poètes nègres des États-Unis; le sentiment racial et religieux dans la poésie de P. L. Dunbar à L. Hughes (1890-1940). Paris, Librairie Istra, 1963 [c1962] 637 p. PS153.N5W3Bibliography: p. [601]-620.
975Brown, Sterling A., Arthur P. Davis, and Ulysses G. Lee, eds. The Negro caravan, writings by American Negroes. New York, Dryden Press [c1941] xviii, 1082 p. PS508.N3B75Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
976Calverton, Victor F., ed. Anthology of American Negro literature, edited, with an introduction, by V. F. Calverton. New York, Modern Library [c1929] 535 p. (The Modern library of the world's best books) PS591.N4C3 [TR: Calverton, V. F.]Bibliography: p. 700-718.
977Chapman, Abraham, comp. Black voices; an anthology of Afro-American literature. Edited, with an introduction and biographical notes, by Abraham Chapman. New York, New American Library [1968] 718 p. (A Mentor book) PS508.N3C5Bibliography: p. 700-718.
978Conference of Negro Writers. 1st, New York, 1959. The American Negro writer and his roots; selected papers. New York, American Society of African Culture, 1960. 70 p. illus. PS153.N5C6 1959ac
979Cromwell, Otelia, Lorenzo D. Turner, and Eva B. Dykes, eds. Readings from Negro authors, for schools and colleges, with a bibliography of Negro literature. New York, Harcourt, Brace [c1931] 388 p. PS508.N3C7"A bibliography of Negro literature": p. 371-383; contains "Collateral reading."
980Culp, Daniel W., ed. Twentieth century Negro literature; or, A cyclopedia of thought on the vital topics relating to the American Negro, by one hundred of America's greatest Negroes. Naperville, Ill., J. L. Nichols [1902] 472 p. ports. E185.5.C97
981Cunard, Nancy, comp. Negro; anthology, made by Nancy Cunard, 1931-1933. London, Published by Nancy Cunard at Wishart, 1934. 854 p. illus., facsims., maps, ports. HT1581.C8 [TR: E185.5.C98 1934]Contains music.Contents.—America.—Negro stars.—Music.—Poetry.—West Indies and South America.—Europe.—Africa.
982Emanuel, James A., and Theodore L. Gross, comps. Dark symphony: Negro literature in America. New York, Free Press [1968] xviii, 604 p. PS508.N3E4Bibliography: p. 564-600.
983Hill, Herbert, ed. Anger, and beyond: the Negro writer in the United States. New York, Harper & Row [1966] xxii, 227 p. PS153.N5H5
984Hill, Herbert, ed. Soon, one morning; new writing by American Negroes, 1940-1962. Selected and edited, with an introduction and biographical notes, by Herbert Hill. New York, Knopf, 1963. 617 p. PS508.N3H5
985Hughes, Langston. The Langston Hughes reader. New York, G. Braziller, 1958. 501 p. PS3515.U274A6 1958
986Johnson, Charles S., ed. Ebony and topaz, a collectanea. New York, Opportunity, National Urban League [c1927] 164 p. illus., facsims., plates, ports. PS508.N3J6
987Jones, LeRoi, and Larry Neal, comps. Black fire; an anthology of Afro-American writing. New York, Morrow, 1968. xviii, 670 p. illus. [PS508.N3J64] [TR: PS508.N3B33]
988Jones, LeRoi, ed. The moderns; an anthology of new writing in America. New York, Corinth Books, 1963. xvi, 351 p. PS536.J6 [TR: PS536.2.B29 1963 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]Bibliographical references included in "Acknowledgments" (p. [vii-viii]).
989Locke, Alain L., ed. The new Negro; an interpretation. With a new introduction by Allan H. Spear. New York, Johnson Reprint Corp., 1968. xxii, xviii, 446 p. illus., music, ports. E185.82.L75 1968The text is a reprint of the 1925 ed.Includes bibliographies.
990Moon, Bucklin, ed. Primer for white folks. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1945. xiv, 491 p. E185.5.M72
991Plato, Ann. Essays; including biographies and miscellaneous pieces, in prose and poetry. Hartford, Printed for the author, 1841. xx, 122 p. PS2593.P347 1841
992Watkins, Sylvestre C., ed. Anthology of American Negro literature; with an introduction by John T. Frederick. New York, Modern Library [1944] xvii, 481 p. (The Modern library of the world's best books) PS508.N3W3"Biographical notes": p. [457]-481.
993Watts Writers' Workshop. From the ashes; voices of Watts. Edited and with an introduction by Budd Schulberg. [New York] New American Library [1967] 277 p. PS508.N3W33
994Williams, John A., comp. Beyond the angry black. [2d ed.] New York, Cooper Square Publishers, 1966. xix, 198 p. PS509.N4B4 1966A reissue with new material of The Angry Black, published in 1962.
995Adoff, Arnold, comp. Black on black; commentaries by Negro Americans. Foreword by Roger Mae Johnson. New York, Macmillan [1968] 236 p. E185.5.A24
996Ahmann, Mathew H., ed. The new Negro. Contributors: Stephen J. Wright [and others]. In the symposium: James Baldwin [and others]. Notre Dame, Ind., Fides Publishers [1961] 145 p. E185.6.A26Includes papers presented at the 1st convention of the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, held in Detroit in 1961.
997Baldwin, James. Nobody knows my name; more notes of a native son. New York, Dial Press, 1961. 241 p. E185.61.B197
998Bennett, Lerone. The Negro mood, and other essays. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1964. 104 p. E185.61.B43
999Bernstein, Barton J., ed. Towards a new past; dissenting essays in American history. New York, Pantheon Books [1968] 364 p. E175.B46Includes bibliographical references.
1000Brotz, Howard, ed. Negro social and political thought, 1850-1920; representative texts. New York, Basic Books [1966] 593 p. E185.B876Includes bibliographies.
1001Clark, Kenneth B. Social power and social change in contemporary America; an address [delivered on July 18, 1966, before an audience of summer interns working in the Dept. of State, the Agency for International Development, and the United States Information Agency. Washington, Dept. of State; for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U. S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966] 20 p. ([U.S.] Dept. of State. Publication 8125. Department and Foreign Service series, 134) HN57.C55"Prepared under the auspices of the U.S. Department of State's Equal Employment Opportunity Program, Office of the Deputy Under Secretary for Administration."
1002Clarke, John H., ed. William Styron's Nat Turner; ten black writers respond. Boston, Beacon Press [1968] 120 p. illus. PS3569.T9C633Appendix (p. [93]-117): The text of The Confessions of Nat Turner.
1003Crummell, Alexander. Africa and America; addresses and discourses. Springfield, Mass., Willey, 1891. 466 p. port. E185.5.C95
1004Crummell, Alexander. The relations and duties of free colored men in America to Africa. A letter to Charles B. Dunbar. Hartford, Press of Case, Lockwood, 1861. 54 p. E448.C95
1005Daedalus. The Negro American. Edited and with introductions by Talcott Parsons and Kenneth B. Clark, and with a foreword by Lyndon B. Johnson. Illustrated with a 32 page portfolio of photographs by Bruce Davidson, selected and introduced by Arthur D. Trottenberg. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1966. xxix, 781 p. illus. (The Daedalus library [v. 7]) E185.6.D24Most of the essays, some in slightly different form, appeared originally in the fall 1965 and winter 1966 issues of Daedalus.Includes bibliographical references.
1006Daniel, Bradford, ed. Black, white, and gray; twenty-one points of view on the race question. New York, Sheed and Ward [1964] 308 p. E185.61.D26
1007Douglass, Frederick. Three addresses on the relations subsisting between the white and colored people of the United States. Washington, Gibson Bros., Printers, 1886. 68 p. E185.61.D734
1008Drimmer, Melvin, comp. Black history; a reappraisal, edited with commentary by Melvin Drimmer. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1968. xx, 553 p. E185.D7Essays which present the Negro's role in American history, each prefaced by an analysis of the historical events surrounding the period it covers.Bibliography: p. [531]-538.
1009DuBois, William E. B. Darkwater; voices from within the veil. New York, Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920. 276 p. [E183.5.D8] [TR: E185.61.D83 1920]Reprinted in part from various periodicals.
1010DuBois, William E. B. The souls of black folk; essays and sketches. New York, Blue Heron Press, 1953. 264 p. illus. E185.5.D81 1953First printed in 1903.
1011Ebony. White on black; the views of twenty-two white Americans on the Negro. Edited by Era Bell Thompson and Herbert Nipson, editors of Ebony magazine. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1963. 230 p. E185.6.E26
1012Franklin, John H. Lincoln and public morality; an address delivered at the Chicago Historical Society on February 12, 1959. [Chicago] Chicago Historical Society, 1959. 24 p. JA79.F66
1013Freedom of Information Conference, 8th, University of Missouri, 1965. Race and the news media. Edited by Paul L. Fisher and Ralph Lowenstein. New York, Praeger [1967] 158 p. E185.61.F84 1965aaPapers and summaries of discussion sessions of the conference sponsored by the Freedom of Information Center of the University of Missouri and the Anti-defamation League of B'nai B'rith.
1014Goldwin, Robert A., comp. Civil disobedience; five essays by Martin Luther King, Jr. [and others]. Edited by Robert A. Goldwin. [Gambier, Ohio, Public Affairs Conference Center, Kenyon College, 1968] 1 v. (various pagings) JC328.G58Bibliographical footnotes.Contents.—Letter from the Birmingham city jail, by M. L. King, Jr.—The case against civil disobedience, by H. J. Storing.—Reflections on civil disobedience and lawlessness, by P. Goodman.—Civil disobedience and beyond, by J. Farmer.—The American tradition of civil disobedience: a response to Henry David Thoreau, by H. V. Jaffa.
1015Goldwin, Robert A., ed. 100 years of emancipation, essays by Harry V. Jaffa [and others]. Chicago, Rand McNally [1964] 217 p. (Rand McNally public affairs series) E185.61.G62 1964aBibliographical footnotes.
1016Grimke, Francis J. Christianity and race prejudice; two discourses delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., May 29th, and June 5th, 1910. By the pastor Rev. Francis J. Grimke. [Washington, Press of W. E. Cobb, 1910] 29 p. E185.61.G87 BX9178.G764C6 no. 4
1017Grimke, Francis J. Equality of rights for all citizens, black and white, alike. A discourse delivered in the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church, Washington, D.C., Sunday, March 7th, 1909, by the pastor, Rev. Francis J. Grimke. [Washington, 1909] 19 p. E185.61.G875
1018Hill, Roy L. Rhetoric of racial revolt. Denver, Golden Bell Press, 1964. 378 p. E185.6.H52
1019Howard University, Washington, D.C. Graduate School. Division of the Social Sciences. The new Negro thirty years afterward; papers contributed to the sixteenth annual spring conference ... April 20, 21, and 22, 1955. Edited by Rayford W. Logan, chairman, Eugene C. Holmes [and] G. Franklin Edwards. Washington, Howard University Press, 1955 [i.e. 1956] 96 p. E185.5.H73 1955a"Dedicated to the memory of Professor Alain Locke."Includes bibliographies. "Bibliography of the writings of Alain Leroy Locke ... by Robert E. Martin": p. 89-96.
1020Johnson, Lyndon B., Pres. U.S. The one huge wrong: President Lyndon Johnson speaking at Howard University in Washington on June 4, 1965, analysing the Negro problem; [linocut illustrations by Paul Peter Piech]. Bushey (Herts.), Taurus Press [1968] [15] p. illus. E185.J63"Two hundred and eighty [numbered] copies have been printed plus a 30 special bound edition. This is copy number 216."
1021Jones, LeRoi. Home; social essays. New York, Morrow, 1966. 252 p. [E185.6.J74] [TR: E185.6.B25 1966 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1022King, Donald B., and Charles W. Quick, eds. Legal aspects of the civil rights movement. With an introduction by James M. Nabrit, Jr. Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1965. 447 p. [DLC-LL] [TR: KF4757.A5K5]"Civil rights law of 1964": p. 333-375.Bibliography: p. 431-446.
1023King, Martin Luther. I have a dream; speech at the March on Washington. [n.p.] c1963. 6 p. E185.61.K53
1024King, Martin Luther. The trumpet of conscience. New York, Harper & Row [1968, c1967] 78 p. (Massey lectures, 1967) E185.97.K5 1968Canadian ed. (Canadian Broadcasting Co.) has title: Conscience for Change.
1025Lincoln, Charles Eric. Sounds of the struggle; persons and perspectives in civil rights. New York, Morrow, 1967. 252 p. E185.615.L5Includes bibliographical references.
1026Little, Malcolm. Malcolm X speaks; selected speeches and statements. [Edited, with prefatory notes, by George Breitman] New York, Merit Publishers, 1965. 242 p. illus., ports. E185.61.L58
1027Little, Malcolm. The speeches of Malcolm X at Harvard. Edited, with an introductory essay, by Archie Epps. New York, W. Morrow, 1968. 191 p. [E185.61.L59 1968] [TR: BP223.Z8L57 1968]Bibliographical references included in "Footnotes" (p. [183]-191).
1028Mack, Raymond W. Race, class, and power. 2d ed. [New York] American Book Co. [1968] 468 p. E184.A1M145 1968Includes bibliographical references.
1029Meier, August, and Elliott M. Rudwick, comps. The making of black America; essays in Negro life & history. New York, Atheneum, 1969. xvi, 377, 507 p. (Studies in American Negro life) E185.M43Includes bibliographical references.Contents.—The origins of black Americans.—The black community in modern America.
1030Miller, Kelly. Race adjustment [and] The everlasting stain. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 306, 352 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.M66 1968Reprint of the 1908 ed. of Race Adjustment and of the 1924 ed. of The Everlasting Stain.
1031Murphy, Raymond J., and Howard Elinson, eds. Problems & prospects of the Negro movement. Belmont, Calif., Wadsworth Pub. Co. [1966] 440 p. illus., (Wadsworth continuing education series) E185.615.M8Bibliography: p. 437-440. Includes bibliographical references.
1032Nelson, Alice R. M. D., ed. Masterpieces of Negro eloquence; the best speeches delivered by the Negro from the days of slavery to the present time. New York, Bookery Pub. Co. [c1914] 512 p. port. PS663.N4N4 [TR: Dunbar-Nelson, Alice Moore]
1033Pipes, William H. Death of an "Uncle Tom." New York, Carlton Press [1967] 118 p. (A Hearthstone book) E185.61.P6Bibliographical footnotes.
1034Redding, Jay Saunders. No day of triumph. With an introduction by Richard Wright. New York, Harper [1942] 342 p. E185.6.R42
1035Roussève, Ronald J. Discord in brown and white; nine essays on intergroup relations in the United States by a Negro American. New York, Vantage Press [1961] 89 p. E185.61.R82"Selected references": p. 87-89.
1036Stone, Chuck. Tell it like it is. New York, Trident Press, 1967 [c1968] 211 p. E185.61.S872 1968
1037Theobald, Robert. An alternative future for America; essays and speeches. Edited by Kendall College. [Chicago, Swallow Press, 1968] 186 p. illus. HN65.T44
1038Truman, Harry S., Pres. U.S. Freedom and equality, addresses. David S. Horton, editor. Columbia, University of Missouri Press [1960] 85 p. JC599.U5T7
1039Washington, Booker T. Character building; being addresses delivered on Sunday evenings to the students of Tuskegee Institute. New York, Doubleday, Page, 1902. 291 p. front. BJ1581.W15
1040Washington, Booker T. Selected speeches. Edited by E. Davidson Washington. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1932. xvi, 283 p. port. E185.6.W319
1041Westin, Alan F., ed. Freedom now! The civil-rights struggle in America. New York, Basic Books [1964] xv, 346 p. E185.61.W54Bibliography: p.[329]-341.
1042Why I believe there is a God; sixteen essays by Negro clergymen. With an introduction by Howard Thurman. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1965. 120 p. BT102.W5
1043Wish, Harvey, ed. The Negro since emancipation. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1964] 184 p. (A Spectrum book) E185.61.W79Bibliography: p. 183-184.
1044Woodson, Carter G., ed. Negro orators and their orations. New York, Russell & Russell [1969] 711 p. PS663.N4W6 1969Reprint of the 1925 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
1044aAshby, William M. Redder blood; a novel. New York, Cosmopolitan Press, 1915. 188 p. PZ3.A8234Re [TR: PS3501.S489]
1045Attaway, William. Blood on the forge, a novel. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1941. 279 p. PZ3.A882Bl [TR: PS3501.T59]
1046Baldwin, James. Another country. New York, Dial Press, 1962. 436 p. PZ4.B18An2 [TR: PS3552.A45]
1047Baldwin, James. Giovanni's room; a novel. New York, Dial Press, 1956. 248 p. PZ4.B18Gi [TR: PS3552.A45]
1048Baldwin, James. Go tell it on the mountain. New York, Knopf, 1953. 303 p. [PZ4.B18Go] [TR: PS3552.A45G62 1953]
1049Baldwin, James. Going to meet the man. New York, Dial Press, 1965. 249 p. PZ4.B18Gq [TR: PS3552.A45]Contents.—The rockpile.—The outing.—The man child.—Previous condition.—Sonny's blues.—This morning, this evening, so soon.—Come out the wilderness.—Going to meet the man.
1050Baldwin, James. Tell me how long the train's been gone; a novel. New York, Dial Press, 1968. 484 p. PS3552.A45T4
1051Baltimore Afro-American. Best short stories by Afro-American writers, 1925-1950, selected and edited by Nick Aaron Ford and H. L. Faggett. Boston, Meador Pub. Co. [1950] 307 p. [PZ1.B23Be] [TR: PZ1.B44684]
1052Bennett, Hal. A wilderness of vines. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1966. 345 p. PZ4.B4696Wi [TR: PS3552.E546]
1053Boles, Robert. Curling, a novel. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1968 [c1967] 259 p. PZ4.B6883Cu
1054Bontemps, Arna W. Black thunder. New York, Macmillan, 1936. 298 p. PZ3.B64442Bl [TR: PS3503.O474]
1055Bontemps, Arna W. Chariot in the sky; a story of the Jubilee Singers. Illustrations by Cyrus Leroy Baldridge. Philadelphia, Winston [1951] 234 p. illus. (Land of the Free series) PZ7.B6443Ch
1056Bontemps, Arna W. Drums at dusk; a novel. New York, Macmillan, 1939. 226 p. illus. PZ3.B64442Dr [TR: PS3503.O474]
1056aBontemps, Arna W. God sends Sunday. New York, Harcourt, Brace [c1931] 199 p. PZ3.B64442Go [TR: PS3503.O474]
1057Bosworth, William. The long search, a novel. Great Barrington, Mass., Advance Pub. Co. [1957] 303 p. PZ4.B7475Lo
1058Brooks, Gwendolyn. Maud Martha, a novel. New York, Harper [1953] 180 p. PZ4.B872Mau [TR: PS3503.R7244]
1059Brown, Frank L. Trumbull Park, a novel. Chicago, Regnery [1959] 432 p. PZ4.B8774Tr [TR: PS3552.R68549]
1060Brown, Lloyd L. Iron City, a novel. New York, Masses & Mainstream, 1951. 255 p. PZ4.B879Ir
1061Brown, William W. Clotel. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 245 p. illus. (Afro-American culture series) [DLC] [TR: PZ3.B8199Cl7; PS1139.B9]Reprint of the 1853 ed.The first novel written by a Negro.
1062Chastain, Thomas. Judgment day. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1962. 213 p. PZ4.C489Ju [TR: PS3553.H3416]
1063Chesnutt, Charles W. The colonel's dream. New York, Doubleday, Page, 1905. 294 p. PZ3.C4253Cl [TR: PS1292.C6]
1064Chesnutt, Charles W. The conjure woman. Ridgewood, N. J., Gregg Press [1968] 229 p. (Americans in fiction) PZ3.C4253C5 [TR: PS1292.C6]Reprint of the 1899 ed.Contents.—The goophered grapevine.—Po' Sandy. Mars Jeem's nightmare.—The conjurer's revenge.—Sis' Becky's pickaninny.—The gray wolf's ha'nt.—Hot-Foot Hannibal.
1065Chesnutt, Charles W. The house behind the cedars. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1900. 294 p. PZ3.C4253H [TR: PS1292.C6]
1066Chesnutt, Charles W. The marrow of tradition. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 329 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) [PZ3.C425M5] [TR: PZ3.C4253Mar 1969; PS1292.C6]Afro-American culture series.Reprint of the 1901 ed.
1067Chesnutt, Charles W. The wife of his youth, and other stories of the color line. With illustrations by Clyde O. De Land. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1899. 323 p. plates. PZ3.C4253W [TR:PS1292.C6]Contents.—The wife of his youth.—Her Virginia mammy.—The sheriff's children.—A matter of principle.—Cicely's dream.—The passing of Grandison.—Uncle Wellington's wives.—The bouquet.—The web of circumstance.
1068Clarke, John H., ed. American Negro short stories. New York, Hill and Wang [1966] xix, 355 p. PZ1.C563Am
1068aCotter, Joseph S. Negro tales. New York, Cosmopolitan Press, 1912. 148 p. port. PZ3.C8274N [TR: PS3505.O862]
1069Crump, Paul. Burn, killer, burn! Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co. [1962] 391 p. illus. PZ4.C9563Bu
1070Cullen, Countee. My lives and how I lost them, by Christopher Cat in collaboration with Countee Cullen, with drawings by Robert Reid Macguire. New York, Harper [c1942] xiv, 160 p. illus. PZ3.C89761My [TR: PS3505.U287]
1071Cullen, Countee. One way to heaven. New York, Harper, 1932. 230 p. PZ3.C89761On [TR: PS3505.U287]
1071aDaly, Victor. Not only war, a story of two great conflicts. Boston, [The] Christopher Pub. House [c1932] 106 p. PZ3.D179No [TR: PS3507.A475]
1072Davis, Christopher. First family. New York, Coward-McCann [1961] 253 p. PZ4.D2596Fi [TR: PS3554.A933]
1073Demby, William. Beetlecreek, a novel. New York, Rinehart [1950] 223 p. PZ3.D3923Be [TR: PS3507.E5346]
1074Demby, William. The catacombs. New York, Pantheon Books [1965] 244 p. PZ3.D3923Cat [TR: PS3507.E5346]
1075Dodson, Owen. Boy at the window, a novel. New York, Farrar, Straus and Young [1951] 212 p. PZ4.D647Bo [TR: Farrar, Straus & Giroux]Paperback ed. (New York, Popular Library, 1965) has title: When Trees Were Green.
1076DuBois, William E. B. Dark princess, a romance. New York, Harcourt, Brace [c1928] 311 p. PZ3.D8525Da [TR: PS3507.U147]
1077DuBois, William E. B. Mansart builds a school. New York, Mainstream Publishers, 1959. 367 p. (His The black flame, a trilogy, book 2) PZ3.D8525Man [TR: PS3507.U147]
1078DuBois, William E. B. The ordeal of Mansart. New York, Mainstream Publishers, 1957. 316 p. (His The black flame, a trilogy, book 1) PZ3.D8525Or [TR: PS3507.U147]
1079DuBois, William E. B. The quest of the silver fleece; a novel. Illustrated by H. S. DeLay. Chicago, A. C. McClurg, 1911. 434 p. plates. PZ3.D8525Q
1080DuBois, William E. B. Worlds of color. New York, Mainstream Publishers, 1961. 349 p. (His The black flame, a trilogy, book 3) PZ3.D8525Wo [TR: PS3507.U147]
1081Dunbar, Paul L. The fanatics. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1901. 312 p. PZ3.D911F [TR: PS1556]
1082Dunbar, Paul L. Folks from Dixie. With illustrations by E. W. Kemble. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1898. 263 p. plates (part col.) PZ3.D911Fo3 [TR: PS1556]Contents.—Anner' Lizer's stumblin' block.—The ordeal at Mt. Hope.—The colonel's awakening.—The trial sermons on Bull-Skin.—Jimsella.—Mt. Pisgah's Christmas 'possum.—A family feud.—Aunt Mandy's investment.—The intervention of Peter.—Nelse Hatton's vengeance.—At Shaft 11.—The deliberation of Mr. Dunkin.
1083Dunbar, Paul L. The love of Landry. New York, Dodd, Mead [1900] 200 p. PZ3.D911L [TR: PS1556]
1084Dunbar, Paul L. The sport of the Gods. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 255 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) PZ3.D911Sp6 [TR: PS1556]Afro-American culture series.Reprint of the 1902 ed.
1085Dunbar, Paul L. The strength of Gideon, and other stories. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 362 p. (The American Negro; his history and literature) PZ3.D911St7 [TR: PS1556]Afro-American culture series.Reprint of the 1900 ed.
1086Dunbar, Paul L. The uncalled; a novel. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1898. 255 p. PZ3.D911U3 [TR: PS1556]
1087Ellison, Ralph. Invisible man. New York, Random House [1952] 429 p. [PZ4.E45In] [TR: PS3555.L625I5 1952]
1088Fauset, Jessie R. The chinaberry tree; a novel of American life. New York, F. A. Stokes Co., 1931. 341 p. PZ3.F276Ch [TR: PS3511.A864]
1089Fauset, Jessie R. Comedy, American style. New York, F. A. Stokes Co., 1933. 326 p. PZ3.F276Co [TR: PS3511.A864]
1090Fauset, Jessie R. There is confusion. New York, Boni and Liveright, 1924. 297 p. PZ3.F276Th [TR: PS3511.A864]
1091Fisher, Rudolph. The conjure-man dies; a mystery tale of dark Harlem. New York, Covici, Friede [c1932] 316 p. PZ3.F5367Co [TR: PS3511.I7436]
1092Fisher, Rudolph. The walls of Jericho. New York, Knopf, 1928. 307 p. PZ3.F5367Wa [TR: PS3511.I7436]Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
1093Graham, Lorenz B. South Town. Chicago, Follett Pub. Co. [1958] 189 p. PZ4.G74So
1094Graham, Shirley. Jean Baptiste Pointe de Sable, founder of Chicago. New York, J. Messner [1953] 180 p. [PZ7.G757Je] [TR: F548.4.P7423]
1095Graham, Shirley. The story of Phillis Wheatley; illustrations by Robert Burns. New York, J. Messner [1949] 176 p. illus., port. [PZ7.G757St] [TR: PS866.W5Z585 Du Bois, Shirley Graham]"Sources": p. 172.
1096Griggs, Sutton E. The hindered hand; or, The reign of the repressionist. Nashville, Orion Pub. Co., 1905. 303 p. PZ3.G888H [TR: PS3513.R7154]
1096aGriggs, Sutton E. Pointing the way. Nashville, Orion Pub. Co., 1908. 233 p. PZ3.G888P [TR: PS3513.R7154]
1097Harper, Frances E. W. Iola Leroy; or, Shadows uplifted. Philadelphia, Garrigues Bros., 1892. 282 p. port. PS1799.H7I6
1098Henderson, George W. Jule. New York, Creative Age Press [1946] 234 p. PZ3.H3845Ju [TR: PS3515.E43422 Henderson, George Wylie.]
1099Henderson, George W. Ollie Miss, a novel. Blocks by Lowell Leroy Balcolm. New York, F. A. Stokes Co., 1935. 276 p. illus., plates. PZ3.H3845Ol [TR: PS3515.E43422 Henderson, George Wylie.]
1100Hill, John H. Princess Malah. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1933] 330 p. PZ3.H5521Pr [TR: PS3515.I492]
1101Himes, Chester B. Blind man with a pistol. New York, W. Morrow, 1969. 240 p. PZ3.H57Bl [TR: PS3515.I713]
1102Himes, Chester B. Cast the first stone, a novel. New York, Coward-McCann [1952] 346 p. PZ3.H57Cas [TR: PS3515.I713]
1103Himes, Chester B. If he hollers let him go. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1945. 249 p. PZ3.H57If [TR: PS3515.I713]
1104Himes, Chester B. Lonely crusade. New York, Knopf, 1947. 398 p. PZ3.H57Lo [TR: PS3515.I713]
1105Himes, Chester B. Pinktoes. Paris, Olympia Press [1961] 207 p. (The Traveller's companion series, no. 87) PZ3.H57Pi [TR: PS3515.I713]
1106Himes, Chester B. The primitive. [New York] New American Library [1955] 151 p. (A Signet book, 1264) PZ3.H57Pr [TR: PS3515.I713]
1107Himes, Chester B. The third generation. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1954] 350 p. PZ3.H57Th [TR: PS3515.I713]
1108Hughes, Langston. The best of Simple. Illustrated by Bernhard Nast. New York, Hill and Wang [1961] 245 p. illus. (American century series, AC39) PS3515.U274B4
1109Hughes, Langston, ed. The best short stories by Negro writers; an anthology from 1899 to the present. Boston, Little, Brown [1967] xvii, 508 p. PZ1.H849Be
1110Hughes, Langston. Laughing to keep from crying. New York, Holt [1952] 206 p. PZ3.H87313Lau [TR: PS3515.U274]Short stories.
1111Hughes, Langston. Not without laughter. New York, Knopf, 1930. 324 p. PZ3.H87313No [TR: PS3515.U274]
1112Hughes, Langston. Simple speaks his mind. [New York] Simon and Schuster [1950] 231 p. PS3515.U274S53
1113Hughes, Langston. Something in common, and other stories. New York, Hill and Wang [1963] 236 p. (American century series) PZ3.H87313So [TR: PS3515.U274]
1114Hughes, Langston. Tambourines to glory, a novel. New York, J. Day Co. [1958] 188 p. PZ3.H87313Tam [TR: PS3515.U274]
1115Hughes, Langston. The ways of white folks. New York, Knopf, 1934. 248 p. PZ3.H87313Way [TR: PS3515.U274]Short stories.
1116Hunter, Kristin. God bless the child. New York, Scribner [1964] 307 p. PZ4.H9457Go [TR: PS3558.U483 Lattany, Kristin Hunter]
1117Hunter, Kristin. The landlord. New York, Scribner [1966] 338 p. PZ4.H9457Lan [TR: PS3558.U483 Lattany, Kristin Hunter]
1118Hurston, Zora N. Seraph on the Suwanee, a novel. New York, Scribner, 1948. 311 p. PZ3.H9457Se [TR: PS3515.U789]
1119Hurston, Zora N. Their eyes were watching God; a novel. Philadelphia, Lippincott [c1937] 286 p. PZ3.H9457Th [TR: PS3515.U789]
1120[Johnson, James W.] The autobiography of an ex-colored man. Boston, Sherman, French, 1912. 207 p. PZ3.P633Au [TR: PS3519.O2625]
1121Jones, LeRoi. The system of Dante's Hell; [a novel]. New York, Grove Press [1965] 154 p. [PZ4.J774Sy] [TR: PZ4.B2267Sy; PS3552.A583 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1122Jones, LeRoi. Tales. New York, Grove Press [1967] 132 p. [PZ4.J774Tal] [TR: PZ4.B2267Tal; PS3552.A583 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1123Kelley, William M. Dancers on the shore. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1964. 201 p. PZ4.K285Dan [TR: PS3561.E392]Short stories.
1124Kelley, William M. Dem. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 210 p. PZ4.K285De [TR: PS3561.E392]
1125Kelley, William M. A drop of patience. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1965. 237 p. PZ4.K285Dr [TR: PS3561.E392]
1126Killens, John O. And then we heard the thunder. New York, Knopf, 1963 [c1962] 485 p. PZ4.K48An2 [TR: PS3561.I37]
1127Killens, John O. 'Sippi. New York, Trident Press, 1967. 434 p. PZ4.K48Si [TR: PS3561.I37]
1128Killens, John O. Youngblood. New York, Dial Press, 1954. 566 p. PZ4.K48Yo [TR: PS3561.I37]
1129Larsen, Nella. Passing. New York, Knopf, 1929. 215 p. PZ3.L33Pas [TR: PS3523.A7225]
1130Larsen, Nella. Quicksand. New York, Knopf, 1928. 301 p. PZ3.L33Qu [TR: PS3523.A7225]
1131Lee, George W. River George. New York, Macaulay Co. [c1937] 275 p. PZ3.L5123Ri [TR: PS3523.E324]
1132Marshall, Paule. Brown girl, brownstones. New York, Random House [1959] 310 p. PZ4.M369Br [TR: PS3563.A7223]
1133Mayfield, Julian. The grand parade. New York, Vanguard Press [1961] 448 p. PZ4.M47Gr [TR: PS3563.A9566]
1134Mayfield, Julian. The hit, a novel. New York, Vanguard Press [1957] 212 p. PZ4.M47Hi [TR: PS3563.A9566]
1135Mayfield, Julian. The long night. New York, Vanguard Press [1958] 156 p. illus. PZ4.M47Lo [TR: PS3563.A9566]
1136Micheaux, Oscar. The story of Dorothy Stanfield, based on a great insurance swindle, and a woman! A novel. New York, Book Supply Co., 1946. 416 p. col. front. PZ3.M5809St [TR: PS3525.I1875]
1137Miller, Warren. The cool world, a novel. Boston, Little, Brown [1959] 241 p. PZ4.M65Co [TR: PS3563.I42155]
1138Motley, Willard. Knock on any door. New York, Appleton-Century Co. [1947] 503 p. [PZ3.M8573Kn] [TR: PS3563.O888K6 1947]
1139Motley, Willard. Let no man write my epitaph. New York, Random House [1958] 467 p. PZ3.M8573Le [TR: PS3563.O888]
1140Motley, Willard. Let noon be fair, a novel. New York, Putnam [c1966] 416 p. PZ3.M8573Lg [TR: PS3563.O888]
1141Motley, Willard. We fished all night. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1951] 560 p. PZ3.M8573We [TR:PS3563.O888]
1142Ottley, Roi. White marble lady. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1965] 278 p. PZ4.O894Wh
1142aParks, Gordon. The learning tree. New York, Harper & Row [1963] 303 p. PZ4.P249Le [TR: PS3566.A73]
1143Paynter, John H. Fugitives of the Pearl. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1930] 209 p. ports. PZ3.P2938Fu [TR: PS3531.A94]"Descendants of Paul and Amelia Edmonson": p. [203]-209.
1144Petry, Ann L. Country place. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1947. 266 p. PZ3.P44904Co
1145Petry, Ann L. The narrows. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1953. 428 p. PZ3.P44904Nar
1146Petry, Ann L. The street. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1946. 435 p. [PZ3.P44904St] [TR: PS3531.E933S75 1946]"A Houghton Mifflin literary fellowship novel."
1147Pharr, Robert D. The book of numbers. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1969. 374 p. [PS3566.H3B6 1969] [TR: PZ4.P536Bo3; PS3566.H33]
1148Pickens, William. The vengeance of the gods, and three other stories of real American color line life. Introduction by Bishop John Hurst. Philadelphia, A.M.E. Book Concern [c1922] 125 p. PZ3.P5853VeContents.—The vengeance of the gods.—The superior race.—Passing the buck.—Tit for tat.
1149Polite, Carlene H. The flagellants. New York [Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1967] 214 p. PZ4.P7674Fl [TR: PS3566.O47]
1150Redding, Jay Saunders. Stranger and alone, a novel. New York, Harcourt, Brace [1950] 308 p. PZ3.R246533St [TR: PS3535.E2233]
1151Rogers, Joel A. She walks in beauty. Los Angeles, Western Publishers, 1963. 316 p. PZ4.R727Sh
1152Rollins, Bryant. Danger song. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 280 p. PZ4.R753Dan
1153Savoy, Willard W. Alien land. New York, E. P. Dutton, 1949. 320 p. PZ3.S2695Al
1153aSchuyler, George S. Black no more; being an account of the strange and wonderful workings of science in the land of the free, A.D. 1933-1940. New York, Macaulay Co. [c1931] 250 p. PZ3.S3972Bl [TR: PS3537.C76]
1154Smith, William G. Anger at innocence. New York, Farrar, Straus [1950] 300 p. [PZ3.S6638An] [TR: PS3537.M8685A82 1950]
1155Smith, William G. Last of the conquerors. New York, Farrar, Straus, 1948. 262 p. PZ3.S6638Las
1156Smith, William G. The stone face, a novel. New York, Farrar, Straus [1963] 213 p. PZ3.S6638St
1157Thurman, Wallace. The blacker the berry; a novel of Negro life. New York, Macaulay Co., 1929. 262 p. PZ3.T4258Bl [TR: PS3539.H957]
1158Thurman, Wallace. Infants of the spring. New York, Macaulay Co. [c1932] 284 p. PZ3.T4258In [TR: PS3539.H957]
1158aThurman, Wallace, and Abraham L. Furman. The interne. New York, Macaulay Co. [c1932] 252 p. PZ3.T4258Int
1159Toomer, Jean. Cane. With a foreword by Waldo Frank. New York, University Place Press [1967, c1951] 239 p. PZ3.T6184Can5 [TR: PS3539.O478]First published in 1923.Prose interspersed with poetry.
1160Turpin, Waters E. O Canaan! A novel. New York, Doubleday, Doran, 1939. 311 p. PZ3.T867O [TR: PS3539.U875]
1161Turpin, Waters E. The rootless. New York, Vantage Press [1957] 340 p. PZ3.T867Ro [TR: PS3539.U875]
1162Turpin, Waters E. These low grounds. New York, Harper, 1937. 344 p. PZ3.T867Th [TR: PS3539.U875]
1163Van Dyke, Henry. Blood of strawberries. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1969] 277 p. PZ4.V24Bl [TR: PS3572.A43]
1164Van Dyke, Henry. Ladies of the Rachmaninoff eyes. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1965] 214 p. PZ4.V24Lad [TR: PS3572.A43]
1165Walker, Margaret. Jubilee. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1966. 497 p. map. PZ4.W1814Ju [TR: PS3545.A517]
1166Walrond, Eric. Tropic death. New York, Boni & Liveright, 1926. 282 p. PZ3.W166Tr [TR: PS3545.A5826]Contents.—Drought.—Panama gold.—The yellow one.—The wharf rats.—The palm porch.—Subjection.—The beach pin.—The white snake.—The vampire bat.—Tropic death.
1167Ward, Thomas P. The right to live. New York, Pageant Press [1953] 249 p. PZ7.W216Ri
1168Webb, Frank J. The Garies and their friends. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 392 p. (Afro-American culture series) PZ3.W382332Ga5 [TR: PS3157.W62]The American Negro, his history and literature.Reprint of the 1857 ed.
1169West, Dorothy. The living is easy. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1948. 347 p. PZ3.W5174Li [TR: PS3545.E82794]
1170White, Walter F. The fire in the flint. New York, Knopf, 1924. 300 p. PZ3.W5857Fi
1171White, Walter F. Flight. New York, Knopf, 1926. 300 p. PZ3.W5857Fl [TR: PS3545.H6165]
1172Williams, Chancellor. Have you been to the river? A novel. New York, Exposition Press [1952] 256 p. PZ3.W67143Hav
1173Williams, John A. The man who cried I am; a novel. Boston, Little, Brown [1967] 403 p. PZ4.W72624Man [TR: PS3573.I4495]
1174Williams, John A. Night song. New York, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy [1961] 219 p. PZ4.W72624Ni [TR: PS3573.I4495 Williams, John Alfred]
1175Williams, John A. Sissie. New York, Farrar, Straus and Cudahy [1963] 277 p. PZ4.W72624Si [TR: PS3573.I4495 Williams, John Alfred]
1176Wright, Charles S. The messenger. New York, Farrar, Straus [1963] 217 p. PZ4.W9477Me [TR: PS3573.R532 Wright, Charles]
1177Wright, Charles S. The wig, a mirror image. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1966] 179 p. PZ4.W9477Wi [TR: PS3573.R532 Wright, Charles]
1178Wright, Richard. Eight men. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1961] 250 p. PZ3.W9352Ei [TR: PS3545.R815]Short stories.
1179Wright, Richard. Lawd today. New York, Walker [1963] 189 p. PZ3.W9352Law [TR: PS3545.R815]
1180Wright, Richard. The long dream, a novel. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1958. 384 p. PZ3.W9352Lo [TR: PS3545.R815]
1181Wright, Richard. Native son. New York, Harper, 1940. 359 p. PZ3.W9352Nat [TR: PS3545.R815]
1182Wright, Richard. The outsider. New York, Harper [1953] 450 p. PZ3.W9352Ou [TR: PS3545.R815]
1183Wright, Richard. Uncle Tom's children, five long stories. New York, Harper [c1938] xxx, 384 p. PZ3.W935Un2 [TR: PS3545.R815]Contents.—The ethics of living Jim Crow; an autobiographical sketch.—Big boy leaves home.—Down by the riverside.—Long black song.—Fire and cloud.—Bright and morning star.
1184Yerby, Frank. Captain Rebel. New York, Dial Press [1956] 343 p. PZ3.Y415Cap [TR: PS3547.E65]
1185Yerby, Frank. The devil's laughter. New York, Dial Press, 1953. 376 p. PZ3.Y415De [TR: PS3547.E65]
1186Yerby, Frank. Fairoaks, a novel. New York, Dial Press [1957] 405 p. PZ3.Y415Fai [TR: PS3547.E65]
1187Yerby, Frank. Floodtide. New York, Dial Press, 1950. 342 p. PZ3.Y415Fl [TR: PS3547.E65]
1188Yerby, Frank. The Foxes of Harrow. New York, Dial Press, 1946. 534 p. PZ3.Y415Fo [TR: PS3547.E65]
1189Yerby, Frank. The Garfield honor. New York, Dial Press, 1961. 347 p. PZ3.Y415Gar [TR: PS3547.E65]
1190Yerby, Frank. Gillian. New York, Dial Press, 1960. 346 p. PZ3.Y415Gi [TR: PS3547.E65]
1191Yerby, Frank. The golden hawk. New York, Dial Press, 1948. 346 p. map. PZ3.Y415Go [TR: PS3547.E65]
1192Yerby, Frank. Griffin's Way, a novel. New York, Dial Press, 1962. 345 p. PZ3.Y415Gr [TR: PS3547.E65]
1193Yerby, Frank. Jarrett's Jade, a novel. New York, Dial Press, 1959. 342 p. PZ3.Y415Jar [TR: PS3547.E65]
1194Yerby, Frank. The old gods laugh, a modern romance. New York, Dial Press, 1964. 408 p. PZ3.Y415Ol [TR: PS3547.E65]
1195Yerby, Frank. Pride's castle. New York, Dial Press, 1949. 382 p. PZ3.Y415Pr [TR: PS3547.E65]
1196Yerby, Frank. The serpent and the staff. New York, Dial Press, 1958. 377 p. PZ3.Y415Se [TR: PS3547.E65]
1197Yerby, Frank. The treasure of Pleasant Valley. New York, Dial Press, 1955. 348 p. PZ3.Y415Tr [TR: PS3547.E65]
1198Yerby, Frank. The vixens, a novel. New York, Dial Press, 1947. 347 p. PZ3.Y415Vi [TR: PS3547.E65]
1199Yerby, Frank. A woman called Fancy. New York, Dial Press, 1951. 340 p. PZ3.Y415Wo [TR: PS3547.E65]
1200Gregory, Dick. From the back of the bus. Photographs by Jerry Yulsman. Introduction by Hugh M. Hefner. Edited by Bob Orden. New York, Dutton, 1962. 125 p. illus. PN6231.S485G7
1201Gregory, Dick. What's happening? Photos. by Jerry Yulsman. New York, Dutton, 1965. 125 p. illus. PN6231.N5G68
1202Hughes, Langston, ed. The book of Negro humor. New York, Dodd, Mead [1966] 265 p. PN6231.N5H8
1203Sterling, Philip, ed. Laughing on the outside; the intelligent white reader's guide to Negro tales and humor. Introductory essay by Saunders Redding. Cartoons by Ollie Harrington. New York, Grosset & Dunlap [1965] 254 p. illus. PN6231.N5S7Bibliography: p. [251]-254.
1204That passing laughter; stories of the Southland, written by those who lived it. Drawings by Harry Maddox. Photography by Gertrude Gibson [and] Mattie Lou Stribling. Portrait by Marie Hull. Birmingham, Ala., Southern University Press, c1966. 140 p. illus. PN6231.N5T5
1205Baldwin, James. The amen corner; a play. New York, Dial Press, 1968. xvii, 91 p. PS3552.A45A8
1206Baldwin, James. Blues for Mister Charlie, a play. New York, Dial Press, 1964. xv, 121 p. PS3552.A45B5
1207Connelly, Marcus C. The green pastures, a fable, suggested by Roark Bradford's southern sketches, "Ol' man Adam an' his chillun." New York, Farrar & Rinehart [c1929] xvi, 173 p. PS3505.O4814G7 1929 [TR: Connelly, Marc]In dramatic form, with cast of characters as presented at the Mansfield Theatre, New York, 1930.Attempts "to present certain aspects of a living religion in the terms of its believers ... thousands of Negroes in the deep South."—p. xv.
1208Cotter, Joseph S. Caleb, the degenerate, a play in four acts; a study of the types, customs, and needs of the American Negro. Louisville, Ky., Bradley & Gilbert Co., 1903. 57 p. port. PS3505.O862C3 1903
1209Couch, William, comp. New black playwrights, an anthology. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1968] xxiii, 258 p. PS634.C684
1210Davis, Ossie. Purlie victorious; a comedy in three acts. New York, S. French [c1961] 90 p. PS3507.A7444P8
1211Duberman, Martin B. In white America, a documentary play. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1964. 112 p. PS3554.U25I5
1212D'Usseau, Arnaud, and James Gow. Deep are the roots. New York, Scribner, 1946. xxvi, 205 p. plates. PS3507.U925D4
1213Edmonds, Randolph. The land of cotton, and other plays. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1942] 267 p. PS3509.D56L3Contents.—The land of cotton.—Gangsters over Harlem.—Yellow death.—Silas Brown.—The High court of Historia.
1214Edmonds, Randolph. Shades and shadows. Boston, Meador Pub. Co., 1930. 171 p. PS3509.D56S5 1930Contents.—The devil's price.—Hewers of wool.—Shades and shadows.—Everyman's land.—The tribal chief.—The phantom treasure.
1215Edmonds, Randolph. Six plays for a Negro theatre. Foreword by Frederick H. Koch. Boston, W. H. Baker Co. [c1934] 155 p. PS3509.D56S6 1934Contents.—Bad man.—Old man Pete.—Nat Turner.—Breeders.—Bleeding hearts.—The new window.
1216Grimke, Angelina W. Rachel, a play in three acts. Boston, The Cornhill Co. [c1920] 96 p. PS3513.R744R3 1920
1217Hansberry, Lorraine. A raisin in the sun; a drama in three acts. New York, Random House [1959] 142 p. illus. (A Random House play) PS3515.A515R3
1218Heyward, Dorothy H. K., and DuBose Heyward. Mamba's daughters, aplay. Dramatized from the novel Mamba's daughters by Du Bose Heyward. New York, Farrar & Rinehart [c1939] 182 p. plates. PS3515.E97M3 1939
1219Hughes, Langston. Five plays. Edited with an introduction by Webster Smalley. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1963] 258 p. PS3515.U274A19 1963Contents.—Mulatto.—Soul gone home.—Little Ham.—Simply heavenly.—Tambourines to glory.
1220Jones, LeRoi. Dutchman and The slave, two plays. New York, Morrow, 1964. 88 p. [PS3519.O4545D8] [TR: PS3552.A583D8 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1221Locke, Alain L., and Montgomery Gregory, eds. Plays of Negro life; a source-book of native American drama. Decorations and illustrations by Aaron Douglas. New York, Harper, 1927. 430 p. illus., plates. PS627.N4L6"Bibliography of Negro drama": p. 424-430.
1222Peters, Paul, and George Sklar. Stevedore, a play in three acts. New York, Covici, Friede [c1934] 123 p. PS3531.E826S7 1934
1223Richardson, Willis, comp. Plays and pageants from the life of the Negro. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1930] 373 p. illus., plates. PS627.N4R5Contents.—Plays: Sacrifice, by Thelma M. Duncan. Antar of Araby, by Maud Cuney-Hare. Ti Yette, by John Matheus. Graven images, by May Miller. Riding the goat, by May Miller. The black horseman, by Willis Richardson. The king's dilemma, by Willis Richardson. The house of sham, by Willis Richardson.—Pageants: Two races, by Inez M. Burke. Out of the dark, by Dorothy C. Guinn. The light of the women, by Frances Gunner. Ethiopia at the bar of justice, by Edward J. McCoo.
1224Richardson, Willis, and May Miller, eds. Negro history in thirteen plays. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1935] 333 p. PS627.N4R47
1225Sackler, Howard O. The great white hope. New York, Dial Press, 1968. 264 p. PS3537.A156G7In 1908, Jack Johnson became the first Negro heavyweight champion of the world. This is an epic drama based on his life.
1226Torrence, Frederic R. Granny Maumee, The rider of dreams, Simon the Cyrenian; plays for a Negro theater. New York, Macmillan, 1917. 111 p. PS3539.O63G7 1917
1227Wright, Richard. Native son (the biography of a young American), a play in ten scenes by Paul Green and Richard Wright, from the novel by Richard Wright. A Mercury production by Orson Welles, presented by Orson Welles and John Houseman. New York, Harper [c1941] 148 p. front. PS3545.R815N25Includes songs with music.
1228Adoff, Arnold, comp. I am the darker brother; an anthology of modern poems by Negro Americans. Drawings by Benny Andrews. Foreword by Charlemae Rollins. New York, Macmillan [1968] 128 p. illus. PS591.N4A65
1229Bontemps, Arna W., ed. American Negro poetry. New York, Hill and Wang [1963] 197 p. PS591.N4B58
1230Bontemps, Arna W., comp. Golden slippers, an anthology of Negro poetry for young readers. With drawings by Henrietta Bruce Sharon. New York, Harper [c1941] 220 p. illus., plates. PS591.N4B6"Biographies": p. 200-215.
1231Braithwaite, William S. B. The house of falling leaves, with other poems. Boston, J. W. Luce, 1908. 112 p. PS3503.R246H7 1908Partly reprinted from various periodicals.
1232Braithwaite, William S. B. Lyrics of life and love. Boston, H. B. Turner, 1904. 80 p. port. PS3503.R246L8 1904
1233Braithwaite, William S. B. Selected poems. New York, Coward-McCann [1948] 96 p. PS3503.R246A6 1948 [TR: Braithwaite, William Stanley]
1234Brewer, John Mason, ed. Heralding dawn; an anthology of verse, selected and edited, with a historical summary on the Texas Negroes' verse-making, by J. Mason Brewer, and with a preface by Henry Smith. [Dallas, June Thomason, Print., c1936] 7 p. l., 45 p. ports. PS591.N4B65Includes biographical sketches of the authors."Bibliography and acknowledgment": 3d prelim. leaf.
1235Brooks, Gwendolyn. Annie Allen. [Poems]. New York, Harper [1949] 60 p. port. PS3503.R7244A7
1236Brooks, Gwendolyn. In the Mecca; poems. New York, Harper & Row [1968] 54 p. PS3503.R7244I5
1237Brown, Sterling A. Southern road, poems; drawings by E. Simms Campbell. New York, Harcourt, Brace [c1932] xv, 135 p. plates. PS3503.R833S6 1932
1238Charters, Samuel B. The poetry of the blues. With photographs by Ann Charters. New York, Oak Publications [1963] 111 p. illus. PS591.N4C4
1239Cullen, Countee. The black Christ & other poems. With decorations by Charles Cullen. New York, Harper, 1929. 110 p. illus., plates. PS3505.U287B6 1929
1240Cullen, Countee, ed. Caroling dusk, an anthology of verse by Negro poets. Decorations by Aaron Douglas. New York, Harper, 1927. xxii, 237 p. PS591.N4C8
1241Cullen, Countee. Color. New York, Harper, 1925. xvii, 108 p. PS3505.U287C6 1925
1242Cullen, Countee. Copper sun. With decorations by Charles Cullen. New York, Harper, 1927. 89 p. illus. PS3505.U287C65 1927
1243Cullen, Countee. On these I stand; an anthology of the best poems of Countee Cullen. Selected by himself and including six new poems never before published. New York, Harper [1947] 197 p. PS3505.U287A6 1947
1244Cuney, Waring, Langston Hughes, and Bruce M. Wright, eds. Lincoln University poets; centennial anthology [1854-1954]. Foreword by Horace Mann Bond; introduction by J. Saunders Redding. New York, Fine Editions Press [1954] 72 p. PS591.N4C84
1245Dodson, Owen. Powerful long ladder. New York, Farrar, Straus, 1946. 103 p. PS3507.O364P6
1246Dunbar, Paul L. The complete poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar, with the introduction to "Lyrics of lowly life," by W. D. Howells. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1913. xxxii, 289 p. port. PS1556.A1 1913
1247Dunbar, Paul L. Lyrics of lowly life. New York, Arno Press, 1969. xx, 208 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) PS1556.L6 1969Afro-American culture series.Reprint of the 1899 ed.
1248Dunbar, Paul L. Oak and ivy. Dayton, Ohio, Press of United Brethren Pub. House, 1893. 62 p. DHUFirst ed. of Dunbar's first work; includes 13 poems not in The Complete Poems (1913).
1249Hayden, Robert E. A ballad of remembrance. London, P. Breman, 1962. 72 p. (Heritage series, v. 1) PS3515.A9363B3
1250Hayden, Robert E. Heart-shape in the dust; poems. Detroit, Falcon Press [c1940] 63 p. PS3515.A9363H4 1940
1251Hayden, Robert E., comp. Kaleidoscope; poems by American Negro poets, edited and with an introduction by Robert Hayden. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1967] xxiv, 231 p. ports. (Curriculum-related books) PS591.N4H3
1252Hayden, Robert E. Selected poems. New York, October House [1966] 79 p. PS3515.A9363A6 1966 [TR: Hayden, Robert Earl]
1253Hughes, Langston. Fields of wonder. New York, Knopf, 1947. 114 p. PS3515.U274F45
1254Hughes, Langston. Fine clothes to the Jew. New York, Knopf, 1927. 89 p. PS3515.U274F5 1927
1255Hughes, Langston. New Negro poets U.S.A. Foreword by Gwendolyn Brooks. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1964] 127 p. PS591.N4H8
1256Hughes, Langston. One-way ticket [poems]; illustrations by Jacob Lawrence. New York, Knopf, 1949 [c1948] xvii, 136 p. illus. PS3515.U274O5
1257Hughes, Langston. The panther & the lash; poems of our times. New York, Knopf, 1967. 101 p. PS3515.U274P3
1258Hughes, Langston, and Arna W. Bontemps, eds. The poetry of the Negro, 1746-1949; an anthology. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1949. xviii, 429 p. PN6109.7.H8
1259Hughes, Langston. Selected poems. Drawings by E. McKnight Kauffer. New York, Knopf, 1959. 297 p. illus. PS3515.U274A6 1959
1260Hughes, Langston. Shakespeare in Harlem. With drawings by E. McKnight Kauffer. New York, Knopf, 1942. 124 p. illus. PS3515.U274S5"A book of light verse."—4th prelim. leaf.
1261Hughes, Langston. The weary blues. With an introduction by Carl Van Vechten. New York, Knopf, 1926. 109 p. PS3515.U274W4 1926
1262Johnson, Georgia D. An autumn love cycle. New York, H. Vinal, 1928. xix, 70 p. front. PS3519.O253A8 1928
1263Johnson, Georgia D. The heart of a woman, and other poems. With an introduction by William Stanley Braithwaite. Boston, Cornhill Co., 1918. 62 p. [PS3601.J6H4 1918] [TR: PS3519.O253H4 1918]
1264Johnson, James W., ed. The book of American Negro poetry, chosen and edited, with an essay on the Negro's creative genius. New York, Harcourt, Brace [c1931] 300 p. music. PS591.N4J6 1931"Revised edition.""Books suggested for collateral reading": p. 295-296.
1265Johnson, James W. Fifty years & other poems. With an introduction by Brander Matthews. Boston, Cornhill Co. [c1917] xiv, 92 p. PS3519.O2625F5Reprinted in part from various periodicals.
1266Johnson, James W. God's trombones; seven Negro sermons in verse. Drawings by Aaron Douglas, lettering by C. B. Falls. New York, Viking Press, 1927. 56 p. plates. PS3519.O2625G6 1927
1267Jones, LeRoi. The dead lecturer; poems. New York, Grove Press [1964] 79 p. [PS3519.O4545D4] [TR: PS3552.A583D4 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1268Kerlin, Robert T. Negro poets and their poems. 2d ed., rev. and enl. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1935] xxi, 342 p. illus., ports. PS591.N4K4 1935"Index of authors, with biographical and bibliographical notes": p. 323-335.
1269[Lanusse, Armand], comp. Creole voices; poems in French by free men of color, first published in 1845, edited by Edward Maceo Coleman. With a foreword by H. Carrington Lancaster. A Centennial ed. Washington, Associated Publishers, 1945. xlvi, 130 p. PQ3937.L8L32This anthology, compiled by Armand Lanusse, who was also one of the principal contributors, was originally published in New Orleans under title: Les cenelles, choix de poésies indigènes.Present edition includes poems of V. E. Rillieux and P. A. Desdunes, two later poets (p. [109]-128).
1270Major, Clarence, comp. The new black poetry. New York, International Publishers [1969] 156 p. PS591.N4M3
1271Murphy, Beatrice M., ed. Ebony rhythm; an anthology of contemporary Negro verse. Freeport, N.Y., Books for Libraries Press [1968, c1948] 162 p. (Granger index reprint series) PS591.N4M76 1968
1272Murphy, Beatrice M., ed. Negro voices; illustrations by Clifton Thompson Hill. New York, H. Harrison [c1938] 173 p. illus. PS591.N4M8At head of title: An anthology of contemporary verse.
1273Pipes, James. Ziba. With decorations by Edith Mahier. Norman, University of Oklahoma Press, 1943. 188 p. illus. PS3531.I79Z3
1274Pool, Rosey E., ed. Beyond the blues, new poems by American Negroes. Lympne, Kent, Hand and Flower Press [1962] 188 p. PS591.N4P6Bibliography: p. 186-188.
1275Rollins, Charlemae H., comp. Christmas gif'; an anthology of Christmas poems, songs, and stories, written by and about Negroes. Line drawings by Tom O'Sullivan. Book design by Stan Williamson. Chicago, Follett Pub. Co. [1963] 119 p. illus. PS509.C56R6
1276Tolson, Melvin B. Harlem gallery. With an introduction by Karl Shapiro. Book 1. The curator. New York, Twayne [1965] 173 p. PS3539.O334H3
1277Tolson, Melvin B. Libretto for the Republic of Liberia. New York, Twayne Publishers [1953] 1 v. (unpaged) PS3539.O334L5 [TR: (Rare Bk Coll)]
1278Tolson, Melvin B. Rendezvous with America. New York, Dodd, Mead, 1944. 121 p. PS3539.O334R4
1279Turner, Lucy M. 'Bout cullud folkses; poems. New York, H. Harrison [1938] 64 p. [PS3601.T8B6 1938] [TR: PS3539.U8536B6 1938]
1280Walker, Margaret. For my people. With a foreword by Stephen Vincent Benét. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1942. 58 p. (The Yale series of younger poets, [41]) PS3545.A517F6
1281Wegelin, Oscar. Jupiter Hammon, American Negro poet; selections from his writings and a bibliography; with five facsimiles. New York, Ninety-nine copies printed for C. F. Heartman, 1915. 51 p. facsims., front. (Heartman's historical series, no. 13) PS767.H15Z8"No. 90 of 91 copies printed on Alexandra Japan paper."
1282Wheatley, Phillis. Poems. Edited, with an introduction, by Julian D. Mason, Jr. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1966. lviii, 113 p. facsims., port. PS866.W5 1966
1283Wheatley, Phillis. Poems and letters; first collected edition, ed. by Chas. Fred. Heartman; with an appreciation by Arthur A. Schomburg. New York, C. F. Heartman [1915] 111 p. port. (Heartman's historical series, no. 8) PS866.W5 1915No. 20 of 350 copies printed on Ben Day paper.
1284Wheatley, Phillis. Poems on various subjects, religious and moral. London, Printed for A. Bell, Bookseller, Aldgate; and sold by Messrs. Cox and Berry, King-Street, Boston, 1773. 124 p. port. PS866.W5 1773
1284aWhite, Newman Ivey, and Walter C. Jackson, eds. An anthology of verse by American Negroes, edited with a critical introduction, biographical sketches of the authors, and bibliographical notes. With an introduction by James Hardy Dillard. Durham, N.C., Trinity College Press, 1924. 250 p. (Trinity College publications) PS591.N4W5"Bibliographical and critical notes": p. 214-237.
1285Wilson, Joseph T. Voice of a new race. Original selections of poems, with a trilogy and oration. Hampton, Va., Normal School Steam Press, 1882. 43 p. PS3334.W58
1286Cobb, William Montague. The first Negro medical society; a history of the Medico-Chirurgical Society of the District of Columbia, 1884-1939. Washington, Associated Publishers, 1939. 159 p. R15.M573C6"Publications by society and members": p. 104-119. Bibliography: p. 135.
1287Cobb, William Montague. Medical care and the plight of the Negro. New York, National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People, 1947. 38 p. illus. E185.88.C7"Literature cited": p. 37-38.
1288Cobb, William Montague. Progress and portents for the Negro in medicine. New York, National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People, 1948. 53 p. illus., map, ports. E185.82.C6"Literature cited": p. 46-47.
1289Cornely, Paul B., and Stanley K. Bigman. Cultural considerations in changing health attitudes. [Washington] 1961. 3 v. (185 leaves). tables. RA448.W3C6"Research grant 5357 (C1, C2). Division of General Medical Sciences. National Institutes of Health. U.S. Public Health Service, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare."Bibliographical footnotes.
1290Corwin, Edward H. L., and Gertrude E. Sturges. Opportunities for the medical education of Negroes. With an introduction by Dr. Walter L. Niles and a foreword by Walter White. New York, Scribner, 1936. xv, 293 p. tables. RA982.N5H35Report of a biracial group of medical experts and laymen on conditions at Harlem Hospital.
1291DuBois, William E. B., ed. The health and physique of the Negro American. Report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, on May the 29th, 1906. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1906. 112 p. plates, tables. (Atlanta University publications, no. 11) E185.5.A88 no. 11"Bibliography of Negro health and physique": p. [6]-13.
1292Dummett, Clifton O., ed. The growth and development of the Negro in dentistry in the United States. [Chicago?] National Dental Association [1952] 124 p. E185.82.D8
1293Grier, William H., and Price M. Cobbs. Black rage. Foreword by Fred R. Harris. New York, Basic Books [1968] 213 p. E185.625.G68The Negro authors indicate that rioting is indicative of Negro recovery rather than ill health.
1294Grossack, Martin M., ed. Mental health and segregation; a selection of papers and some book chapters by David P. Ausubel [and others]. New York, Springer Pub. Co. [c1963] 247 p. tables. E185.625.G7Bibliography: p. 231-237.
1295Joint Health Education Committee, Nashville. Rural Negro health; a report on a five-year experiment in health education in Tennessee, by Michael J. Bent, M.D., and Ellen F. Greene, M.A., for the Joint Health Education Committee. Nashville, Julius Rosenwald Fund, 1937. 85 p. diagrs. RA426.J73"General references": p. 79-83.
1296Kardiner, Abram, and Lionel Ovesey. The mark of oppression; explorations in the personality of the American Negro. With the assistance of William Goldfarb [and others]. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1962, c1951] 396 p. illus. (Meridian Books, M141) E185.625.K3 1962
1297Karon, Bertram P. The Negro personality; a rigorous investigation of the effects of culture. Foreword by Silvan S. Tomkins. New York, Springer Pub. Co., 1958. 184 p. illus. E185.625.K35Bibliography: p. 176-177.
1298Kenney, John A. The Negro in medicine. [Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Printed by the Tuskegee Institute Press, c1912] 60 p. plates (part fold.), ports. E185.82.K36
1299Lott, Albert J., and Bernice E. Lott. Negro and white youth; a psychological study in a border-state community. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1963] 236 p. BF731.L6Includes bibliographies.
1300Lynk, Miles V. Sixty years of medicine; or, The life and times of Dr. Miles V. Lynk, an autobiography. Memphis, Twentieth Century Press, c1951. 125 p. ports. R154.L96A3
1301Malzberg, Benjamin. Statistical data for the study of mental disease among Negroes in New York State, 1949-1951. Albany, 1959. 405 p. tables. [RC444.N4M3]"This study is reprinted from Mental Hygiene, volume 43, no. 3, July 1959."
1302Morais, Herbert M. The history of the Negro in medicine. New York, Publishers Co. [1967] xiv, 317 p. illus., facsims., ports. (International library of Negro life and history) R695.M6Published under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.Bibliography: p. 281-304.
1303National Medical Fellowships. Opportunities for Negroes in medicine. Chicago, 1959. 29 p. E185.82.N38
1304Negro Health Survey, Pittsburgh. Tuberculosis and the Negro in Pittsburgh; a report of the Negro health survey, by Elsie Witchen, director, Negro Health Survey. [Pittsburgh] Tuberculosis League of Pittsburgh, 1934. 120 p. diagrs., maps, plates, tables. RC313.A57N4
1305Parker, Seymour, and Robert J. Kleiner. Mental illness in the urban Negro community. New York, Free Press [c1966] xiv, 408 p. illus. RC451.5.N4P35"Financial assistance received from the National Institutes of Health (grant numbers M-3047, M-5661, and MH-07494-01) and from the Pennsylvania Mental Research Foundation."Bibliography: p. 349-362.
1306Pettigrew, Thomas F. A profile of the Negro American. Princeton, Van Nostrand [1964] xiv, 250 p. illus. E185.625.P4Bibliography: p. 202-235.
1307Peyton, Thomas R. Quest for dignity; an autobiography of a Negro doctor. [Rev. reprinting] Los Angeles, Publishers Western, 1963 [c1950] 160 p. illus. R154.P49A3 1963
1308Reitzes, Dietrich C. Negroes and medicine. Cambridge, Published for the Commonwealth Fund by Harvard University Press, 1958. 400 p. illus. E185.82.R46
1309Rohrer, John H., and Munro S. Edmonson, eds. The eighth generation: cultures and personalities of New Orleans Negroes. Co-authors: Harold Lief, Daniel Thompson [and] William Thompson. New York, Harper [1960] 346 p. diagrs., tables. E185.625.R6"This volume reports a research project carried out during the years 1953-1956 at the Urban Life Research Institute of Tulane University.... The responsibility for its direction rested with Dr. John H. Rohrer."Bibliographical footnotes.
1310Spencer, Gerald A. Cosmetology in the Negro: a guide to its problems. [New York, Arlain Print. Co., 1944] 127 p. illus. RL71.S65Bibliographical footnotes.
1311Spencer, Gerald A. Medical symphony, a study of the contributions of the Negro to medical progress in New York. [New York, c1947] 120 p. ports. R292.N7S63"References": p. 9.
1312Aptheker, Herbert. The Negro in the Civil War. New York, International Publishers [c1938] 48 p. E453.A67"Suggested readings": p. 47-48.
1313Brown, Earl L., and George R. Leighton. The Negro and the war. [New York, Public Affairs Committee] 1942. 32 p. diagrs. (Public affairs pamphlets, no. 71) E185.61.B877"For further reading": p. 32.
1314Brown, William W. The Negro in the American rebellion, his heroism and his fidelity. Boston, Lee & Shepard, 1867. xvi, 380 p. E540.N3B8
1315Cashin, Herschel V., and others. Under fire. With the Tenth U.S. Cavalry. Being a brief, comprehensive review of the Negro's participation in the wars of the United States. With introduction by Major-General Joseph Wheeler. Illustrated with over one hundred fine engravings from original photographs. New York, F. T. Neely [c1899] xv, 361 p. illus., plates, ports. [E725.5.C33] [TR: E725.45 10th]Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
1316Cornish, Dudley T. The sable arm; Negro troops in the Union Army, 1861-1865. New York, W. W. Norton [1966, c1956] 337 p. (The Norton library, N334) E540.N3C77 1966Bibliography: p. 316-332.
1317Emilio, Luis F. History of the Fifty-fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 1863-1865. Boston, Boston Book Co., 1891 xvi, 410 p. maps (part fold.), ports. E513.5 54thCover title: A Brave Black Regiment.Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
1318Francis, Charles E. The Tuskegee airmen; the story of the Negro in the U.S. Air Force. Boston, Bruce Humphries [1956, c1955] 225 p. illus. D810.N4F76
1319Heywood, Chester D. Negro combat troops in the World War; the story of the 371st Infantry. With maps, photographs and illustrations; pen and ink drawings by D. Lester Dickson. Worcester, Mass., Commonwealth Press [c1928] 310 p. illus., 2 fold. maps (in pocket) D570.33 371st.H4
1320Higginson, Thomas W. Army life in a black regiment. With an introduction by Howard Mumford Jones. [East Lansing] Michigan State University Press, 1960 [i.e. 1961] 235 p. E492.94 33d H5 1961First published in 1870.
1321Johns Hopkins University. Operations Research Office. Utilization of Negro manpower in the Army: a 1951 study. A team research study by staff members, consultants, and subcontractors of the Operations Research Office of the Johns Hopkins University. Alfred H. Hausrath, project director. McLean, Va., Research Analysis Corp., 1967. 1 v. (various pagings) illus. E185.63.J6A condensed and unclassified ed. of a 7-vol. draft report (1951)based on a study conducted in Korea and the U.S. as Project CLEAR."References": p. R1-R7.
1322Leckie, William H. The buffalo soldiers; a narrative of the Negro cavalry in the West. Norman, University of Oklahoma Press [1967] xiv, 290 p. illus., maps, ports. UA31 10th.L4Bibliography: p. 262-276.
1323Lee, Irvin H. Negro Medal of Honor men. New York, Dodd, Mead [1967] 139 p. illus., ports. UB433.L4Bibliography: p. 131-132.
1324Lee, Ulysses G. The employment of Negro troops. Washington, Office of the Chief of Military History, United States Army; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1966. xix, 740 p. illus., maps (part fold., part col.), ports. (United States Army in World War II: Special studies) D810.N4L4Bibliographical footnotes.
1325McConnell, Roland C. Negro troops of antebellum Louisiana; a history of the Battalion of Free Men of Color. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [c1968] 143 p. facsim., map. (Louisiana State University studies. Social science series, no. 13) UA220.M3Bibliography: p. 135-140. Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 116-133).
1326Mandelbaum, David G. Soldier groups and Negro soldiers. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1952. 142 p. E185.63.M35Bibliography: p. 133-138.
1327Mason, Monroe, and Arthur Furr. The American Negro soldier with the Red Hand of France. Boston, Cornhill Co. [c1920] 180 p. plan, plates, port. D639.N4M3
1328Miller, Kelly. Kelly Miller's history of the world war for human rights; being an intensely human and brilliant account of the World War and why and for what purpose America and the allies are fighting and the important part taken by the Negro. Washington, Austin Jenkins Co. [c1919] 608 p. plates, ports. D523.M46Published also with slight variations in text, under title: Our War for Human Rights.
1329Nell, William C. The colored patriots of the American Revolution. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 396 p. illus. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E269.N3N4 1968Reprint of the 1855 ed.
1330Quarles, Benjamin. The Negro in the American Revolution. Chapel Hill, Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va., by University of North Carolina Press [1961] 231 p. E269.N3Q3Bibliography: p. [201]-223.
1331Quarles, Benjamin. The Negro in the Civil War. Boston, Little, Brown [1953] xvi, 379 p. illus. E540.N3Q3Bibliography: p. [349]-360.
1332Scott, Emmett J. Scott's official history of the American Negro in the World War. Prefaced with highest tributes to the American Negro by Hon. Newton D. Baker, Gen. John J. Pershing, and the late Theodore Roosevelt. [Chicago, Homewood Press, c1919] 511 p. illus., plates, ports. D639.N4S3Reprint issued by Arno Press, 1969.
1333Sherman, George R. The Negro as a soldier. By George R. Sherman, (Captain, Seventh United States Colored Infantry and Brevet-Lieut.-Colonel, United States volunteers.) Providence, The Society, 1913. 34 p. ports. (Personal narratives of events in the War of the Rebellion, being papers read before the Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society. 7th ser., no. 7) E464.R47 [E540.N3S55 E492.9 7th]
1334Singletary, Otis A. Negro militia and Reconstruction. Austin, University of Texas Press [1957] 181 p. illus. E668.S59Bibliography: p. 153-166.
1335Steward, Theophilus G. The colored regulars in the United States Army. New York, Arno Press, 1969. 344 p. illus., ports. (The American Negro; his history and literature) E725.5.N3S8 1969Reprint of the 1904 ed., with a new preface by W. L. Katz.
1336Stillman, Richard J. Integration of the Negro in the U.S. Armed Forces. New York, Praeger [1968] 167 p. illus. (Praeger special studies in U.S. economic and social development) E185.63.S7 1968Includes bibliographical references.
1337Taylor, Susie K. Reminiscences of my life in camp. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 82 p. illus., ports. (The American Negro; his history and literature) E492.94 33d.T3 1968Reprint of the 1902 ed.
1338U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. South Dakota Advisory Committee. Negro airmen in a northern community; discrimination in Rapid City, South Dakota; a report. [Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1963. 50 p. F659.R2U5Cover title: Report on Rapid City.
1339U.S. President's Committee on Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces. Equality of treatment and opportunity for Negro military personnel stationed within the United States; initial report. [Washington] 1963. 93 p. E185.63.U63
1340Wesley, Charles H., and Patricia W. Romero. Negro Americans in the Civil War; from slavery to citizenship. New York, Publishers Co. [1967] 307 p. illus., facsims., maps, ports. (International library of Negro life and history) E540.N3W4Published under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.Bibliography: p. [273]-285.
1341Wesley, Charles H. Ohio Negroes in the Civil War. [Columbus] Ohio State University Press for the Ohio Historical Society [1962] 46 p. (Publications of the Ohio Civil War Centennial Commission, no. 6) E525.O337 no. 6Includes bibliography.
1342Williams, George W. A history of the Negro troops in the War of the Rebellion, 1861-65; preceded by a review of the military services of Negroes in ancient and modern times. New York, Bergman Publishers [1968] xvi, 353 p. illus., port. E540.N3W7 1968Reprint of the 1888 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
1343Wilson, Joseph T. The black phalanx. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 528 p. illus. (The American Negro; his history and literature) E185.63.W815 1968Reprint of the 1890 ed.Bibliography: p. 517.
1344Allen, William F., comp. Slave songs of the United States; the complete original collection (136 songs) collected and compiled by William Francis Allen, Charles Pickard Ware, and Lucy McKim Garrison in 1867, with new piano arrangements and guitar chords by Irving Schlein. [New York] Oak Publications [1965] 175 p. illus. M1670.A42 1965Includes facsim. of title page and preface of 1st ed. (New York, A. Simpson, 1867).
1345Bradford, Perry. Born with the blues; Perry Bradford's own story. The true story of the pioneering blues singers and musicians in the early days of jazz. New York, Oak Publications [c1965] 175 p. illus. ML410.B779B6
1346Carawan, Guy, and Candie Carawan. Ain't you got a right to the tree of life? The people of Johns Island, South Carolina, their faces, their words, and their songs, recorded by Guy and Candie Carawan. Photographed by Robert Yellin. Music transcribed by Ethel Raim, with a preface by Alan Lomax. New York, Simon and Schuster [1967, c1966] 190 p. illus., map. E185.93.S7C3Includes melodies with words.Bibliography: p. [11].
1347Chambers, Herbert A., ed. The treasury of Negro spirituals. [Foreword by Marian Anderson] New York, Emerson Books [1963, c1959] 125 p. illus. M1670.C45T7Contains 30 well-known spirituals, arranged for voice and piano, and six modern compositions, two of which are arranged for male quartet.
1348Charters, Samuel B. The bluesmen; the story and the music of the men who made the blues. New York, Oak Publications [1967+] illus., music, ports. [ML3561.J3C425] [TR: ML3561.B63C5]Contents.—v. 1. "The singers and the styles from Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas up to the Second World War, with a brief consideration of some of the traceable relationships between the blues and African song."
1349Courlander, Harold. Negro folk music, U.S.A. New York, Columbia University Press, 1963. 324 p. illus., music. ML3556.C7"The music" (melodies with words): p. [221]-287.Bibliography: p. [299]-301. Discography: p. [302]-308.
1350Dennison, Tim. The American Negro and his amazing music. New York, Vantage Press [1963] 76 p. ML3556.D45
1351Dett, Robert Nathaniel, ed. Religious folk-songs of the Negro as sung at Hampton Institute. Hampton, Va., Hampton Institute Press, 1927. xxvii, 236 p. M1670.H3 1927
1352Fisher, Miles M. Negro slave songs in the United States. New York, Russell & Russell [1968, c1953] xv, 223 p. ML3556.F58 1968Foreword by Ray Allen Billington.Includes texts of the songs, without the music.Bibliography: p. 193-213.Reprint also issued by Citadel Press, 1963.
1353Handy, William C., ed. Blues; an anthology. With an introduction by Abbe Niles. Illustrations by Miguel Covarrubias. New York, A. & C. Boni, 1926. 180 p. illus. M1630.18.H26B5 1926 [ML30.25e.H35]Music: p. 49-180.
1354Handy, William C., ed. A treasury of the blues; complete words and music of 67 great songs from Memphis blues to the present day. With an historical and critical text by Abbe Niles. With pictures by Miguel Covarrubias. [New York?] C. Boni; distributed by Simon and Schuster [1949] 258 p. illus. M1630.18.H26B5 1949First ed. published in 1926 under title: Blues, an Anthology."A selective bibliography": p. 254-255.
1355Hare, Maud C. Negro musicians and their music. Washington, Associated Publishers [1936] 439 p. plates, ports. ML3556.H3N4 [TR: Cuney-Hare, Maud]Includes music.Bibliography: p. 419-423.
1356Hayes, Roland. My songs; Aframerican religious folk songs arranged and interpreted by Roland Hayes. Boston, Little, Brown, 1948. 128 p. M1670.H4M9"An Atlantic Monthly Press book."
1357Jackson, Clyde O. The songs of our years; a study of Negro folk music. New York, Exposition Press [1968] 54 p. (An Exposition-university book) ML3556.J39Bibliography: p. [53]-54.
1358Jackson, George P. White and Negro spirituals, their life span and kingship, tracing 200 years of untrammeled song making and singing among our country folk, with 116 songs as sung by both races. New York, J. J. Augustin [1944] 349 p. illus., music, ports. ML3551.J17"The tune comparative list. One hundred and sixteen melodies of white people paired with same number of Negro-sung variants": p. [145]-227.
1359Johnson, James W., ed. The book of American Negro spirituals, edited with an introduction of James Weldon Johnson; musical arrangements by J. Rosamond Johnson, additional numbers by Lawrence Brown. New York, Viking Press, 1925. 187 p. M1670.J67
1360Johnson, James W., and John Rosamond Johnson, eds. The books of American Negro spirituals, including The book of American Negro spirituals and The second book of Negro spirituals. New York, Viking Press, 1940. 2 v. in 1. M1670.J67B65For voice and piano.A reissue of the volumes first published separately in 1925 and 1926. Each volume has special t.p.Musical arrangements by J. Rosamond Johnson, additional numbers by Lawrence Brown.
1361Jones, LeRoi. Black music. New York, W. Morrow, 1967. 221 p. illus. [ML3556.J728] [TR: ML3556.B15 1967 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1362Jones, LeRoi. Blues people; Negro music in white America. New York, W. Morrow, 1963. 244 p. [ML3556.J73] [TR: ML3556.B16 Baraka, Imamu Amiri]
1363Keil, Charles. Urban blues. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1966] 231 p. ML3556.K43
1364Kirkeby, W. T. E., Duncan P. Schiedt, and Sinclair Traill. Ain't misbehavin'; the story of Fats Waller. New York, Dodd, Mead [1966] 248 p. ports. ML417.W15K6 1966a"The music of Thomas 'Fats' Waller; a selective discography compiled by the 'Storyville Team'": p. 233-248.
1365Krehbiel, Henry E. Afro-American folksongs; a study in racial and national music. New York, F. Ungar Pub. Co. [1962] 176 p. music. ML3556.K9 1962Reprint of the 1914 ed.
1366Locke, Alain L. The Negro and his music. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1968] 142 p. (Kennikat Press series in Negro culture and history) ML3556.L6N4 1968Reprint of the ed. first published in 1936."Reading references" at end of each chapter. "Record illustrations" at end of most of the chapters.
1367Lomax, John A., and Alan Lomax, eds. Negro folk songs as sung by Lead Belly, "king of the twelve-string guitar players of the world," long-time convict in the penitentiaries of Texas and Louisiana. New York, Macmillan Co., 1936. xiv, 242 p. port. ML1670.L84N4"The main body of the song-texts consists of transcriptions from records we made with an instantaneous aluminum recording machine, the property of the Archive of American Folk-song of the Library of Congress. This machine and these records were used through the courtesy of the Library of Congress. Dr. George Herzog transcribed the melodies, as herein printed, from these same discs."—Introduction, p. xiii.
1368Lucas, John. Basic jazz on long play. The great soloists: ragtime, folksong, blues, jazz, swing, and the great bands: New Orleans, swing, dixieland. Northfield, Minn., Carleton Jazz Club, Carleton College, 1954. 103 p. (Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. Carleton Jazz Club. Bulletin no. 1) ML3561.J3L78
1369Nathan, Hans. Dan Emmett and the rise of early Negro minstrelsy. Norman, University of Oklahoma Press [1962] xiv, 496 p. illus., facsims. ML410.E5N4Includes unaccompanied melodies."Bibliography of the works of D. D. Emmett": p. 290-306. "Anthology" (principally melodies with piano accompaniment): p. [311]-491.
1370Niles, John J. Singing soldiers. Illustrated by Margaret Thorniley Williamson. New introduction by Leslie Shepard. Detroit, Singing Tree Press, 1968. 171 p. illus. M1629.M675S45 1968First published in 1927 by C. Scribner's Sons, New York. "Now reissued."Contains both accompanied and unaccompanied melodies with words.
1371Odum, Howard W., and Guy B. Johnson. The Negro and his songs; a study of typical Negro songs in the South. Hatboro, Pa., Folklore Associates, 1964 [c1925] xix, 306 p. ML3556.O3 1964"Reprinted from the original ed. of 1925.""Select bibliography of Negro folk songs": p. [297]-300.
1372Patterson, Lindsay, comp. The Negro in music and art. New York, Publishers Co. [1967] xvi, 304 p. illus., facsims., ports. (International library of Negro life and history) ML3556.P38Published under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History.Bibliography: p. [291]-296.
1373Ramsey, Frederic. Been here and gone. New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers University Press [1960] 177 p. illus. ML3556.R3
1374Ramsey, Frederic, and Charles E. Smith, eds. Jazzmen. New York, Harcourt, Brace [1959, c1939] 360 p. illus. (A Harvest book, 30) ML3561.J3R3 1959
1375Scarborough, Dorothy. On the trail of Negro folk-songs, by Dorothy Scarborough, assisted by Ola Lee Gulledge. Foreword by Roger D. Abrahams. Hatboro, Pa., Folklore Associates, 1963. 295 p. music. ML3556.S3 1925a"Reprinted in facsimile from the original edition of 1925."
1376Shapiro, Nat, and Nat Hentoff, comps. Hear me talkin' to ya; the story of jazz as told by the men who made it. New York, Dover Publications [1966,c1955] xvi, 429 p. ML3561.J3S46 1966"This Dover edition is a reprint of the work originally published by Rinehart and Company, Inc., in 1955."
1377Talley, Thomas W., comp. Negro folk rhymes, wise and otherwise, with a study. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1968, c1922] 347 p. (Kennikat Press series in Negro culture and history) PS595.N3T3 1968Includes music (principally melodies with words).
1378Thurman, Howard. Deep river; reflections on the religious insight of certain of the Negro spirituals. Illustrated by Elizabeth Orton Jones. [Rev. and enl.] New York, Harper [1955] 93 p. illus. ML3556.T55 1955
1379Thurman, Howard. The Negro spiritual speaks of life and death. New York, Harper [1947] 55 p. (The Ingersoll lecture, Harvard University, 1947) ML3556.T56
1380Trotter, James M. Music and some highly musical people; containing brief chapters on I. A description of music. II. The music of nature. III. A glance at the history of music. IV. The power, beauty, and uses of music. Following which are given sketches of the lives of remarkable musicians of the colored race. With portraits, and an appendix containing copies of music composed by colored men. Boston, Lee and Shepard, 1878. 353, 152 p. ports. [ML60.T85] [TR: ML385.T76]Music: Appendix, p. 4-152.
1381Williams, Martin T. Jazz masters of New Orleans. New York, Macmillan Co. [1967] xvii, 287 p. ports. (The Macmillan jazz masters series) ML3561.J3W5315Bibliographies and discographies at ends of chapters.
1382Bell, Inge P. CORE and the strategy of nonviolence. New York, Random House [1968] 214 p. (Random House studies in sociology) E185.61.B37Includes bibliographies.
1383Brooks, Charles H. A history and manual of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America. Philadelphia, 1893. 257 p. ports. HS1171.3.B8
1384Cass, Donn A. Negro freemasonry and segregation; an historical study of prejudice against American Negroes as Freemasons, and the position of Negro Freemasonry in the Masonic fraternity. Chicago, E. A. Cook Publications, 1957. 152 p. illus. HS883.C3Bibliography: p. [150]-152.
1385Clark, Alexander G. History of Prince Hall Freemasonry (1775-1945). Des Moines, United Grand Lodge of Iowa, F. & A. M. (Prince Hall Affiliation) [1947] 337 p. port. HS883.C47Completed by S. Joe Brown after the death of the author."With special reference to the Grand Lodge of Missouri (Prince Hall Affiliation) and the three Iowa Grand Lodges that grew out of it."
1386Davis, Harry E. A history of freemasonry among Negroes in America. [Cleveland? 1946] 334 p. HS883.D35"Published under auspices of the United Supreme Council, Ancient & Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry, Northern Jurisdiction, U.S.A. (Prince Hall affiliation), Incorporated."Includes bibliographies.
1387Hughes, Langston. Fight for freedom; the story of the NAACP. New York, Norton [1962] 224 p. illus. E185.5.N276H8Bibliography: p. 207-208.
1388Kellogg, Charles F. NAACP, a history of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. v. 1. 1909-1920. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press [1967] 332 p. illus., ports. E185.5.N276K4, v. 1"Bibliographical notes": p. 309-315.
1389Matthews, Joseph B. Communism and the NAACP. [Atlanta, Georgia Commission on Education, 1958?] 2 v. E185.5.M3
1390Miller, Helen S. The history of Chi Eta Phi Sorority, Inc., 1932-1967. Durham, N.C. [Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1968] xvi, 244 p. ports. LJ105.C45M5
1391Myers, Phineas B. Ninety-five years after Lincoln; a history of the Urban League of Dayton, Ohio. [2d, rev. ed.] New York, Exposition Press [1959] 103 p. illus. F499.D2M9 1959"The 1950 edition was published under the title: Eighty-five Years after Lincoln."
1392National Urban League. The National Urban League re-examined; a policy to guide the Urban League in its interracial social service program. Statement and recommendations from the board convention of the National Urban League, April 15-17, 1955.... Kansas City, Missouri. [New York, 1955] 40 p. E185.5.N33A44
1393National Urban League. The Urban League story, 1910-1960; golden 50th anniversary year book. [William R. Simms, editor. New York, c1961] 66 p. illus. E185.5.N33A53
1394Record, Wilson. Race and radicalism; the NAACP and the Communist Party in conflict. Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell University Press [1964] xv, 237 p. (Communism in American life) E185.5.N276R4Cornell studies in civil liberty.Bibliographical footnotes.
1395Strickland, Arvarh E. History of the Chicago Urban League. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 1966. 286 p. F548.9.N3S76Bibliography: p. [265]-272. Bibliographical footnotes.
1396Voorhis, Harold V. Negro masonry in the United States. New York City, H. Emmerson, 1940. 132 p. facsims., ports. HS883.V6Bibliography: p. 126-128.
1396aVroman, Mary E. Shaped to its purpose: Delta Sigma Theta—the first fifty years. New York, Random House [1965] 213 p. LJ145.D58V7
1397Wesley, Charles H. The history of Alpha Phi Alpha; a development in Negro college life. [3d ed., rev. and enl.] Washington, Foundation Publishers, 1939. xxi, 396 p. illus., ports. LJ121.A55W4 1939"National Alpha Phi Alpha hymn" (words and music): p. 313-315.
1398Wesley, Charles H. History of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, 1898-1954. Washington, Association for the Study of Negro Life and History [1955] 503 p. illus. HS2259.E53W4
1399Wesley, Charles H. The history of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Ohio, 1849-1960; an epoch in American fraternalism. Wilberforce, Ohio, Central State College Press [1961] 457 p. illus. HS887.O3W4
1400Wynn, Daniel W. The NAACP versus Negro revolutionary protest; a comparative study of the effectiveness of each movement. New York, Exposition Press [1955] 115 p. (Exposition—University book) E185.61.W98Bibliography: p. [103]-110.
1401Zinn, Howard. S N C C, the new abolitionists. Boston, Beacon Press [1964] 246 p. E185.61.Z49
1402Aikin, Charles, ed. The Negro votes. San Francisco, Chandler Pub. Co. [1962] 377 p. illus. (Chandler publications in political science) DLC-LL [TR: KF4893.A7A35]
1403American Negro Academy, Washington, D.C. The Negro and the elective franchise. A series of papers and a sermon. Washington, 1905. 85 p. (Occasional papers, no. 11) [E184.N3A5] [TR: E185.5.A51 no. 11]Contents.—1. Meaning and need of the movement to reduce southern representation [by] A. H. Grimke.—2. The penning of the Negro (the Negro vote in the States of the revised constitutions) [by] C. C. Cook.—3. The Negro vote in the States whose constitutions have not been specifically revised [by] John Hope.—4. The potentiality of the Negro vote, North and West [by] John L. Love.—5. Migration and distribution of the Negro population as affecting the elective franchise [by] Kelly Miller.—6. The Negro and his citizenship [by] Rev. F. J. Grimke.
1404Ashmore, Harry S. The man in the middle. Columbia, University of Missouri Press [1966] 58 p. (The Paul Anthony Brick lectures, 5th ser.) E846.A8
1405Bailey, Harry A., ed. Negro politics in America. Columbus, Ohio, C. E. Merrill Books [1967] 455 p. illus., maps. E185.6.B15Includes bibliographical references.
1406Banfield, Edward C., and James Q. Wilson. City politics. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1963. 362 p. illus. (Publications of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University) JS331.B28Bibliographical footnotes.
1407Brewer, John Mason. Negro legislators of Texas and their descendants; a history of the Negro in Texas politics from Reconstruction to disfranchisement, with an introduction by Herbert P. Gambrell. Dallas, Tex., Mathis Pub. Co. [c1935] 134 p. map, ports. E185.93.T4B7
1408Brogan, Denis W. Politics in America. New York, Harper [c1954] 467 p. JK268.B72 1954a [TR: Brogan, D. W.]Bibliography: p. 436-441.Chapter 3 is on race and politics.
1409Brooke, Edward W. The challenge of change; crisis in our two-party system. Boston, Little, Brown [1966] xviii, 269 p. E743.B77Bibliography: p. 267-269.
1409aBrown, William G. The new politics, and other papers. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1914. 234 p. port. JK271.B67 [TR: Brown, William Garrott]Contents.—The new politics.—Prophetic voices about America.—The white peril: the immediate danger of the Negro.—The South and the saloon.—President Taft's opportunity.—Greetings to the presidents.
1410Buni, Andrew. The Negro in Virginia politics, 1902-1965. Charlottesville, University Press of Virginia [1967] 296 p. E185.93.V8B86Bibliography: p. [271]-285.
1411Clayton, Edward T. The Negro politician, his success and failure. With an introduction by Martin Luther King, Jr. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1964. xiv, 213 p. E185.6.C637
1412Cornell-Tompkins County Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Fayette County, Tennessee. Step by step; evolution and operation of the Cornell students' civil-rights project in Tennessee, summer, 1964, by Fayette County Project Volunteers. New York, Published for the Fayette County Fund by W. W. Norton [1965] 128 p. illus. F443.F3C6Edited by Douglas F. Dowd and Mary D. Nichols.
1413Coulter, Ellis Merton. Negro legislators in Georgia during the Reconstruction period. Athens, Georgia Historical Quarterly, 1968. 209 p. port. E185.93.G4C6"This book is limited to 250 copies."Contains articles which originally appeared in the Georgia Historical Quarterly.Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [181]-196). Bibliography: p. [197]-201.
1414Cox, LaWanda C. F., and John H. Cox. Politics, principle, and prejudice, 1865-1866; dilemma of Reconstruction America. [New York] Free Press of Glencoe [1963] 294 p. E666.C84Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 233-281). Bibliography: p. 283-286.
1415Cromwell, John W. The challenge of the disfranchised; a plea for the enforcement of the 15th amendment. Washington, The Academy, 1924. 10 p. (American Negro Academy. Occasional papers, no. 22) E185.5.A51 no. 22
1416De Santis, Vincent P. Republicans face the Southern question: the new departure years, 1877-1897. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1959. 275 p. maps. (The Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science, ser. 77, no. 1) H31.J6 ser. 77, no. 1 F215.D345Bibliographical footnotes.
1417Edmonds, Helen G. The Negro and fusion politics in North Carolina, 1894-1901. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1951] 260 p. illus., maps. E185.93.N6E4Bibliography: p. 239-247.
1418Fleming, George J. An all-Negro ticket in Baltimore. [New York] Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1960] 16 p. (Case studies in practical politics) JS590.Z5 4th.F7
1419Ford, James W. The Negro and the democratic front. Introduction by A. W. Berry. New York, International Publishers [c1938] 222 p. port. E185.6.F67
1420Gosnell, Harold F. Negro politicians; the rise of Negro politics in Chicago. With an introduction by James Q. Wilson. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1967] [TR: 1935] xix, 396 p. maps, ports. F548.9.N3G67 1967"Originally published in 1935."Bibliographical footnotes.
1421Heard, Alexander. A two-party South? Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1952] xviii, 334 p. diagrs., maps. F215.H43Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 281-318).
1422Hirshson, Stanley P. Farewell to the bloody shirt; northern Republicans & the southern Negro, 1877-1893. Introduction by David Donald. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1962] 334 p. E661.H58Bibliography: p. 259-273.
1423Jarrell, Hampton M. Wade Hampton and the Negro; the road not taken. Columbia, University of South Carolina Press, 1949. 209 p. port. E467.1.H19J3Bibliography: p. 189-193.
1424Jarrette, Alfred Q. Politics and the Negro. Boston, Vinjano Educational Publishers, 1964. 54 p. illus., facsims., map, ports. E185.96.J3Bibliography: p. 54.
1425Keech, William R. The impact of Negro voting; the role of the vote in the quest for equality. Chicago, Rand McNally [1968] 113 p. (American politics research series) JK1929.A2K4Bibliographical footnotes.
1426Key, Valdimer O. Southern politics in State and Nation. With the assistance of Alexander Heard. New York, Knopf, 1949. xxvi, 675, xiv p. illus., maps, ports. F215.K45 1949Bibliographical footnotes.
1427Ladd, Everett C. Negro political leadership in the South. Ithaca, N.Y., Cornell University Press [1966] 348 p. fold. map. E185.61.L22Bibliography: p. 333-342.
1428Lewinson, Paul. Race, class & party; a history of Negro suffrage and white politics in the South. New York, Russell & Russell, 1963 [c1959] 302 p. illus. JK1929.A2L4 1963First issued in 1932.Bibliography: p. 283-292.
1429Logan, Rayford W., ed. The attitude of the southern white press toward Negro suffrage, 1932-1940. With a foreword by Charles H. Wesley. Washington, Foundation Publishers, 1940. 115 p. JK1929.A2L6
1430Mabry, William A. The Negro in North Carolina politics since Reconstruction. Durham, N.C., Duke University Press, 1940. 87 p. (Historical papers of the Trinity College Historical Society, ser. 23) F251.D83 ser. 23Bibliography: p. [84]-87.
1431Matthews, Donald R., and James W. Prothro. Negroes and the new southern politics. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1966] xvi, 551 p. illus. E185.61.M38Bibliographical footnotes.
1432Moon, Henry L. Balance of power: the Negro vote. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1948. 256 p. JK2275.N4M6Bibliographical footnotes.
1433Morton, Richard L. The Negro in Virginia politics, 1865-1902. Charlottesville, University of Virginia, 1919. 199 p. fold. maps. (Publications of the University of Virginia. Phelps-Stokes fellowship paper, no. 4) E185.93.V8M82Published also as thesis (Ph.D.), University of Virginia, 1919.Bibliography: p. [163]-165.
1434Nolan, William A. Communism versus the Negro. Chicago, H. Regnery Co., 1951. xvii, 276 p. E185.61.N87Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [207]-267).
1435Nowlin, William F. The Negro in American national politics. Boston, Stratford Co. [c1931] 148 p. JK2275.N4N6Bibliography: p. 145-148.
1436Ogden, Frederic D. The poll tax in the South. [University] University of Alabama Press, 1958. xiv, 301 p. diagrs., tables. HJ4931.A13O4"Originally submitted as a doctoral dissertation at the Johns Hopkins University."Bibliographical footnotes.
1437Olbrich, Emil. The development of sentiment on Negro suffrage to 1860. [Madison] University of Wisconsin, 1912. 135 p. (Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin, no. 477. History series, v. 3, no. 1) H31.W62 v. 3, no. 1 JK1923.O55Thesis (M.A.)—University of Wisconsin, 1906.Bibliography: p. 129-135.
1438Perry, Jennings. Democracy begins at home, the Tennessee fight on the poll tax. Cartoons by Tom Little. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott Co. [1944] 280 p. illus., diagr. HJ4931.T4P4
1439Pike, James S. The prostrate State; South Carolina under Negro government. Edited with an introduction to the Torchbook ed. by Robert F. Durden. New York, Harper & Row [1968] xlii, 279 p. (Harper Torchbooks, TB3085) F274.P632 1968Reprint of the 1874 ed.Bibliographical footnotes.
1440Price, Hugh D. The Negro and Southern politics; a chapter of Florida history. With an introduction by William G. Carleton. [New York] New York University Press, 1957. xviii, 133 p. facsims., maps, tables. E185.93.F5P7Based on thesis (M.A.)—University of Florida.Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 113-124). Bibliography: p. 125-128.
1441Price, Margaret W. The Negro and the ballot in the South. Atlanta, Southern Regional Council, 1959. 83 p. tables. JK1929.A2P7Bibliographical footnotes.
1442Record, Wilson. The Negro and the Communist Party. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1951] 340 p. E185.61.R29Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 317-331).
1443Riley, Jerome R. The philosophy of Negro suffrage. Hartford, Conn., American Pub. Co., 1895. 110 p. port. E185.61.R57
1444Schechter, Betty. The peaceable revolution. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1963. 243 p. illus. HM278.S35
1445Smith, Samuel D. The Negro in Congress, 1870-1901. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1966, c1940] 160 p. E185.6.S64 1966Bibliography: p. 145-151.
1446Strong, Donald S. Negroes, ballots, and judges; national voting rights legislation in the Federal courts. University, Published for the Bureau of Public Administration, University of Alabama, by University of Alabama Press [1968] 100 p. KF4893.S8Bibliographical footnotes.
1447Taper, Bernard. Gomillion versus Lightfoot. New York, McGraw-Hill [1963] 131 p. (McGraw-Hill paperbacks, 62855) JK1348.A2Z5 1963Charles G. Gomillion, a Tuskegee professor, v. Mayor Philip M. Lightfoot, in a singular case, argued before the Supreme Court the denial of Negro voting rights in Tuskegee, Alabama.
1448Tatum, Elbert L. The changed political thought of the Negro, 1915-1940; with a foreword by Lawrence A. Davis. New York, Exposition Press [1951] 205 p. JK2275.N4T3Bibliography: p. 195-205.
1449U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Voting; hearings. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1959. 325 p. forms. JK1929.A4U5Hearings held Dec. 8, 1958, to Jan. 9, 1959, in Montgomery, Alabama.
1450Vander, Harry J. The political and economic progress of the American Negro, 1940-1963. Dubuque, Iowa, W. C. Brown Book Co. [1968] 111 p. illus. JK2275.N4V3Includes bibliographies.
1451Wallace, Jesse T. A history of the Negroes of Mississippi from 1865 to 1890. Clinton, Miss., 1927. 188 p. E185.93.M6W2Thesis (Ph. D.)—Columbia University, 1928.Vita.Bibliography: p. 185-187.
1451aWardlaw, Ralph W. Negro suffrage in Georgia, 1867-1930. [Athens, Ga., 1932] 91 p. ([Georgia. University] Phelps-Stokes fellowship studies no. 11) E185.5.G35 no. 11Bulletin of the University of Georgia, v. 33, no. 2a.Thesis (M.A.)—University of Georgia.Bibliography: p. 86-91.
1452Watters, Pat, and Reese Cleghorn. Climbing Jacob's ladder; the arrival of Negroes in Southern politics. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1967] xvi, 389 p. JK1929.A2W3Includes bibliographical references.
1453Weeks, Stephen B. The history of Negro suffrage in the South. Boston, Ginn, 1894. p. [671]-703. JK1929.A2W5Reprinted from Political Science Quarterly, v. 9, no. 4.
1454Weinberg, Kenneth G. Black victory; Carl Stokes and the winning of Cleveland. Chicago, Quadrangle Books, 1968. 250 p. facsim., ports. F499.C6S85
1455Wilson, James Q. Negro politics; the search for leadership. Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1960] 342 p. JK1924.W5Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 319-333).
1456The Black American and the press [by] Armistead S. Pride [and others]. Edited by Jack Lyle. Los Angeles, W. Ritchie Press [1968] xviii, 86 p. E185.615.B53Report of a symposium developed by the Department of Journalism, University of California at Los Angeles.Bibliographical footnotes.
1457Brooks, Maxwell R. The Negro press re-examined; political content of leading Negro newspapers. Boston, Christopher Pub. House [1959] 125 p. PN4888.N4B7Includes bibliographies.
1458Detweiler, Frederick G. The Negro press in the United States. College Park, Md., McGrath Pub. Co., 1968 [c1922] 274 p. PN4888.N4D4 1968Includes bibliographical references.
1459Graham, Hugh D. Crisis in print; desegregation and the press in Tennessee. [Nashville] Vanderbilt University Press [1967] 338 p. illus. E185.93.T3G7Includes bibliographical references.
1459aOak, Vishnu V. The Negro entrepreneur. Yellow Springs, Ohio, Printed for the author by the Antioch Press, 1948-49. 2 v. illus. E185.8.O2Bibliography: v. 1, p. 138-150; v. 2, p. 209-220.Contents.—v. 1. The Negro newspaper.—v. 2. The Negro's adventure in general business.
1460Penn, Irvine G. The Afro-American press and its editors. With contributions by Hon. Frederick Douglass, Hon. John R. Lynch [etc.]. Springfield, Mass., Willey, 1891. 565 p. illus., fold. facsim., ports. PN4888.N4P4 [TR: Penn, I. Garland]
1461Simpson, George E. The Negro in the Philadelphia press. Philadelphia, 1936. xv, 158 p. diagrs., map, tables. PN4899.P48S5 1934Thesis (Ph.D.)—University of Pennsylvania, 1934.An analysis of Negro material published in the Philadelphia Record, Public Ledger, Evening Bulletin, and Philadelphia Inquirer during 1908-1932.Bibliography: p. [153]-156.
1462Spearman, Walter, and Sylvan Meyer. Racial crisis and the press. Atlanta, Southern Regional Council, 1960. 54 p. PN4893.S65
1463American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia. The Negro protest. Special editor: Arnold M. Rose. Philadelphia, 1965. 214 p. (Its Annals, v. 357) H1.A4 v. 357 E185.61.A45Bibliographical footnotes.
1464American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia. Racial desegregation and integration, edited by Ira De A. Reid. Philadelphia, 1956. 211 p. (Its Annals, v. 304) H1.A4 v. 304 E185.61.A46Bibliographical footnotes.
1465Ashmore, Harry S. The other side of Jordan. New York, Norton [1960] 155 p. E185.61.A73
1466Atkins, James A. The age of Jim Crow. New York, Vantage Press [1964] 300 p. E185.97.A84A3
1467Austin, Frank E. The history of segregation. Winter Park, Fla., Printed by the Rollins Press, c1956. 260 p. HT1589.A9
1468Baker, Ray S. Following the color line; American Negro citizenship in the progressive era. Introduction and notes to the Torchbook ed. by Dewey W. Grantham, Jr. New York, Harper & Row [1964] xviii, 311 p. illus., ports. (American perspectives) E185.61.B16 1964Harper torchbooks. The University library. "TB 3053."Chapters 1-8, 10-14, with slight revisions, originally appeared in the American Magazine, Apr. 1907-Sept. 1908.
1469Baldwin, James. The fire next time. New York, Dial Press, 1963. 120 p. E185.61.B195
1470Baldwin, James. Notes of a native son. New York, Dial Press, 1963 [c1955] 158 p. E185.61.B2 1963
1471Banton, Michael P. Race relations. New York, Basic Books [c1967] xiv, 434 p. illus., maps. HT1521.B34 1967bBibliography: p. [394]-415.
1472Bennett, Lerone. Confrontation: black and white. Foreword by A. Philip Randolph. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1965. 321 p. E185.B42Bibliography: p. [305]-312.
1473Boyd, Malcolm. You can't kill the dream. Reflections. Photos compiled by Bruce Roberts. The American dream, by Eric Sevareid. Richmond, John Knox Press [1968] 80 p. illus., ports. E185.61.B776
1474Boyle, Sarah P. The desegregated heart; a Virginian's stand in time of transition. New York, Morrow, 1962. 364 p. E185.61.B778
1475Boyle, Sarah P. For human beings only; a primer of human understanding. New York, Seabury Press, 1964. 127 p. E185.61.B779
1476Braden, Anne. The wall between. New York, Monthly Review Press, 1958. 306 p. F459.L8B7Autobiographical.
1477Brink, William J., and Louis Harris. The Negro revolution in America; what Negroes want, why and how they are fighting, whom they support, what whites think of them and their demands. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1964 [c1963] 249 p. tables. E185.61.B795"Based on the nationwide survey by Newsweek magazine."
1478Bunche, Ralph J. A world view of race. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1968, c1936] 98 p. (Kennikat Press series in Negro culture and history) HT1521.B78 1968Includes bibliographies.
1479Caldwell, Erskine. In search of Bisco. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux [1965] 219 p. E185.61.C2Story of the author's visits to the deep South in search of his childhood playmate, a Negro boy named Bisco, from whom he was separated by the laws of a segregated society.
1480Carter, Hodding. The South strikes back. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1959. 213 p. E185.61.C28
1481Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. Lyndon B. Johnson, Robert C. Weaver, Joseph P. Lyford, and John Cogley on the Negro as an American. [Santa Barbara, Calif., 1963] 18 p. (Its Occasional papers) E185.61.C4
1482Clark, Dennis. The ghetto game; racial conflicts in the city. New York, Sheed and Ward [1962] 245 p. E184.A1C53Includes bibliographies.
1483Clark, Kenneth B. Dark ghetto; dilemmas of social power. Foreword by Gunnar Myrdal. New York, Harper & Row [1965] xxix, 251 p. illus. F128.9.N3C65
1484Clark, Kenneth B. The Negro protest: James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King talk with Kenneth B. Clark. Boston, Beacon Press [1963] 56 p. E185.61.C62
1485Cleaver, Eldridge. Eldridge Cleaver; post-prison writings and speeches. Edited and with an appraisal by Robert Scheer. New York, Random House [1969] xxxiii, 211 p. E185.615.C63
1486Cleaver, Eldridge. Soul on ice. With an introduction by Maxwell Geismar. New York, McGraw-Hill [1967, c1968] xv, 210 p. E185.97.C6"A Ramparts book."
1487Collins, Winfield H. The truth about lynching and the Negro in the South, in which the author pleads that the South be made safe for the white race. New York, Neale Pub. Co., 1918. 163 p. E185.65.C7
1488Conference on Negro-Jewish Relations in the United States, New York, 1964. Negro-Jewish relations in the United States; papers and proceedings. New York, Citadel Press, 1966. 71 p. E185.61.C7545 1964"Convened by the Conference on Jewish Social Studies, New York City."First published in Jewish Social Studies, v. 27, Jan. 1965.Bibliography: p. 67-71.
1489Connecticut. Commission on Civil Rights. Attitudes toward racial integration in Connecticut, by Henry G. Stetler, supervisor, Research Division. Hartford, 1961. 50 p. illus. E185.93.C7A52
1490Cook, James G. The segregationists. New York, Appleton-Century-Crofts [1962] 376 p. E184.A1C62
1491Creger, Ralph. A look down the lonesome road, by Ralph Creger with Erwin L. McDonald. Foreword by Harry Golden. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1964. xiv, 223 p. E185.61.C9
1492Curry, Jesse E., and Glen D. King. Race tensions and the police. With a foreword by George Eastman. Springfield, Ill., Thomas [1962] 137 p. (Police science series) HV8069.C8Bibliography: p. 135.
1493Dabbs, James M. The Southern heritage. New York, Knopf, 1958. 273 p. E185.61.D2
1494Dees, Jesse W., and James S. Hadley. Jim Crow. Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor Publishers [1951] 529 p. illus. E185.61.D4Bibliography: p. 483-495.
1495Doyle, Bertram W. The etiquette of race relations in the South. Port Washington, N.Y., Kennikat Press [1968, c1937] xxv, 249 p. (Kennikat Press series in Negro culture and history) E185.61.D766Bibliography: p. 173-190.
1496DuBois, William E. B. Dusk of dawn; an essay toward an autobiography of a race concept. New York, Harcourt, Brace [1940] 334 p. E185.97.D73
1497Dykeman, Wilma, and James Stokely. Neither black nor white. New York, Rinehart [1957] 371 p. E185.61.D993
1498Essien-Udom, Essien U. Black nationalism; a search for an identity in America. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1962] 367 p. illus., ports. E185.61.E75Bibliography: p. 351-360.
1499Evers, Mrs. Medgar. For us, the living, by Mrs. Medgar Evers with William Peters. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1967. 378 p. E185.97.E94E9
1500Fager, Charles E. White reflections on black power. Grand Rapids, W. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. [1967] 118 p. E185.615.F3
1501Fields, Uriah J. The Montgomery story; the unhappy effects of the Montgomery bus boycott. New York, Exposition Press [1959] 87 p. E185.89.T8F5
1501aFontaine, William T. Reflections on segregation, desegregation, power and morals. Springfield, Ill., Thomas [1967] 162 p. (American lecture series, publication no. 700. A monograph in the Bannerstone division of American lectures in philosophy) E185.615.F6Bibliographical footnotes.
1502Fortune, T. Thomas. Black and white; land, labor, and politics in the South. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 310 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.61.F74 1968Reprint of work first published in 1884.
1503Franklin, John H., comp. Color and race. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1968. xvi, 391 p. (The Daedalus library, v. 13) HT1521.F65Includes bibliographies.
1504Frazier, Edward Franklin. On race relations; selected writings. Edited and with an introduction by G. Franklin Edwards. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1968] xx, 331 p. illus. (The Heritage of sociology) E185.F835 1968Includes bibliographical references."Bibliography of E. Franklin Frazier": p. 325-331.
1505Ginzberg, Eli, and Alfred S. Eichner. The troublesome presence; American democracy and the Negro. [New York] Free Press of Glencoe [1964] 339 p. E185.G5Includes bibliographical references.
1506Harkey, Ira B. The smell of burning crosses; an autobiography of a Mississippi newspaperman. Jacksonville, Ill., Harris-Wolfe [1967] 208 p. E185.61.H248
1507Harris, Janet, and Julius W. Hobson. Black pride; a people's struggle. New York, McGraw-Hill [1969] 160 p. illus., ports. E185.H3Traces the history of black people in America and the struggles of such leaders as Frederick Douglass, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King to establish a racial identity and equal rights for Negroes as citizens of the United States.Bibliography: p. 153-157.
1508Hays, Brooks. A southern moderate speaks. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1959] 231 p. E185.61.H435
1509Height, Dorothy I. Step by step with interracial groups. [Rev. ed.] New York, Publications Services, National Board, YMCA [1955] 56 p. HT1521.H4 1955
1510Hentoff, Nat. The new equality. New York, Viking Press [1964] 243 p. E185.61.H49
1511Johnson, James W. Negro Americans, what now? New York, Viking Press, 1934. 103 p. E185.61.J69
1512Kerlin, Robert T. The voice of the Negro, 1919. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 188 p. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.61.K4 1968Reprint of the 1920 ed.
1513Killens, John O. Black man's burden. New York, Trident Press, 1965. 176 p. E185.61.K487
1514Lester, Julius. Look out, Whitey! Black power's gon' get your mama! New York, Dial Press, 1968. 152 p. E185.615.L475Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 147-149). Bibliography: p. 151-152.
1515Lightfoot, Claude M. Ghetto rebellion to black liberation. New York, International Publishers [1968] 192 p. E185.61.L553
1516Lubell, Samuel. White and black: test of a nation. 2d ed., rev. New York, Harper & Row [1966] xiv, 233 p. (Harper colophon books, CN75J) E185.61.L8 1966Bibliographical references included in "Reading notes" (p. 219-226).
1517McWilliams, Carey. Brothers under the skin. Rev. ed. Boston, Little, Brown [1964] xix, 364 p. E184.A1M19 1964Bibliographical footnotes.
1518Marx, Gary T. Protest and prejudice; a study of belief in the black community. New York, Harper & Row [1967] xxviii, 228, 27 p. E185.615.M32"Volume three in a series based on the University of California Five-year Study of Anti-Semitism in the United States, being conducted by the Survey of Research Center ... under a grant from the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith."
1519Moody, Anne. Coming of age in Mississippi. New York, Dial Press, 1968. 348 p. E185.97.M65A3Autobiographical.
1520Moon, Bucklin. The high cost of prejudice. New York, J. Messner [1947] xvi, 168 p. E185.61.M75"Check list for further reading": p. 165-168.
1521Moton, Robert R. What the Negro thinks. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, 1929. 267 p. E185.61.M934
1522National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. An appeal to the world; a statement on the denial of human rights to minorities in the case of citizens of Negro descent in the United States of America and an appeal to the United Nations for redress. Prepared under the editorial supervision of W. E. Burghardt Du Bois. [New York, 1947] 94 p. NcDIncludes bibliographical references.
1523National Urban League. The racial gap, 1955-1965: 1965-1975 in income, unemployment, education, health [and] housing [by Sylvia Lauter]. New York [1967] 41 p. E185.615.N3Bibliography: p. 40-41.
1524Negro and Jew: an encounter in America; a symposium compiled by Midstream magazine. Shlomo Katz, editor. New York, Macmillan [1967] xvi, 141 p. E185.61.N386
1525New South (Atlanta). Changing patterns in the new South; a unique record of the growth of democracy in the South in the last decade, from the pages of the Southern Regional Council's publication New South. [Atlanta, Southern Regional Council, 1955] 116 p. E185.61.N47Many of the selections have been condensed. Several of the articles were originally issued in newspapers or adapted from speeches, before being printed in the New South.
1526New York (State) State Commission for Human Rights. Research Division. Negroes in five New York cities, a study of problems, achievement, and trends, by Eunice and George Grier. [New York, New York State Commission against Discrimination] 1958. 113 leaves. illus. E185.93.N56N46Bibliography: leaves C1-C9.
1526aNewby, Idus A. Challenge to the Court; social scientists and the defense of segregation, 1954-1966. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1967] 239 p. E185.61.N46Bibliographical footnotes.
1527Newby, Idus A. Jim Crow's defense; anti-Negro thought in America, 1900-1930. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press, 1965. xv, 230 p. E185.61.N475Bibliography: p. 201-221.
1528Nolen, Claude H. The Negro's image in the South; the anatomy of white supremacy. Lexington, University of Kentucky Press, 1967. xix, 232 p. E185.61.N872"Bibliographical essay": p. [211]-218.
1529Osofsky, Gilbert. The burden of race; a documentary history of Negro-white relations in America. New York, Harper & Row [1967] xvi, 654 p. E185.O8Bibliography: p. 637-641.
1530Park, Robert E. Race and culture. Glencoe, Ill., Free Press [1950] xxii, 403 p. port. (His Collected papers, v. 1) HT1521.P3Bibliographical footnotes.
1531Peck, James. Freedom ride. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1962. 160 p. E185.61.P43
1532Peters, William. The Southern temper. With a foreword by Harry Golden. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1959. 283 p. E185.61.P47Bibliographical references included in "Acknowledgments" (p. [9]-10).
1533Petersen, William, ed. American social patterns; studies of race relations, popular heroes, voting, union democracy, and government bureaucracy. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1956. 263 p. illus. (Doubleday anchor books, A86) HN57.P4Includes bibliographical references.
1534Phelps-Stokes Fund. Negro status and race relations in the United States, 1911-1946; the thirty-five year report of the Phelps-Stokes Fund, by Anson Phelps Stokes, with contributions from Channing H. Tobias [and others] and a documentary appendix. New York, 1948. 219 p. E185.61.P53Cover title: Progress in Negro Status and Race Relations, 1911-1946.Includes bibliographies.
1535Pope, Liston. The kingdom beyond caste. New York, Friendship Press [1957] 170 p. HT1521.P6
1535aPowledge, Fred. Black power, white resistance; notes on the new civil war. Cleveland, World Pub. Co. [1967] 282 p. E185.615.P6Bibliographical footnotes.
1536Proudfoot, Merrill. Diary of a sit-in. Foreword by Frank P. Graham. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1962] 204 p. F444.K7P95
1537Putnam, Carleton. Race and reason, a Yankee view. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1961] 125 p. E185.61.P84
1538Quint, Howard H. Profile in black and white; a frank portrait of South Carolina. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1958] 214 p. E185.93.S7Q5
1539Randel, William P. The Ku Klux Klan; a century of infamy. Philadelphia, Chilton Books [1965] xvii, 300 p. illus. E668.R18"Bibliographical note": p. 265-294.
1540Raper, Arthur F. The tragedy of lynching. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1933. 499 p. diagr., map. ([University of North Carolina. Social study series]) HV6464.R3Presented by the Southern Commission on the Study of Lynching.
1541Reuter, Edward B. The American race problem; a study of the Negro. New York, Crowell [c1927] 448 p. diagrs., map, tables. (Crowell's social science series) E185.61.R44"Readings" at end of each chapter.
1542Rogers, Joel A. From "superman" to man. 5th ed. New York, J. A. Rogers Publications [c1941] 132 p. E185.61.R72 1941 [Rogers, J. A.]
1543Rowan, Carl T. Go South to sorrow. New York, Random House [1957] 246 p. E185.61.R855
1544Rowan, Carl T. South of freedom. New York, Knopf, 1952. 270 p. E185.61.R86
1545Rumbough, Constance H. Crumbling barriers. Foreword by Charles S. Johnson. New York, Fellowship Publications [1948] 45 p. E185.61.R935
1546Shannon, Alexander H. The racial integrity of the American Negro. Nashville, Printed for the author by Parthenon Press [1951] 264 p. E185.62.S52 1951Bibliography: p. 261.
1546aSilberman, Charles E. Crisis in black and white. New York, Random House [1964] 370 p. E185.61.S57Bibliographical footnotes.
1547Smith, James Wesley. The strange way of truth. New York, Vantage Press [1968] 145 p. E185.93.V8S55Bibliography: p. 141-145.
1548Stanton, William R. The leopard's spots: scientific attitudes toward race in America, 1815-59. [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1960] 244 p. GN17.S75Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 197-238).
1549Stover, William H. M. Don't just deplore discrimination, do something! New York, Vantage Press [1964] 188 p. form. E185.61.S9
1550Talmadge, Herman E. You and segregation. Birmingham, Ala., Vulcan Press [1955] 79 p. E185.61.T2
1551Thompson, Edgar T., ed. Race relations and the race problem; a definition and an analysis. Contributors: Robert E. Park [and others] New York, Greenwood Press, 1968 [c1939] xv, 338 p. maps. E184.A1T5 1968Bibliography: p. [307]-328.
1552Thurman, Howard. The luminous darkness; a personal interpretation of the anatomy of segregation and the ground of hope. New York, Harper & Row [1965] 113 p. E185.61.T47
1553Tucker, Sterling. Beyond the burning: life and death of the ghetto. New York, Association Press [1968] 160 p. E185.615.T8Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 152-160).
1554Tumin, Melvin M. Desegregation: resistance and readiness, by Melvin M. Tumin, with the assistance of Warren Eason [and others]. Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1958. xvii, 270 p. tables. E185.61.T88Bibliographical footnotes.
1555Vander Zanden, James W. Race relations in transition; the segregation crisis in the South. New York, Random House [1965] 135 p. (Studies in sociology, SS25) E185.61.V33Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 118-126). "Suggested readings": p. 127-129.
1556Vaughan, Curtis M. Faubus' folly; the story of segregation. New York, Vantage Press [1959] 160 p. E185.61.V36
1557Warren, Robert Penn. Segregation, the inner conflict in the South. New York, Random House [1956] 66 p. E185.61.W2
1558Weatherby, William J. Love in the shadows. New York, Stein and Day [1966] 182 p. E185.61.W35 1966First published in 1965 under title: Breaking the Silence.
1559Weatherford, Willis D., and Charles S. Johnson. Race relations; adjustment of whites and Negroes in the United States. Boston, D. C. Heath [c1934] 590 p. (Social relations series) E185.W42Bibliography: p. 556-576.
1560White, Walter F. How far the promised land? New York, Viking Press, 1955. 244 p. E185.61.W6
1561White, Walter F. Rope & faggot; a biography of Judge Lynch. New York, Knopf, 1929. 272 p. front., tables. HV6457.W45Bibliography: p. 269-272.
1562Williams, O. R. Segregation and common sense. Boston, Forum Pub. Co. [1961] 217 p. E185.61.W737
1563Williamson, Joel, comp. The origins of segregation. Boston, D. C. Heath [1968] xiv, 113 p. (Problems in American Civilization) E185.615.W5Contents.—The strange career of Jim Crow, by C. V. Woodward.—The color line, by G. B. Tindall.—Jim Crow laws and miscegenation, by V. L. Wharton.—Social acceptance and unacceptance, by C. E. Wynes.—The separation of the races, by J. Williamson.—Why Negroes were segregated in the new South, by C. V. Woodward.—In summation, by C. E. Wynes.—The debate on school segregation in South Carolina, 1868.—The Negroes in Negroland, by H. R. Helper.—The Negro, by J. R. Sparkman.—The silent South, by G. W. Cable.—Urban segregation during slavery, by R. C. Wade.—Segregation in the antebellum North, by L. F. Litwack.—Why segregation in postwar Philadelphia, by B. H. Hunt.—Ethnic relations in American communities, by R. M. Williams, Jr.—Suggestions of additional reading (p. 111-113).
1564Wood, Forrest G. Black scare; the racist response to emancipation and Reconstruction. Berkeley, University of California Press, 1968. 219 p. illus. E185.61.W84Bibliography: p. [193]-210.
1565Woodward, Comer Vann. The strange career of Jim Crow. 2d rev. ed. New York, Oxford University Press, 1966. 205 p. E185.61.W86 1966"Notes on reading": p. 193-196.
1566Woofter, Thomas J. Southern race progress, the wavering color line. Introduction by Jonathan Daniels. Washington, Public Affairs Press [1957] 180 p. E185.61.W923
1567Wright, Nathan. Let's work together. New York, Hawthorn Books [1968] 271 p. E185.615.W72
1568Wright, Nathan. Ready to riot. New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston [1968] 148 p. illus., maps. HN80.N685W74Bibliographical footnotes.
1569Wright, Richard. White man, listen! Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1957. 190 p. HT1581.W7Reprint issued by Anchor Books, 1964.
1569aZinn, Howard. The Southern mystique. New York, Knopf, 1964. 267 p. E185.61.Z5"Bibliographical notes": p. 265-267.
1570Berson, Lenora E. Case study of a riot; the Philadelphia story. With commentaries by Alex Rosen and Kenneth B. Clark. New York, Institute of Human Relations Press, American Jewish Committee [1966] 71 p. maps. ([American Jewish Committee. Institute of Human Relations] Pamphlet series, no. 7) F158.9.N3B4
1571California. Governor's Commission on the Los Angeles Riots. Transcripts, depositions, consultants reports, and selected documents. Los Angeles, 1965. 18 v. illus. (part col.), maps. F869.L8C15Includes bibliographies.
1572California. Governor's Commission on the Los Angeles Riots. Violence in the city—an end or a beginning? A report. [Los Angeles] 1965. 101 p. plates (part col.), fold. col. map. F869.L8C17
1573Cohen, Jerry, and William S. Murphy. Burn, baby, burn! The Los Angeles race riot, August 1965. Introduction by Robert Kirsch. New York, Dutton, 1966. 318 p. illus., ports. F869.L8C6
1574Conot, Robert E. Rivers of blood, years of darkness; the unforgettable classic account of the Watts riot. New York, Morrow, 1968 [c1967] 497 p. F869.L8C66 1968Bibliography: p. 493-497.
1575Crump, Spencer. Black riot in Los Angeles; the story of the Watts tragedy. Los Angeles, Trans-Anglo Books [1966] 160 p. illus., facsims., maps (part col.), ports. F869.L8C78"Appendix: The text of the McCone Commission report": p. 125-154.Bibliography: p. 155.
1576Gilbert, Ben W. Ten blocks from the White House; anatomy of the Washington riots of 1968 [by] Ben W. Gilbert and the staff of the Washington Post. New York, Praeger [1968] xix, 245 p. illus., maps. (Praeger paperbacks, P-240) F200.G5
1577Hayden, Thomas. Rebellion in Newark; official violence and ghetto response. New York, Vintage Books [1967] 102 p. maps. F144.N6H27
1578Heaps, Willard A. Riots, U.S.A., 1765-1965. New York, Seabury Press [1966] 186 p. [E178.3.H427] [TR: HV6477.H527 1966]Bibliography: p. 174-182.
1579Illinois. Chicago Commission on Race Relations. The Negro in Chicago; a study of race relations and a race riot in 1919. New York, Arno Press, 1968. xxiv, 672 p. illus., maps. (The American Negro, his history and literature) F548.9.N3I2 1968Reprint of the 1922 ed.
1580Janowitz, Morris. Social control of escalated riots. [Chicago?] University of Chicago, Center for Policy Study [1968] 44 p. HV6477.J3"Prepared for the Center's conference on 'Short Term and Emergency Measures to Avert Urban Violence.'"Bibliographical footnotes.
1581Lee, Alfred M., and Norman D. Humphrey. Race riot, Detroit 1943. With a new introductory essay by Alfred McClung Lee. New York, Octagon Books, 1968 [c1943] xxxiii, 143 p. illus., maps. F574.D4L4 1968Bibliography: p. 142-143.
1582Momboisse, Raymond M. Riots, revolts, and insurrections. Springfield, Ill., C. C. Thomas [1967] xviii, 523 p. HV8055.M6
1583Nelson, Truman J. The torture of mothers. Introduction by Maxwell Geismar. Newburyport, Mass., Garrison Press [1965] 121 p. ports. F128.9.N3N37Experiences related by mothers and children who were subjected to violent treatment at the hands of the police during the Harlem riots of fall 1964.
1584Rudwick, Elliott M. Race riot at East St. Louis, July 2, 1917. Foreword by Oscar Handlin. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press [1964] xvii, 300 p. illus., maps. F549.E2R8Bibliography: p. 285-291.
1585Shogan, Robert, and Tom Craig. The Detroit race riot; a study in violence. Philadelphia, Chilton Books [1964] 199 p. F574.D4S5Bibliography: p. 185-188.
1586Supplemental studies for the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. New York, Praeger [1968] 248 p. forms. (Praeger special studies in U.S. economic and social development) E185.61.S94 1968b"The studies were conducted independently of the Commission and of each other by research groups at the University of Michigan, the Johns Hopkins University, and Columbia University."Bibliographical footnotes.Contents.—Racial attitudes in fifteen American cities, by A. Campbell and H. Schuman.—Between white and black; the faces of American institutions in the ghetto, by P. H. Rossi, and others.—Who riots? A study of participation in the 1967 riots, by R. M. Fogelson and R. B. Hill.
1587U.S. Congress. House. Select Committee on New Orleans Riots. NewOrleans riots. Minority report. [Washington? 1866?] 24 p. F379.N5U5 [TR: F379.N557A85]Presented by B. M. Boyer.From House Report, no. 16, 39th Congress, 2d session.
1588U.S. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. Report. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1968] xv, 425 p. illus., ports. HV6477.A56Commercially published, with an introduction by Tom Wicker, in hard covers by E. P. Dutton and in paperback by Bantam, New York, 1968.
1589Urban riots: violence and social change. Edited by Robert H. Connery. New York, 1968. 190 p. (Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science, v. 29, no. 1) HN58.U7Many of the "papers in this issue ... were delivered at a conference sponsored by the academy in cooperation with the Columbia University Center on Urban Minority Affairs, April 19, 1968."Bibliography: p. 183-190.
1590Walker, Marion E. Black rebellion. Columbia, S.C., National Graphics [1968] 64 p. illus., ports. HV6477.W34
1591Waskow, Arthur I. From race riot to sit-in, 1919 and the 1960s; a study in the connections between conflict and violence. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1966. xviii, 380 p. E185.61.W24 [TR: Waskow, Arthur Ocean]Bibliography: p. [355]-366.
1592Allen, James E. The Negro in New York. Foreword by Arthur Levitt. New York, Exposition Press [1964] 94 p. E185.93.N56A55Bibliography: p. [93]-94.
1593Aukofer, Frank A. City with a chance. Milwaukee, Bruce Pub. Co. [1968] 146 p. F589.M6A93Milwaukee is the city discussed.
1594Bartlett, Irving H. From slave to citizen; the story of the Negro in Rhode Island. Foreword by Benjamin Crocker Clough. Providence, Urban League of Greater Providence, 1954. 76 p. illus. E185.93.R4B3"Bibliographical note": p. 74-76.
1595Beasley, Delilah L. The Negro trail blazers of California; a compilation of records from the California archives in the Bancroft Library at the University of California, in Berkeley; and from the diaries, old papers, and conversations of old pioneers in the State of California. Los Angeles, 1919. 317 p. ports. F870.N38B3 1919bPhoto offset. San Francisco, R and E Research Associates, 1968.Bibliography: p. [13-14].
1596Burgess, Margaret E. Negro leadership in a southern city. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1962] 231 p. illus. E185.61.B95Bibliography: p. [219]-226.
1597California. State Fair Employment Practice Commission. Negro Californians; population, employment, income, education. San Francisco, Division of Fair Employment Practices, 1963. 34 p. E185.93.C2A5"Derived principally from the 1960 Census of population, the statistical tables were compiled by the California Division of Labor Statistics and Research."
1598Chicago. University. Chicago Community Inventory. Chicago's Negro population; characteristics and trends. A report by the Chicago Community Inventory, University of Chicago, to the Office of the Housing and Redevelopment Coordinator and the Chicago Plan Commission. [Chicago] 1956. 109 p. maps. ICU"This report was prepared by Otis Dudley Duncan, associate director, and Beverly Duncan, research assistant."
1599Clark, Peter W. Delta shadows, "a pageant of Negro progress in New Orleans." Illustrated by Numa Joseph Roussève. [New Orleans] Graphic Arts Studios, 1942. 200 p. illus., ports. F379.N5C6
1600Clarke, John H., ed. Harlem, a community in transition. New York, Citadel Press [c1964] 223 p. illus., ports. F128.68.H3C55"Much of the material in this book is from the Summer 1963 (Volume III, no. 3) issue of Freedomways."Bibliographical footnotes.
1601Claspy, Everett. The Negro in southwestern Michigan; Negroes in the North in a rural environment. Dowagiac, Mich., 1967. 112 p. E185.93.M5C55Includes bibliographical references.
1602Crum, Mason. Gullah; Negro life in the Carolina Sea Islands. Durham, N.C., Duke University Press, 1940. xv, 351 p. plates. (Duke University publications) E185.93.S7C85Bibliography: p. [345]-351.
1603Dabney, Wendell P. Cincinnati's colored citizens; historical, sociological and biographical. Cincinnati, Dabney Pub. Co. [c1926] 440 p. illus., ports. F499.C5D12
1604Daniels, John. In freedom's birthplace; a study of the Boston Negroes. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1914. 496 p. F73.9.N4D2
1605De Jong, Gordon F., and George A. Hillery. Kentucky's Negro population in 1960. Lexington, University of Kentucky, Agricultural Experiment Station, Dept. of Rural Sociology, 1965. 32 p. illus., map. ([Kentucky. Agricultural Experiment Station, Lexington] Bulletin 704) E185.93.K3D4Bibliographical footnotes.
1606Detroit Urban League. Research Dept. A profile of the Detroit Negro, 1955-1964. [Detroit] 1965. 62 p. illus., maps. F574.D4D59Bibliography: p. 62.
1607Drake, St. Clair, and Horace R. Cayton. Black metropolis; a study of Negro life in a northern city. Introduction by Richard Wright. Introduction to Torchbook ed. by Everett C. Hughes. [Rev. and enl. ed.] New York, Harper & Row [1962] 2 v. illus. (Harper torchbooks, TB1086-1087. The Academy library) F548.9.N3D68 1962Bibliographical references included in "Notes and documentation" (p. 783-792). "A list of selected books dealing with the American Negro": p. 793-796. "Suggestions for collateral reading": p. 797-798.
1608DuBois, William E. B. The Philadelphia Negro; a social study. Together with a special report on domestic service, by Isabel Eaton. New York, B. Blom [1967] xx, 520 p. illus., 2 fold. col. plans. (Publications of the University of Pennsylvania. Series in political economy and public law, no. 14) F158.9.N3D8 1967Contents.—The Philadelphia Negro.—Appendixes. A. Schedules used in the house-to-house inquiry. B. Legislation, etc., of Pennsylvania in regard to the Negro. C. Bibliography (p. 419-423). Special report on Negro domestic service in the seventh ward, Philadelphia, by I. Eaton.
1608aEhle, John. The free men. New York, Harper & Row [1965] 340 p. illus., ports. F264.C38E4A portrait of a moderate southern community (Chapel Hill, North Carolina) experiencing an effort at integration in the years 1963-64.
1609Gay, William T. Montgomery, Alabama, a city in crisis. New York, Exposition Press [1957] 117 p. F334.M7G3
1610Green, Constance M. The secret city; a history of race relations in the Nation's Capital. Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1967. xv, 389 p. illus., ports. E185.93.D6G7"Bibliographical note": p. 339-348. Bibliography: p. 349-361.
1611Handlin, Oscar. The newcomers: Negroes and Puerto Ricans in a changing metropolis. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1959. 171 p. illus. (New York metropolitan region study) F128.9.A1H3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [147]-164).New York City is the metropolis under study.
1612Harlem Youth Opportunities Unlimited, New York. Youth in the ghetto; a study of the consequences of powerlessness and a blueprint for change. New York, 1964. xxi, 614 p. illus., maps, tables. HN80.N5H3Bibliographical footnotes.
1613Hesslink, George K. Black neighbors; Negroes in a northern rural community. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1968] xvii, 190 p. maps. F572.C3H4Bibliography: p. 185-190.Cass County, Michigan, is the area under study.
1613aJohnson, Charles S. Shadow of the plantation. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1934] xxiv, 214 p. diagr., plates. E185.93.A3J6Macon County, Alabama, was the area chosen for this survey.
1614Johnson, Haynes B. Dusk at the mountain; the Negro, the Nation, and the Capital; a report on problems and progress. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1963. 273 p. E185.93.D6J56Bibliography: p. [260]-266.
1615Johnson, James W. Black Manhattan. New York, Arno Press, 1968 [c1930] 284, xxxiv p. illus., plans, ports. (The American Negro, his history and literature) F128.9.N3J67 1968
1616Johnson, William. William Johnson's Natchez; the ante-bellum diary of a free Negro. Edited by William Ransom Hogan and Edwin Adams Davis. [Baton Rouge] Louisiana State University Press [1951] 812 p. illus., facsims. (Source studies in Southern history, no. 1) E185.97.J697A3
1617Joiner, William A. A half century of freedom of the Negro in Ohio. Xenia, Ohio, Press of Smith Adv. Co. [1915?] 134 p. illus., ports. E185.93.O2J6Cover title: The Ohio Book for the Lincoln Jubilee."College song, Dear old Wilberforce [by] W.A. Joiner [and] F. J. Work" (close score): p. 134.
1618Langhorne, Orra H. M. G. Southern sketches from Virginia, 1881-1901. Edited by Charles E. Wynes. Charlottesville, University Press of Virginia [1964] xxxix, 145 p. illus., ports. F231.L3"The writings of Orra Langhorne": p. 139-140. Bibliographical footnotes.
1618aLee, Frank F. Negro and white in Connecticut Town. New York, Bookman Associates [1961] 207 p. map. E185.93.C7L4"Based upon the writer's unpublished doctoral dissertation ... Yale University, 1953.""Annotated bibliography": p. 179-199.
1618bLee, George W. Beale Street, where the blues began. Foreword by W. C. Handy. New York, R. O. Ballou [c1934] 296 p. ports. F444.M5L4
1619Liebow, Elliot. Tally's corner; a study of Negro streetcorner men. With a foreword by Hylan Lewis. Boston, Little, Brown [1967] xvii, 260 p. E185.93.D6L5 1967Revision of thesis, Catholic University of America.Bibliography: p. [257]-260.Washington, D.C., is the locale.
1620Logan, Frenise A. The Negro in North Carolina, 1876-1894. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press [1964] 244 p. E185.93.N6L6Bibliography: p. [221]-233.
1621Lyda, John W. The Negro in the history of Indiana. [Terre Haute? Ind., 1953] 136 p. E185.93.I4L9Bibliography: p. 131-136.
1621aMcCord, William M. Mississippi: the long hot summer. New York, Norton [1965] 222 p. E185.93.M6M32Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 211-215).The violence of the summer of 1964 as related and interpreted by a sociologist in terms of his own participation.
1622Maryland. Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations. An American city in transition; the Baltimore community self-survey of inter-group relations. [Sponsored by] Maryland Commission on Interracial Problems and Relations [and] Baltimore Commission on Human Relations. [Baltimore] 1955. 264 p. illus., map. F189.B1M25
1623Michigan. Freedmen's Progress Commission. Michigan manual of freedmen's progress. Compiled by Francis H. Warren. Detroit. 1915. [Detroit] J. M. Green [1968] 371, 34 p. illus., ports. E185.93.M5A43 1968
1624Minnesota. Governor's Human Rights Commission. The Negro and his home in Minnesota; a report to Governor Luther W. Youngdahl of Minnesota by the Governor's Interracial Commission. [St. Paul] 1947. 77 p. illus. E185.93.M55A5 1947"Third of a series of reports ... on various racial situations."
1625Moore, Geraldine H. Behind the ebony mask. [Birmingham, Ala.] Southern University Press, 1961. 220 p. illus. F334.B6M57On the Negro in Birmingham, Alabama.
1626National Urban League. Community Relations Project. A study of the social and economic conditions of the Negro population of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, conducted for the Oklahoma City Council of Social Welfare by the National Urban League as part of its Community Relations Project, Dept. of Research, June-July, 1945. [Oklahoma City? 1945?] 91 p. F704.O41N3
1627National Urban League. Dept. of Research and Community Projects. The Negro community of Baltimore; a summary report of a social study conducted for the Baltimore Urban League through the Dept. of Research, National Urban League, by Ira De A. Reid. Drawings by Wilmer Jennings. Baltimore, 1935. 46 p. diagrs. F189.B1N24
1628The Negro in Milwaukee; a historical survey. [Milwaukee, Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1968] 32 p. illus., ports. F589.M6N48Contents.—The railway porter who wanted to vote, by F. I. Olson.—Negroes in Milwaukee, by W. T. Green.—An incident of early Milwaukee law enforcement, by W. J. Vollmar.—Negro recognition in early Milwaukee, by C. V. Salomon.—Thirty years a slave, by L. Hughes.—Landmark civil rights decision in Wisconsin, by H. H. Anderson.—Milwaukee Negroes elected to public office.
1629New York (City) Interdepartmental Neighborhood Service Center. The poor of Harlem: social functioning in the underclass; a report to the Welfare Administration by Joan Gordon, with the assistance of Carolyn Atkinson [and others]. New York, 1965, c1966. 167 p. HN80.N5A49"Welfare Administration project 105."
1630O'Reilly, Charles T. The inner core——north; a study of Milwaukee's Negro community. [Milwaukee, University of Wisconsin] 1963. 96 p. illus., maps. F589.M6O685"A project of the School of Social Work, the University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee for the Ford urban program, the University of Wisconsin Extension Division."Includes bibliographies.
1631Osofsky, Gilbert. Harlem; the making of a ghetto; Negro New York, 1890-1930. New York, Harper & Row [1966] 259 p. illus., facsims., ports. F128.9.N3O73Includes bibliographies.
1632Ottley, Roi, and William J. Weatherby. The Negro in New York; an informal social history. New York, New York Public Library, 1967. xix, 328 p. map. F128.9.N3O74"Edited from manuscripts in the Schomburg Collection of Negro Literature and History, the New York Public Library ... originally prepared by the Federal Writers Project under the working title, 'Harlem—the Negroes of New York (an informal social history).'"Bibliography: p. 297-312.
1633Ottley, Roi. New world a-coming. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 364 p. illus. (The American Negro, his history and literature) F128.9.N3O75 1968Reprint of the 1943 ed.Bibliography: p. [348]-354.The Negro in New York City.
1633aPatterson, Caleb P. The Negro in Tennessee, 1790-1865. Austin, Tex., University [1922] 213 p. (University of Texas bulletin. no. 2205: Feb. 1, 1922) E445.T3P2Bibliography: p. 202-209.
1634Posey, Thomas E. The Negro citizen of West Virginia. Institute, W. Va., Press of West Virginia State College [1934] 119 p. diagrs., plates, ports. E185.93.W5P6Bibliography: p. [110]-112.
1634aQuillin, Frank U. The color line in Ohio; a history of race prejudice in a typical northern State. Ann Arbor, Mich., G. Wahr, 1913. xvi, 178 p. maps. (University of Michigan historical studies. [3]) E185.93.O2Q62Published also as thesis (Ph.D.), University of Michigan, 1910.Bibliography: p. [167]-171.
1635Record, Wilson. Minority groups and intergroup relations in the San Francisco Bay area. [Berkeley, Calif.] 1963. 48 p. F868.S156R4At head of title: Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California, Berkeley.The Institute of Governmental Studies presents this monograph as part of its series of Franklin K. Lane papers.
1636Rose, Willie L. N. Rehearsal for Reconstruction; the Port Royal experiment. With an introduction by C. Vann Woodward. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill [1964] xviii, 442 p. illus., fold. map, ports. F277.B3R6"Notes on sources": p. 409-433.Concerns Sea Islands, South Carolina.
1637Roussève, Charles B. The Negro in Louisiana; aspects of his history and his literature. New Orleans, Xavier University Press, 1937. xvii, 212 p. illus., diagrs., music, plates. E185.93.L6R6"This work, prepared in 1935 in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of master of arts, makes its appearance ... substantially as it was originally written, save for ... several minor alterations and the addition of a few details."—p. vii.Bibliography: p. 193-201.
1638Russell, John H. The free Negro in Virginia, 1619-1865. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1913. 194 p. (Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and political science, series 31, no. 3) H31.J6 E185.93.V8R9Thesis (Ph.D.)—Johns Hopkins University, 1913.Bibliography: p. 178-186.
1639Scheiner, Seth M. Negro mecca; a history of the Negro in New York City, 1865-1920. [New York] New York University Press, 1965. 246 p. F128.9.N3S3Bibliography: p. 226-242.
1640Sexton, Patricia C. Spanish Harlem; an anatomy of poverty. New York, Harper & Row [1965] 208 p. map. [F128.9.F8S48] [TR: F128.9.P8S48]Includes bibliographical references.
1641Silver, James W. Mississippi: the closed society. New York, Harcourt, Brace & World [1964] xxii, 250 p. facsim., map. F345.S5Bibliographical footnotes.
1642Spangler, Earl. The Negro in Minnesota. With an introduction by Carl T. Rowan. Minneapolis, T. S. Denison [1961] 215 p. E185.93.M55S7Bibliography: p. 186-213.
1643Spear, Allan H. Black Chicago; the making of a Negro ghetto, 1890-1920. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1967] xvii, 254 p. illus., col. maps, ports. F548.9.N3S65Bibliographical footnotes.
1644Steward, William, and Theophilus G. Steward. Gouldtown, a very remarkable settlement of ancient date; studies of some sturdy examples of the simple life, together with sketches of early colonial history of Cumberland County and southern New Jersey and some early genealogical records. Philadelphia, Press of J. B. Lippincott Co., 1913. 237 p. plates, ports. F144.G69S8Gouldtown was one of the earliest all-Negro settlements.
1645Tate, Thaddeus W. The Negro in eighteenth-century Williamsburg. Williamsburg, Va., Colonial Williamsburg; distributed by the University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville [c1965] xiv, 256 p. (Williamsburg research studies) F234.W7T3Bibliography: p. [237]-246.
1646Thornbrough, Emma L. The Negro in Indiana; a study of a minority. [Indianapolis] Indiana Historical Bureau, 1957. 412 p. (Indiana historical collections, v. 37) F535.N4T5Cover title and half-title: The Negro in Indiana Before 1900.Bibliographical footnotes.
1647Tindall, George B. South Carolina Negroes, 1877-1900. Columbia, University of South Carolina Press, 1952. 336 p. illus., ports. E185.93.S7T5Bibliography: p. 311-326.
1648United Community Services of Metropolitan Boston. Black and white in Boston; a report based on the Community Research Project. [By] Donald D. Dobbin, Norma J. Emond [and] Janine G. O'Grady. [Boston, Research Dept., United Community Services of Metropolitan Boston] 1968. 44 p. map. F73.9.N4U5
1648aU.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Hearings before the United States Commission on Civil Rights. Hearings held in Detroit, Michigan, December 14, 1960 [and] December 15, 1960. Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1961. 511 p. illus., fold. maps. E185.93.M5A5
1648bWarner, Robert A. New Haven Negroes, a social history. New Haven, Published for the Institute of Human Relations by Yale University Press, 1940. xiv, 309 p. facsim., maps, plates, port. F104.N6W27Bibliographical footnotes.
1649Washington, Nathaniel J. Historical development of the Negro in Oklahoma. Tulsa, Okla., Dexter Pub. Co. [1948] 71 p. illus., maps. E185.93.O4W3Bibliography: p. 69-71.
1650Waynick, Capus M., John C. Brooks, and Elsie W. Pitts, eds. North Carolina and the Negro. Raleigh, North Carolina Mayors' Co-operating Committee, 1964. xvii, 309 p. illus. (part col.), maps, ports. (part col.) E185.93.N6W3Bibliography: p. 271-287.
1651Whaley, Marcellus S. The old types pass; Gullah sketches of the Carolina Sea Islands. Illustrated by Edna Reed Whaley. Boston, Christopher Pub. House [c1925] 192 p. music, plates. E185.93.S7W6
1652Wharton, Vernon L. The Negro in Mississippi, 1865-1890. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1947. 298 p. (The James Sprunt studies in history and political science, v. 28) F251.J28 v. 28Bibliography: p. [277]-292.
1653Wightman, Orrin S. Early days of coastal Georgia. Photographs by Orrin Sage Wightman. Story by Margaret Davis Cate. St. Simons Island, Ga., Fort Frederica Association [1955] 235 p. illus., maps. F286.W6
1654Wright, James M. The free Negro in Maryland, 1634-1860. New York, Columbia University, 1921. 362 p. (Studies in history, economics and public law, v. 97, no. 3; whole no. 222) H31.C7 v. 97 [E185.W95]Bibliography: p. 348-362.
1655Wynes, Charles E. Race relations in Virginia, 1870-1902. Charlottesville, University of Virginia Press, 1961. 164 p. E185.93.V8W9Bibliography: p. 151-160.
1656Adams, C. C., and Marshall A. Talley. Negro Baptists and foreign missions. Philadelphia, Foreign Mission Board of the National Baptist Convention, U.S.A. [c1944] 84 p. BV2521.A85
1657Bragg, George F. History of the Afro-American group of the Episcopal Church. Baltimore, Church Advocate Press, 1922. 319 p. plates, ports. BX5979.B7"Negro ordinations from 1866 to present": p. [267]-287.Clerical directory: p. [285]-292.
1658Brawley, E. M., ed. The Negro Baptist pulpit; a collection of sermons and papers on Baptist doctrine and missionary and educational work, by colored Baptist ministers. Philadelphia, American Baptist Publication Society [1890] 300 p. [BX6447.B7] [TR: BX6452.B7 1890]
1659Brotz, Howard. The black Jews of Harlem: Negro nationalism and the dilemmas of Negro leadership. [New York] Free Press of Glencoe [1964] 144 p. F128.68.H3B7Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 133-140).
1660Campbell, Will D. Race and the renewal of the church. Philadelphia, Westminster Press [1962] 90 p. (Christian perspectives on social problems) BT734.C3
1661The Church and the urban racial crisis, edited by Mathew Ahmann and Margaret Roach. Techny, Ill., Divine Word Publications [1967] 262 p. E185.615.C58"The major addresses and background papers prepared for the August, 1967, convention of the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice held at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Missouri."
1662Culver, Dwight W. Negro segregation in the Methodist Church. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1953. 218 p. (Yale studies in religious education, 22) BX8382.A17C8Based on the author's thesis, Yale University, 1948.Bibliography: p. [191]-206.
1663Daniel, Vattel E. Ritual in Chicago's South Side churches for Negroes. Chicago, 1940. 155 leaves. mounted col. map. BR563.N4D29Thesis—University of Chicago.Typescript (carbon copy).Bibliography: leaves 144-150.
1664Day, Helen C. Color, ebony. New York, Sheed & Ward, 1951. 182 p. BX4668.D34Concerns converts to Catholicism.
1665DuBois, William E. B., ed. The Negro church; report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Eighth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, May 26th, 1903. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1903. 212 p. (Atlanta University publications, no. 8) E185.5.A88 no. 8 E185.7.D81"Select bibliography of Negro churches": p. vi-viii.
1666Fauset, Arthur H. Black gods of the metropolis; Negro religious cults of the urban North. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1944. 126 p. plates, ports. (Publications of the Philadelphia Anthropological Society, v. 3) BR563.N4F3 1944aBrinton memorial series, [no. 2].Issued also as thesis (Ph.D.), University of Pennsylvania."A study of five Negro religious cults in the Philadelphia of today."—Preface.
1667Felton, Ralph A. Go down, Moses; a study of 21 successful Negro rural pastors. Madison, N.J., Dept. of the Rural Church, Drew Theological Seminary [1952] 95 p. illus. BR563.N4F38
1668Felton, Ralph A. These my brethren; a study of 570 Negro churches and 1542 Negro homes in the rural South. Madison, N.J., Dept. of the Rural Church, Drew Theological Seminary [1950] 102 p. BR563.N4F4
1669Fisk University, Nashville. Social Science Institute. God struck me dead; religious conversion experiences and autobiographies of Negro ex-slaves. Nashville, 1945. 218 leaves. (Its Social science source documents, no. 2) BV4930.F5
1670Frazier, Edward Franklin. The Negro church in America. New York, Schocken Books [1964, c1963] 92 p. (Studies in sociology) BR563.N4F7Bibliographical footnotes.
1671Fuller, Thomas O. History of the Negro Baptists of Tennessee. [Memphis, Tenn., Haskins Print, c1936] 346 p. plates, ports. [BX6444.T4F8]
1672Gillard, John T. The Catholic Church and the American Negro; being an investigation of the past and present activities of the Catholic Church in behalf of the 12,000,000 Negroes in the United States, with an examination of the difficulties which affect the work of the colored missions. Baltimore, St. Joseph's Society Press, 1929 [i.e. 1930] xv, 324 p. diagr., map, tables (part fold.) BX1407.N4G5Bibliography: p. 291-301.
1673Harrison, William P. The gospel among the slaves. A short account of missionary operations among the African slaves of the Southern States. Compiled from original sources. Nashville, Pub. House of the M. E. Church, South. 1893. 394 p. illus., ports. BV2783.H3
1674Haynes, Leonard L. The Negro community within American Protestantism, 1619-1844. Boston, Christopher Pub. House [1953] 264 p. BR563.N4H38
1675Hough, Joseph C. Black power and white Protestants; a Christian response to the new Negro pluralism. New York, Oxford University Press, 1968. 228 p. BT734.2.H63Bibliographical footnotes.
1676Ingram, Tolbert R., ed. Essays on segregation. Boston, St. Thomas Press, 1960. 106 p. BT734.3.I5
1677Johnston, Ruby F. The development of Negro religion. New York, Philosophical Library [1954] 202 p. illus. BR563.N4J6
1678Joint Survey Commission of the Baptist Inter-convention Committee. The Negro Baptist ministry; an analysis of its profession, preparation, and practices, by Ira De A. Reid. Report of a survey conducted by the Joint Survey Commission of the Baptist Inter-convention Committee: the American Baptist Convention, the National Baptist Convention [and] the Southern Baptist Convention. [Philadelphia, H. and L. Advertising Co.] 1951 [i.e. 1952] 145 p. BV4080.J6
1679Jones, Howard O. Shall we overcome? A challenge to Negro and white Christians. Westwood, N.J., F. H. Revell Co. [1966] 146 p. BT734.2.J6
1680Jordan, Lewis G. Negro Baptist history, U.S.A., 1750, 1930. Nashville, Sunday School Pub. Board, N.B.C. [1930] 394 p. plates, ports. BX6443.J6"Minutes of the Baptist Foreign Mission Convention of the United States of America held in Montgomery, Ala., November 24, 25, 26, 1880" (p. [153]-170) and "Minutes of the fourth annual session of the Baptist Foreign Mission Convention of the United States of America, held with the First Baptist Church, Manchester, Virginia, September 19-22, 1883" (p. [217]-236) have special title pages.Bibliography: p. 392-394.
1680aKing, Martin Luther. Strength to love. New York, Harper & Row [1963] 146 p. BX6452.K5
1681Koger, Azzie B. Negro Baptists of Maryland. [Baltimore, Clarke Press] c1946. 78 p. illus., ports. BX6444.M3K6 1946First published in 1936 under title: History of the Negro Baptists of Maryland.
1682Lincoln, Charles Eric. The Black Muslims in America. Foreword by Gordon Allport. Boston, Beacon Press [1961] 276 p. E185.61.L56"This book originated as a dissertation ... in the Graduate School of Boston University."Includes bibliography.This black separatist group, also called the Nation of Islam, under the leadership of Elijah Mohammad, has a widespread following in the United States.
1683Lincoln, Charles Eric. My face is black. Boston, Beacon Press [1964] 137 p. E185.61.L57Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [134]-137).Includes further discussion of the Black Muslims.
1684Loescher, Frank S. The Protestant church and the Negro. Philadelphia, 1948. 159 p. BR563.N4L6 1948aEssential portion of thesis—University of Pennsylvania.Bibliographical footnotes.
1685Mays, Benjamin E., and Joseph W. Nicholson. The Negro's church. New York, Institute of Social and Religious Research [c1933] 321 p. maps. BR563.N4M3
1686Millea, Thomas V. Ghetto fever. Milwaukee, Bruce Pub. Co. [1968] 166 p. F548.9.N3M5Concerns church and race problems in Chicago.
1687Payne, Daniel A., Bp. History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Edited by Rev. C. S. Smith. Nashville, Pub. House of the A.M.E. Sunday-School Union, 1891. xvi, 502 p. ports. BX8443.P28
1688Pipes, William H. Say amen, brother! Old-time Negro preaching: a study in American frustration. New York, William-Frederick Press, 1951. 210 p. BR563.N4P53Bibliography: p. 201-205.
1689Poole, Elijah. Message to the blackman in America, by Elijah Muhammad. Chicago, Muhammad Mosque of Islam No. 2 [1965] xxvii, 355 p. [BP222.P6] [TR: BP222.E4]On the Black Muslims.
1690Reimers, David M. White Protestantism and the Negro. New York, Oxford University Press, 1965. 236 p. E185.61.R36Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 190-222). Bibliography: p. 223-227.
1691Richardson, Harry V. Dark glory, a picture of the church among Negroes in the rural South. New York, Pub. for Home Missions Council of North America and Phelps-Stokes Fund by Friendship Press [1947] xiv, 209 p. BR563.N4R5"A selected reading list": p. 194-197.
1692Sellers, James E. The South and Christian ethics. New York, Association Press [1962] 190 p. E185.61.S48
1693Singleton, George A. The romance of African Methodism; a study of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. New York, Exposition Press [1952] 251 p. illus. BX8443.S45
1694Sleeper, Charles F. Black power and Christian responsibility; some Biblical foundations for social ethics. Nashville, Abingdon Press [1968, c1969] 221 p. BS680.E84S5Bibliography: p. 205-217.
1695Tyms, James D. The rise of religious education among Negro Baptists; a historical case study. New York, Exposition Press [1966, c1965] xiv, 408 p. (An Exposition-university book) BX6450.T93Bibliography: p. [397]-403.
1696Washington, Joseph R. Black religion; the Negro and Christianity in the United States. Boston, Beacon Press [1964] 308 p. BR563.N4W3Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. 298-303).
1697Washington, Joseph R. The politics of God. Boston, Beacon Press [1967] 234 p. BR563.N4W33Bibliographical footnotes.
1698Weatherford, Willis D. American churches and the Negro; an historical study from early slave days to the present. Boston, Christopher Pub. House [1957] 310 p. BR563.N4W4
1699Woodson, Carter G. The history of the Negro church. Washington, Associated Publishers [c1921] 330 p. plates, ports. BR563.N4W6
1700Woodward, Joseph Herbert. The Negro bishop movement in the Episcopal diocese of South Carolina. McPhersonville, S.C., H. Woodward [c1916] 45 p. BX5967.W65
1701Year book of Negro churches, with statistics and records of achievements of Negroes in the United States. 1935-36+ Wilberforce, Ohio, Printed at Wilberforce University. E185.7.Y43Editor: Reverdy C. Ransom."Published by authority of the bishops of the A.M.E. Church."
1745Clark, Kenneth B. Prejudice and your child. 2d ed., enl. Boston, Beacon Press [1963] 247 p. (A Beacon paperback) BF723.R3C5 1963Includes bibliography.
1746Coles, Robert. Children of crisis; a study of courage and fear. Boston, Little, Brown [1967] xiv, 401 p. illus. E185.61.C66"An Atlantic: Monthly press book."Includes bibliographical references.
1747Fanshel, David. A study in Negro adoption. Commentary by Alexander J. Allen. New York, Child Welfare League of America, 1957. 108 p. tables. HV875.F2
1748Goff, Regina M. Problems and emotional difficulties of Negro children as studied in selected communities and attributed by parents and children to the fact that they are Negro. New York, Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1949. 93 p. (Columbia University. Teachers College. Contributions to education, no. 960) E185.89.C3G6 1949a LB5.C8 no. 960Issued also as thesis, Columbia University.Bibliography: p. 89.
1749Goodman, Mary E. Race awareness in young children. With an introduction by Kenneth B. Clark. New, rev. ed. New York, Collier Books [1964] 351 p. map. BF723.R3G6 1964"Notes and references": p. 331-342.
1750Gula, Martin. Quest for equality, the story of how six institutions opened their doors to serve Negro children and their families. [Washington, U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, Welfare Administration, Children's Bureau; for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966] 50 p. illus. (U.S. Children's Bureau. Publication no. 441) HV873.G8 HV741.A32 no. 441Includes bibliographies.
1751Henton, Comradge L., and Edward E. Johnson. Relationship between self-concepts of Negro elementary-school children and their academic achievement, intelligence, interests, and manifest anxiety. Baton Rouge, La., Southern University, Dept. of Psychology [1964?] 78 leaves. LB1131.H386Cooperative Research Project no. 1592, performed pursuant to a contract with the U.S. Office of Education.Bibliography: leaves [76]-78.
1752Jackson, Luther P. Poverty's children, [n.p., CROSS-TELL] 1966. 42 leaves. HN80.W3J3Based on the study findings of the 1960-64 Child Rearing Study (CRS) of Low Income Families in the District of Columbia.
1753Price, Arthur Cooper. A Rorschach study of the development of personality structure in white and Negro children in a southeastern community. Genetic psychology monographs, v. 65, Feb. 1962: 3-52. tables. LB1101.G4 v.65"Based upon a doctoral dissertation at the University of Florida."Bibliography: p. 51-52.
1754Sanders, Wiley B., ed. Negro child welfare in North Carolina; a Rosenwald study, directed by Wiley Britton Sanders. Montclair, N.J., Patterson Smith, 1968 [c1933] xiv, 326 p. illus. (Patterson Smith reprint series in criminology, law enforcement, and social problems, publication no. 18) E185.86.S27 1968"Under the joint auspices of the North Carolina State Board of Charities and Public Welfare and the School of Public Welfare, the University of North Carolina."
1755Bonger, Willem A. Race and crime. Translated from the Dutch by Margaret Mathews Hordyk. Montclair, N.J., Patterson Smith, 1969. 130 p. (Patterson Smith reprint series in criminology, law enforcement, and social problems, no. 34) HV6191.B62 1969Reprint of the 1943 ed.Translation of Ras en misdaad.Bibliography: p. [109]-123.
1756Carter, Dan T. Scottsboro; a tragedy of the American South. Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press [1969] 431 p. illus., ports. KF224.S34C3Includes bibliographical references.
1757Chamberlain, Bernard P. The Negro and crime in Virginia. [Charlottesville] University of Virginia, 1936. 132 p. tables. (Publications of the University of Virginia. Phelps-Stokes fellowship papers, no. 15) E185.93.V8C46
1758DuBois, William E. B., ed. Some notes on Negro crime, particularly in Georgia; report of a social study made under the direction of Atlanta University; together with the Proceedings of the Ninth Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems, held at Atlanta University, May 24, 1904. Atlanta, Atlanta University Press, 1904. 68 p. diagrs. (Atlanta University publications, no. 9) E185.5.A88 no. 9 [E185.65.D81]Bibliography: p. vi-viii.Contents.—The problem of crime, by F. B. Sanborn.—Crime and slavery.—Crime and the census.—Extent of Negro crime.—Crime in cities, by M. N. Work.—Crime in Georgia.—Atlanta and Savannah, by H. H. Proctor and M. N. Work.—Crime in Augusta, by A. G. Coombs and L. D. Davis.—What Negroes think of crime.—Causes of Negro crime.—Some conclusions.—The Ninth conference.—Resolutions.—Index.
1759Kephart, William M. Racial factors and urban law enforcement. Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press [1957] 209 p. tables. HV8138.K45Bibliography: p. 207-209.
1759aLightfoot, Robert M. Negro crime in a small urban community. [Charlottesville] University of Virginia, 1934. 85, [1] p. plan. (Publications of the University of Virginia. Phelps-Stokes fellowship papers, no. 12) E185.93.V8L5Bibliography: p. [86].
1760Towler, Juby E. The police role in racial conflicts. Springfield, Ill., C. C. Thomas [1964] 119 p. illus. HV8069.T6
1761U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Law enforcement; a report on equal protection in the South. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1965. 188 p. DLC-LLBibliographical footnotes.
1762Wolfgang, Marvin E. Crime and race; conceptions and misconceptions.New York, Institute of Human Relations Press, American Jewish Committee [1964] 71 p. ([American Jewish Committee] Institute of Human Relations. Pamphlet series, no. 6) HV6197.U5W6"References": p. 64-71.
1763Bernard, Jessie S. Marriage and family among Negroes. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1966] 160 p. illus. (A Spectrum book) E185.86.B4Bibliographical footnotes.
1764Billingsley, Andrew. Black families in white America [by] Andrew Billingsley, with the assistance of Amy Tate Billingsley. Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall [1968] 218 p. illus., map. (A Spectrum book) E185.86.B5Bibliographical footnotes.
1765Frazier, Edward Franklin. The free Negro family. New York, Arno Press, 1968. 75 p. maps. (The American Negro, his history and literature) E185.86.F73 1968Reprint of the 1932 ed.Bibliography: p. 73-75.
1766Frazier, Edward Franklin. The Negro family in the United States. Rev. and abridged ed. Foreword by Nathan Glazer. Chicago, University of Chicago Press [1966] xxii, 372 p. E185.86.F74 1966Revised and abridged edition first published in 1948.Bibliographical footnotes.
1767Jeffers, Camille. Living poor; a participant observer study of priorities and choices. With an introduction by Hylan Lewis. Ann Arbor, Mich., Ann Arbor Publishers, 1967. 123 p. HN80.W3J4A report to the Child Rearing Study of Low Income Families in the District of Columbia, a project sponsored by the Health and Welfare Council of the National Capital Area.
1768Rainwater, Lee, and William L. Yancey. The Moynihan report and the politics of controversy; a Trans-action social science and public policy report. Including the full text of The Negro family: the case for national action by Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Cambridge, Mass., M.I.T. Press [1967] xviii, 493 p. illus. E185.86.U54R3Includes bibliographical references.
1769U.S. Dept. of Labor. Office of Policy Planning and Research. The Negro family, the case for national action. [Washington, For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.] 1965. 78 p. illus. [E185.86.U52]Bibliography: p. 51-53.The Moynihan report.
1770Wisconsin. Governor's Commission on Human Rights. Negro families in rural Wisconsin; a study of their community life. Madison, 1959. 72 p. illus. E185.93.W58A54
1771Brown, James N. Off my chest, by Jimmy Brown with Myron Cope. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1964. 230 p. illus., ports. GV939.B75A3
1772Cottrell, John. Muhammad Ali, who once was Cassius Clay. New York, Funk & Wagnalls [1968, c1967] 363 p. ports. GV1132.C55C6 1968First published in London under title: Man of Destiny.
1773Fleischer, Nathaniel S. Black dynamite, the story of the Negro in the prize ring from 1782 to 1938; with numerous illustrations. [New York, Printed by C. J. O'Brien, c1938-47] 5 v. illus., plates, ports. ("The Ring" athletic library) GV1131.F65Vol. 2 has also special title: "Jolting Joe," the amazing story of Joe Louis and his rise to world heavyweight title; "Homicide Hank," the socking saga of Henry Armstrong; v. 3: "The three colored aces," George Dixon, "Little Chocolate," Joe Gans, "The Old Master," Joe Walcott, "The Barbados Demon," and several contemporaries; v. 4: "Fighting furies," story of the golden era of Jack Johnson, Sam Langford and their contemporaries; v. 5: Sockers in sepia; a continuation of the drama of the Negro in pugilistic competition.
1774Henderson, Edwin B. The Negro in sports. Rev. ed. Washington, Associated Publishers, 1949. xvi, 507 p. illus., ports. GV161.H4 1949
1775Louis, Joe. How to box, edited by Edward J. Mallory. Philadelphia, D. McKay Co. [1948] 64 p. illus. GV1137.L8
1776Mann, Arthur W. Branch Rickey: American in action. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1957. 312 p. illus. GV865.R45M3Includes a few pages on Negroes in baseball.
1777Olsen, Jack. The black athlete: a shameful story; the myth of integration in American sport. New York, Time-Life Books [1968] 223 p. GV713.O4
1778Robinson, John R. Baseball has done it. Edited by Charles Dexter. Philadelphia, Lippincott [1964] 216 p. GV865.R6A2
1779Robinson, Louie. Arthur Ashe, tennis champion. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday [1967] 136 p. ports. (Doubleday signal books) GV994.A7R6
1780Young, Andrew S. N. ("Doc"). Negro firsts in sports. With illustrations by Herbert Temple. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co. [1963] 301 p. illus. GV697.A1Y6
1781Zinkoff, Dave. Around the world with the Harlem Globetrotters, by Dave Zinkoff with Edgar Williams. Foreword by Abe Saperstein; illustrated with photographs. Philadelphia, Macrae Smith Co. [1953] 218 p. illus. GV885.Z5
This is primarily an author and subject index. Numbers refer to entries. References to books about persons or associations are preceded by the word "about," to distinguish them from books by those persons or associations.
Abbott, Martin, 883
Abbott, Robert S., about, 134, 261
Abolitionists, 764, 778, 824, 843, 860, 945
Abrahamson, Julia, 1
Abramson, Doris E., 948
Achille, Louis T., 799
Actors, 140, 184, 247, 667- 669, 672, 1615.
See also Comedians
Adams, C. C., 1656
Adams, Edward C. L., 674
Adams, John Quincy, about, 251
Adams, Russell L., 98
Adams, Walter, 604
Adler, Mortimer J., ed., 770
Adoff, Arnold, comp., 995, 1228
Adoption, 1747
Aerospace industries, 476
African Methodist Episcopal Church, 81, 1687, 1693, 1701
Ahmann, Mathew H., ed., 996, 1661
Aikin, Charles, ed., 1402
Alabama, 684, 1609, 1613a, 1625
Albany Institute of History and Art, 82
Alcohol, 1720
Aldridge, Ira F., about, 140, 247
Aldridge, William, 246
Alexander, Albert A., 4
Alexander, Charles, 1315
Alexander, Richard D., 435
Ali, Muhammad, 1772
Allen, Alexander J., 1747
Allen, Elizabeth L., ed., 72
Allen, James E., 1592
Allen, James S., 884
Allen, Richard, Bishop, about, 303
Allen, Walter C., 151
Allen, William F., comp., 1344
Allport, Gordon W., 1682
Alpha Phi Alpha, 1397
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Boston, 27
American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia, 1463- 1464
American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Mass., 630
American Baptist Publication Society, 1658
American Civil Liberties Union, 494
American Colonization Society, about, 787
American Council of Learned Societies Devoted to Humanistic Studies, Committee on Negro Studies, 3, 24
American Council on Education, American Youth Commission, 40, 1719
American Council on Race Relations, 494
American Folklore Society, 26, 698, 703
American Historical Association, 458, 749, 875, 877a
American Institute for Marxist Studies, 809- 810
American Jewish Committee, Institute of Human Relations, 1570, 1762
American Library Association, Library Administration Division, 603
American Management Association, 451
American Missionary Association, 559a
American Negro Academy, Washington, D.C., 731, 1403, 1415
American Reform Tract and Book Society, Cincinnati, 155
American Revolution, 117, 765, 1329- 1330, 1342- 1343
American Society of African Culture, 978
Ames, William C., 309
Amistad (Schooner), 854
Amistad Research Center, 20
Anderson, Archibald W., ed., 566
Anderson, Harry H., 1628
Anderson, Howard R., ed., 795
Anderson, James K., 450
Anderson, Margaret, 541
Anderson, William T., 1315
Andrews, Benny, illus., 1228
Andrews, Sidney, 884a
Angelo, Frank, 182
Anti-Defamation League, 365, 507, 509, 568, 593, 1013
Antislavery movements, 185, 269, 300, 812, 819, 826- 827, 830, 833, 839, 846, 851, 861- 862, 864, 877, 882
Aplin, Norita, 711
Apprentices, 462, 466, 471, 488
Aptheker, Herbert, 713- 714, 808- 810, 1312
ed., 712
Arctic exploration, 218
Arkansas
Armour, Alexander W., 705
Armstrong, Henry, 153
Armstrong, Louis ("Satchmo"), about, 140
Arter, Rhetta M., 495
Artists, 82, 85, 87, 90- 93, 96- 97, 951- 952, 1372
Ashby, William M., 1044a
Ashe, Arthur, 154
about, 1779
Ashmore, Harry S., 542, 1404, 1465
Associates in Negro Folk Education, 86- 87, 410, 954
Associates of Doctor Thomas Bray for Founding Clerical Libraries and Supporting Negro Schools, 630
Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 137, 427, 442, 452- 453, 492, 671, 802- 803, 924- 925, 1302, 1340, 1372, 1390, 1398
Associations. See Organizations
Aswell, James R., ed., 710
Athletes, 101, 150, 1773- 1774, 1777 -1780.
Atkins, James A., 1466
Atkins, Simon G., about, 132
Atkinson, Carolyn, 1629
Atlanta, 193
Atlanta University, 9, 403, 430, 577- 578, 1291, 1665, 1758
Attaway, William, 1045
about, 966
Attucks, Crispus, about, 120
Aukofer, Frank A., 1593
Austin, Frank E., 1467
Authors, 950- 952, 956- 957, 965- 966, 978, 983, 991
Autobiography. See Biography and autobiography
Automobile industry and trade, 477
Avins, Alfred, comp., 931
ed., 496
Badger, Henry G., 543
Bailey, Harry A., ed., 1405
Bailey, Pearl, 156
Baker, George, about, 262
Baker, Josephine, about, 140
Baker, Newton D., 1332
Baker, Ray S., 1468
Balcolm, Lowell L., illus., 1099
Baldridge, Cyrus L., illus., 1055
Baldwin, James, 996- 997, 1046- 1050, 1205- 1206, 1469- 1470, 1484
about, 966
Ball, Charles, 157
Ball, Edward D., ed., 638
Ballowe, Hewitt L., 675
Baltimore Afro-American, 1051
Baltimore Urban League, 1627
Bancroft, Frederic, 811
Banfield, Edward C., 518, 1406
Banks and banking, 406, 408, 427
Banneker, Benjamin, about, 120, 207
Banton, Michael P., 1471
Baptist Foreign Missionary Convention of the U.S., 1680
Baptists, 293, 307, 1671, 1680- 1681
Barber, Carroll G., 20
Barbour, Floyd B., comp., 310
Bardolph, Richard, 99
Barndt, Joseph R., 1702
Barnes, Gilbert H., 812
Barnett, Moneta, illus., 769
Barrett, Janie P., about, 114, 134
Barth, Ernest A. T., 521
Bartlett, Irving H., 158, 1594
Barton, Rebecca C., 99a
Baseball, 150, 174, 245, 249- 250, 275- 276, 278, 1776, 1778
Basketball, 1781
Bates, Daisy G., 544
about, 145
Beam, Lura, 545
Beardwood, Roger, 415
Beasley, Delilah L., 1595
Becker, Gary S., 436
Beckwourth, James P., 159
Bede, Brother, 546
Bedichek, Roy, 680
Belafonte, Harry, 97
about, 140
Belasco, David, 279
Belfrage, Sally, 311
Bell, Inge P., 1382
Bell, Malcolm, illus., 708
Bell, Muriel, illus., 708
Bell, Thomas F., about, 220
Bell, William K., 396
Bellegarde, Dantes, 799
Benét, Stephen Vincent, 1280
Bennett, Elaine C., 3
Bennett, Hal, 1052
Bennett, John, 676
Bennett, Lerone, 100, 160, 715- 716, 998, 1472
Bent, Michael J., 1295
Bentley, George R., 885
Berger, Morroe, 932
Berman, Daniel M., 547
Bernard, Jacqueline, 161
Bernard, Jessie S., 1763
Bernstein, Abraham A., 548
Bernstein, Barton J., ed., 999
Berry, A. W., 1419
Berry, Brewton, 1703
Berson, Lenora E., 1570
Bethune, Mary J. McLeod, about, 114, 118, 222
Bibb, Henry, 162
Bibliographies, 1- 63, 68, 74, 517, 749, 756, 960- 961, 965, 979
Bicknell, Marguerite E., 64
Biggers, John T., illus., 680
Bigman, Stanley K., 1289
Billingsley, Amy T., 1764
Billingsley, Andrew, 1764
Biographical dictionaries, 69, 73, 78- 80, 121, 131
Biography and autobiography, 98- 308
See also Clergymen
Bittle, William E., 717
Bivins, Horace W., 1315
Bivins, S. Thomas, 383
Black Muslims, 237a, 1026- 1627, 1469, 1498, 1682- 1683, 1689
bibliography, 62
Black power, 195, 310, 318, 320, 348, 362, 381, 716, 1500, 1694, 1702
Black Star, 364
Blair, Gertrude, 386
Blair, Lewis H., 397
Bland, James A., about, 181
Blaustein, Albert P., 549- 550
comp., 312
Bleiweiss, Robert M., 163
Blood, Robert O., 437
Bloomfield, Neil J., ed., 372
Blossom, Virgil T., 551
Blues. See Jazz music
Blythe, LeGette, 177
Boas, Frank, 697
Boggs, James, 1704
Boles, Robert, 1053
Boley, Okla., 717
Bolling v. Sharpe, 547
Bond, Frederick W., 665
Bond, Horace M., 552- 553, 1244
Bone, Robert A., 949
Bonger, Willem A., 1755
Bonner, T. D., ed., 159
Bontemps, Arna W., 7, 101- 103, 718, 1054- 1056a
Booker, Simeon, 1705
Borders, William H., about, 193
education, 612
Bosworth, William, 1057
Botkin, Benjamin A., ed., 677, 829
Botume, Elizabeth H., 886
Bouma, Donald H., 554
Bowdoin College, Museum of Fine Arts, 83
Bowerman, Charles E., 564
Bowers, Lessie, 384
Boxing, 153, 194, 239, 254- 255, 265, 308, 1225, 1772- 1773, 1775
Boyar, Burt, 184
Boyar, Jane, 184
Boyd, Malcolm, 1473
Boykin, James H., 719
Brackett, Jeffrey R., 813
Braden, Anne, 1476
Bradford, Amory, 398
Bradford, Perry, 1345
Bradford, Roark, 677a- 678, 1207
Bradford, Sarah E. H., 164
Bradley, Mary H., 235
Bradshaw, Clifford A., 113
Bragg, George F., 1657
Braithwaite, William S. B., 1231- 1233, 1263
about, 952
Branch, Hettye W., 165
Brawley, Benjamin G., 104, 166, 951- 952
ed., 950
Brawley, E. M., ed., 1658
Bray, Douglas W., 450
Brazos Valley, Tex., 682
Breitman, George, ed., 1026
Brenford, Robert J., 26
Brewer, John Mason, 680- 683, 1407
Brickman, William W., ed., 555
Briggs, Vernon M., 462
Bright, Jean M., ed., 972
Brock, William R., 887
Broderick, Francis L., 167
ed., 720
Brogan, Denis W., 1408
Bronz, Stephen H., 953
Brooke, Edward W., 1409
about, 127
Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., 405
Brooks, Alexander D., 4
Brooks, Charles H., 1383
Brooks, Gwendolyn, 1058, 1235- 1236
Brooks, John C., ed., 1650
Brooks, Maxwell R., 1457
Broom, Leonard, 721
Brotz, Howard, 1659
ed., 1000
Brown, Aaron, ed., 631
Brown, Arthur M., 1315
Brown, Charles A., 556
Brown, Charlotte H., about, 114
Brown, Claude, 168
Brown, Earl L., 1313
Brown, Frank L., 1059
Brown, Hallie Q., comp., 105
Brown, Ina C., 722
Brown, James N., 1771
Brown, John (abolitionist), about, 189, 861
Brown, John (slave), about, 169
Brown, Lloyd L., 1060
Brown, Oliver, appellant, 579
Brown, Robert R., Bishop, 559
Brown, Roscoe C., comp., 77
Brown, Samuel Joe, 1385
ed., 975
Brown, Warren H., 5
Brown, William G., 1409a
Brown, William W., 106, 723, 1061, 1314
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 547, 579
Browning, Colleen, illus., 117
Brownlee, Frederick L., 559a
Bruce, Blanche Kelso, about, 120
Bruce, John E., comp., 107
Bruce, Kathleen, 814
Bruce, Philip A., 888
Bruère, Martha B., illus., 707
Bryan, Ashley, illus., 305
Buckle, Richard, ed., 170
Buckler, Helen, 171
Buckmaster, Henrietta, pseud., 815, 889
Bullock, Ralph W., 110
Bunche, Ralph J., 1478
Buni, Andrew, 1410
Burck, Gilbert, 415
Burckel, Christian E., 69
Bureau of National Affairs, Washington, D.C., 314
Burgess, Margaret E., 1596
Burke, Inez M., 1223
Burnham, Louis E., 258
Burns, William H., 315
Burroughs, Margaret T., illus., 195
Burroughs, Nannie H., 523
about, 114
Business education, 433
Businessmen, 427, 429- 433, 447, 1459a
Butcher, Margaret J., 955
Byrd, Harry F., 181
Byrd, James W., 172
CORE. See Congress of Racial Equality
CROSS-TELL. See Communicating Research on the Urban Poor
Cable, George W., 316- 317, 1563
Cade, John B., 173
Cain, Alfred E., 113
ed., 724
Caldwell, Dista H., 561
Caldwell, Erskine, 1479
California, 221, 1595, 1597, 1635
Arts Commission, 89Dept. of Industrial Relations, Division of Labor Statistics and Research, 1597education, 606employment, 488housing, 513race relations, 398State Fair Employment Practice Commission, 1597University Bancroft Library, 1595Institute of Governmental Studies, 1635Institute of Industrial Relations, 480Survey Research Center, 1518University at Los AngelesArt Galleries, Dickson Art Center, 89Dept. of Journalism, 1456Institute of Government and Public Affairs, 413University, Davis, 89
Callis, Myra C., 452
Calverton, Victor F., ed., 976
Camden Co., N.J., 549
Campanella, Roy, 174
Campbell, Angus, 1586
Campbell, Charles, 230a
Campbell, E. Simms, illus., 1237
Campbell, Ernest Q., 564
Campbell, Tunis G., 385
Campbell, Will D., 1660
Cannon, Alice, 693
Cape Fear River Valley, N.C., 900
Carawan, Candie, 1346
Carawan, Guy, 1346
Carleton, William G., 1440
Carmichael, Bennie, 638
Carmichael, Stokely, 318
Carnegie Institution of Washington, Division of Historical Research, 820
Caroline Co., Va., 705
Carruth, Eleanore, 415
Carter, Dan T., 1756
Carver, George Washington
Cashin, Herschel V., 1315
Cass, Donn A., 1384
Cass Co., Mich., 1613
Cate, Margaret D., 1653
Catholic authors, bibliography, 45
Catholic Church, 119, 199, 229, 375, 546, 1661, 1664, 1672
Catholic Interracial Council, 229
Catterall, Helen H. T., ed., 933
Cattle trade, 165
Caughey, John W., 725
Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, 344, 1481
Center for Urban Education, 22
Central State College, Wilberforce, Ohio
Chamberlain, Bernard P., 1757
Chambers, Bradford, comp., 320
Chambers, Herbert A., ed., 1347
Chambers, Lucille A., ed., 726
Chamerovzow, Louis A., ed., 169
Chaney, James E., about, 124
Chapel Hill, N.C., 1608a
Chapman, Abraham, 6
comp., 977
Chappell, Louis W., 685
Charleston, W. Va., 537
Charlottesville, Va., 1759a
Charters, Ann, illus., 1238
Charters, Samuel B., 1238, 1348
Chase, Lucy, 923
Chase, Sarah, 923
Chastain, Thomas, 1062
Cherokee Indians, 246
Cherry, Gwendolyn, 111
Chesler, Mark A., 601
Chesnutt, Charles W., 1063- 1067
Chesnutt, Helen M., 175
Chi Eta Phi Sorority, 1390
Chicago, 1395, 1420, 1579, 1598, 1607, 1643, 1663, 1686
Chicago Historical Society, 1012
Chicago Urban League, 1395
Child, Lydia M. F., 112
Child Rearing Study of Low Income Families in the District of Columbia, 1752, 1767
Child Welfare League of America, 1747
Children, 1745-54, 1767.
Children's literature. See Juvenile literature
Christensen, Mrs. A. M. H., 686
Christian, Kathryn, 727
Christian, Malcolm H., 176
Christmas, Walter, ed., 113
Church. See Religion and the church.
Church and race problems, 229, 321, 375, 498, 510, 529, 559, 1016, 1491, 1552, 1660- 1661, 1675, 1679, 1686, 1690, 1697.
See also Segregation ——religious aspects; Slavery, ——and the church
Cincinnati, 1603
Public Schools, 728
Cities and towns, 344, 355, 381, 415, 419, 879, 1715, 1738- 1739, 1744
Citizens' Councils, 1480
City University of New York, 90
Civil disobedience, 325a, 1014, 1444, 1591
Civil Liberties Educational Foundation, 4
Civil rights, 309- 982, 397, 486, 761, 931- 932, 937, 1340, 1400, 1414, 1434, 1447, 1450, 1463, 1507- 1508, 1511, 1516, 1590, 1704, 1732, 1761
Civil Rights Act of 1964, 314, 330, 1022
Civil rights workers, 124, 356
Civil service, 454, 461, 467, 478.
See also Government officials and employees
Civil War, 288, 763- 764, 893, 908, 915, 923, 1312, 1331
Clark, Alexander G., 1385
Clark, Alfred T., 725
Clark, Dennis, 1482
Clark, Henry, 498
Clark, Kenneth B., 565, 636, 1001, 1483- 1484, 1570, 1745, 1749
ed., 1005
Clark, Mary T., 321
Clark, Peter W., 1599
Clark, Septima P., 177
Clarke, Jacquelyne J., 322
Clarke, John H., ed., 1002, 1068, 1600
Claspy, Everett, 1601
Clay, Cassius Marcellus, about, 1772
Clayton, Edward T., 1411
Cleaves, Mary W., 19
Cleghorn, Reese, 1452
Clemons, Lulamae, 1706
Public Schools, 711
Clift, Virgil A., ed., 566
Clough, Benjamin C., 1594
Clowes, Richard M., 725
Cobb, William Montague, 1286- 1288
Cobb, Price M., 1293
Coffin, Levi, 816
Cogley, John, 1481
Cohen, Haskell, 239
Cohen, Irving S., 760
Cohen,Jacob, 329
Cohen, Jerry, 1573
Cohn, David L., 1707
Colby, Clinton E., 21
Cole, Nathaniel (Nat "King"), about, 140
Coleman, Edward M., ed., 1269
Coleman, James S., 567
Coleman, John Winston, 817
Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel, about, 120
College Entrance Examination Board, 584
Colleges. See Universities and colleges
Collins, Charles W., 934
Collins, Mary E., 502
Collins, Winfield H., 1487
Colonization, 717, 774, 787, 1000, 1003- 1004
Columbia University
Comedians, 140, 184, 208, 279, 335
Commager, Henry S., comp., 323
Commission on Race and Housing, 499, 505, 508, 514, 524
Communicating Research on the Urban Poor, 1752
Communism, 1038, 1389, 1394, 1419, 1434, 1442
Community leadership, 349, 1427, 1596, 1732
Conant, James B., 569
Concklin, Seth, about, 857
Condition of slaves, 133, 828- 829, 831, 845, 858, 875
Conference for the Study of the Negro Problems
Conference of Community Leaders on Equal Employment Opportunity, Washington, D.C., 1962, 439
Conference of Negro Writers, 1st, New York, 1959, 978
Conference on Discrimination and the Law, University of Chicago, 1963, 935
Conference on Jewish Social Studies, 1488
Conference on Negro-Jewish Relations in the United States, New York, 1964, 1488
Congaree River, 674
Congress of Racial Equality, 329, 1382
The Congressional Globe, 931
Congressional Quarterly Service, Washington, D.C., 324
Congressional Record, 931
Congressmen. See Legislators
Connecticut, 488, 873, 1618a, 1648b
Connelly, Marcus C., 695, 1207
Connery, Robert H., ed., 1589
Conot, Robert E., 1574
Conroy, Jack, 102
bibliography, 23
Cook, C. C., 1403
Cook, James G., 1490
Cook, James T., 21
Cooke, Paul P., 325
Coombs, A. G., 1758
Cooper, Anna J., 600
Cooper, Mary U., 389
Cooperative movement, 403, 418
Cope, Myron, 1771
Cornell-Tompkins County Committee for Free and Fair Elections in Fayette County, Tennessee, 1412
Cornely, Paul B., 1289
Cornish, Dudley T., 1316
Corwin, Edward H. L., 1290
Cotner, Robert C., 212
Cotter, Joseph S., 1068a, 1208
Cotton, Ella E., 178
Cottrell, John, 1772
Couch, William, comp., 1209
Coulter, Ellis M., 730, 891, 1413
Council of Social Welfare, Oklahoma City, 1626
Countryman, Vern, ed., 935
Covarrubias, Miguel, illus., 697, 1353- 1354
Cox, Archibald, 325a
Cox, John H., 1414
Cox, LaWanda C. F., 1414
Cox, Oliver C., 1717
Craig, Tom, 1585
Crain, Robert L., 570
Craven, Avery O., 892
Cregar, Ralph, 1491
Crichlow, Ernest, illus., 213, 288
Crime and delinquency, 1540, 1723, 1754- 1762
Crime and the press, 325a
Crogman, William H., 70
Cromwell, John W., 88, 731, 1415
Cromwell, Otelia, ed., 979
Cronon, Edmund D., 179
Crow Indians, 159
Crowe, Charles R., ed., 893
Crum, Mason, 1602
Crummell, Alexander, 1003- 1004
about, 120
Crump, Paul, 1069
Crump, Spencer, 1575
Cruse, Harold, 1708
Cuffé, Paul, about, 120
Cullen, Charles, illus., 1239, 1242
Cullen, Countee, 1070- 1071, 1239, 1241- 1243
Culp, Daniel W., ed., 980
Cultural Exchange Center, Los Angeles, 94
Culver, Dwight W., 1662
Cumberland Co., N.J., 1644
Cummings, John, 1733
Cunard, Nancy, comp., 981
Cuney, Norris W., about, 212
Cuney, Waring, ed., 1244
Cunningham, Virginia, 180
Current, Richard N., ed., 894
Curry, Jesse E., 1492
Curtin, Thomas J., 633
Cushing, Richard J., Cardinal, 119
Cuthbert, Marion V., 571
Dabbs, James M., 1493
Dabney, Lillian G., 572
Dabney, Wendell P., 1603
Dade Co., Fla., 538
Daedalus, 1005
Daly, John J., 181
Daly, Victor, 1071a
Damerell, Reginald G., 573
Dancy, John C., 182
Daniel, Bradford, ed., 1006
Daniel, Sadie I., 114
Daniel, Vattel E., 1663
Daniel, William A., 1744
Daniels, John, 1604
Daniels, Jonathan, 1566
Dannett, Sylvia G. L., 115
David, Jay, comp., 116
Davidson, Bruce, illus., 1005
Davie, Maurice R., 732
Davis, Allison, 1709
Davis, Arthur P., ed., 975
Davis, Christopher, 1072
Davis, David B., 818
Davis, Edwin A., 183
ed., 1616
Davis, Harry E., 1386
Davis, John P., ed., 65
Davis, L. D., 1758
Davis, Lawrence A., 1448
Davis, Ossie, 1210
Davis, Robert E., 400
Davis, Sammy, Jr., 184
about, 140
Davis, William R., 574
Day, Helen C., 1664
Day, Richard E., 575
Daykin, Jon J., 441
Dayton, Ohio, 1391
Dees, Jesse W., 1494
Degrees, academic, 587
De Jong, Gordon F., 1605
De Knight, Freda, 386
De Land, Clyde O., illus., 1067
Delany, Martin R., 733
Delaware
DeLay, H. S., illus., 1079
Delta Sigma Theta, 1396a
about, 966
De Mond, Albert L., 401
Dennett, John R., 895
Dennison, Tim, 1350
Dentists, 1292
Derbigny, Irving A., 576
De Santis, Vincent P., 1416
Des Moines, Public Schools, 727
Detroit Urban League, 182
Research Dept., 1606
Dett, Robert N., ed., 1351
Detweiler, Frederick G., 1458
Deutsch, Morton, 502
Dewey, Donald, 469
Dexter, Charles, 1778
Dickinson, Donald C., 7
Dickson Art Center, 89
Diggs, Charles C., 432
Diggs, E. Irene, 68
Dill, Augustus G., ed., 578
Dillard, James H., 1284a
Dillon, Merton L., 819
Directories, 66, 76, 131, 802, 1459a
Discrimination. See Race discrimination, Segregation
Dissertations, academic, bibliography, 25, 40
District of Columbia, 148, 1610, 1614
Divine, Father, about, 262
Dobbin, Donald D., 1648
Dobie, James Frank, 682
Dobler, Lavinia G., 117
Dodds, Barbara, 8
Dogan, M. W., 70
Dollard, John, 1710
Donald, David, 1422
Donald, Henderson H., 442, 896
Donnan, Elizabeth, ed., 820
Donohugh, Agnes C. L., 68
Donovan, Frank R., 821
Doriot, George F., 435
Dorman, Michael, 326
Dorson, Richard M., comp., 690
Douglas, Aaron, illus., 722, 1221, 1240, 1266
Douglas, William O., 822
Douglass, Frederick, 185- 186, 1007, 1460
Douglass, Joseph H., 424
Douty, Esther M., 187
Dover, Cedric, 84
Dover, Maureen, 84
Dowd, Douglas F., ed., 1412
Doyle, Bertram W., 1495
Drake, Merci L., 472
Drama, 665, 670, 672, 948, 1209
Drawings, 97
Dreer, Herman, 956
Drew, Charles R., about, 211, 237
Drew Theological Seminary, 1667- 1668
Drewry, William S., 823
Drimmer, Melvin, comp., 1008
Drisko, Carol F., 897
Drotning, Phillip T., 734
Duberman, Martin B., 332, 1211
ed., 824
DuBois, William E. B., 188- 189, 425, 712, 825, 898, 1009- 1010, 1076- 1080, 1496, 1608
Ducas, George, ed., 770
Duckett, Alfred, 276
Dudley, James B., about, 132
Dumas, Alexandre, père, about, 120
Dummett, Clifton O., ed., 1292
Dumond, Dwight L., 10, 327, 826- 827
Dunbar, Alice M. See Nelson, Alice R. M. D.
Dunbar, Ernest, 1711
Dunbar, Paul L., 1081- 1086, 1246- 1248
Dunbar High School, Washington, D.C., 600
Duncan, Eula G., 693
Duncan, Otis D., 444, 503, 1598
Duncan, S. E., 629
Duncan, Thelma M., 1223
Dunham, Katherine, 190
about, 170
Dunning, William A., 899
Durden, Robert F., ed., 1439
Durham, Philip, 443
Durham, N.C., 1425
D'Usseau, Arnaud, 1212
Dykeman, Wilma, 1497
Dykes, Eva B., ed., 979
Eason, Warren, 1554
East St. Louis, Ill., 1584
Eastman, George, 1492
Eaton, Isabel, 1608
Ebony, 67, 1011
Eckard, E. W., 469
Economic conditions, 396- 539, 1037, 1597, 1607
bibliography, 40See also Business; Employment; Housing, under names of places and regions, e.g., Southern States ——economic conditions
Edmonds, Helen G., 1417
Edmonson, Munro S., ed., 1309
Education, 114, 131- 132, 426, 433, 440, 450, 540- 664, 746, 980, 1039, 1290, 1298
See also Educators, Race discrimination ——in education; Segregation ——in education; Teachers and teaching, Universities and colleges
Educational Foundation of the National Council of Negro Women, 495
Educators, 132, 222, 227, 257, 597.
See also Teachers and teaching
Edwards, Gilbert Franklin, 444
Edwards, Paul K., 404
Edwin, Ed, 219
Egypt, Ophelia S., 831
Ehle, John, 1608a
Eichenberg, Fritz, illus., 693
Eichner, Alfred S., 1505
"80 John," about, 165
Eisenhower, Dwight D., about, 256
Eisenstadt, Murray, 735
See also Gerrymander, Voting
Elinson, Howard, ed., 1031
Elkins, Stanley M., 828
Elks of the World, Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of, 1398
Ellington, Duke, about, 140
Elliott, Lawrence, 191
Ellis, Ethel M. V., comp., 11, 37a
about, 966
Ellison, Virginia H., 4
Emancipation, 764, 796, 803, 864, 882, 930
Emancipation Proclamation, 821, 904, 921, 1015
Emanuel, James A., 192
comp., 982
Embree, Edwin R., 118
Emilio, Luis F., 1317
Emmett, Daniel D., about, 1369
Emond, Norma J., 1648
Employment, 407, 410, 413, 416, 428, 432, 434- 492, 898, 1313, 1704, 1719a, 1743
bibliography, 43
Encyclopedias, 68
English, James W., 193
biography (collective), 140.
Eppes, Susan B., 1712
Epps, Archie, ed., 1027
Epstein, Lenore A., 420
Essays and addresses, 995- 1044, 1404, 1485, 1504, 1661.
See also under subjects, e.g., Civil rights, ——essays and addresses
Essien-Udom, Essien U., 1498
European War, 1914-1918, 1319, 1327- 1328, 1332
Evans, William McKee, 900
Evers, Medgar W., about, 127, 1499
Evers, Mrs. Medgar, 1499
Expatriates, 1711
FEPC. See U.S. Committee on Fair Employment Practice
Facts on File, New York, 328, 370
Fager, Charles E., 1500
Faggett, Harry L., ed., 1051
Fahey, William A., 136
Falls, C. B., 1266
Faltermayer, Edmund K., 415
See also Children;
Fanshel, David, 1747
about, 145
Farr, Finis, 194
Father Divine, about, 262
Faubus, Orval E., about, 1556
Faulkner, William, about, 970
Fauset, Arthur H., 1666
Fax, Elton, illus., 687
Fayette Co., Tenn., 1412
Federal Writers' Project, 829
Feelings, Tom, illus., 115, 845
Fein, Rashi, 405
Feldman, Eugene P. R., 195
Ferguson, Blanche E., 958
Ferguson, Clarence C., 550
Ferman, Louis A., 445
Ferris, William H., 738
Ficklen, John R., 901
Fields, Uriah J., 1501
15th amendment
Filler, Louis, 830
1st amendment, about, 346
Fishel, Leslie H., 739
Fisher, ——, 157
Fisher, Dorothy C., 305
Fisher, Elijah J., about, 196
Fisher, Paul L., ed., 1013
Fisher, Walter, 217
Fisk University, Nashville, about, 563
Fitzgerald, Ed, ed., 204
Fitzhugh, George, 832
Fitzhugh, H. Naylor, ed., 432
Fleischer, Nathaniel S., 1773
Fleishman, Stanley, 330
Fleming, Walter L., 406
Fletcher, Tom, 666
Florida, 209, 228, 488
Fogelson, Robert M., 1586
Foley, Eugene P., 447
Folk-lore and folk-tales, 172, 673- 710
bibliography, 15
Folk-songs. See Songs
Fontaine, William T., 1501a
Foote, Nelson N., 504
Ford, James, ed., 523
Ford, James W., 1419
Ford, Nick A., 959
ed., 1051
Foreman, Paul B., 51
Forten, Charlotte L., 580
Forten, James, about, 187
Fortune, Amos, about, 243
Fortune, T. Thomas, 1502
Fortune, 415
Foster, William Z., 740
Fountain, William A., 81
14th amendment
Fowler, Julian S., ed., 35
Francis, Charles E., 1318
Frank, Waldo, 1159
Franklin, Charles L., 448
Franklin, John H., 315, 725, 741- 743, 904- 905, 1012
Frazier, Edward Franklin, 744, 1504, 1670, 1714, 1765- 1766
Frederick, John T., 992
Fredrickson, George M., ed., 837
Freedman's Savings and Trust Company, Washington, D. C., 406
Freedmen, 241, 594, 642, 759, 896, 903, 912, 923
Freedmen's Bureau, about, 241, 883, 885, 903
Freedom of Information Conference, 8th, University of Missouri, 1965, 1013
Freemasons, 1384- 1386, 1396, 1399
Freidel, Frank B., 745
Friedman, Leon, comp., 332
Frontier and pioneer life, 159, 198, 240
Fugitive slaves, 815- 816, 834, 848, 866, 872.
See also Slavery, ——biographies and narratives; Underground railroad
Fuller, Meta V. W., about, 134, 952
Furman, Abraham L., 1158a
Furness, William H., 857
Furr, Arthur, 1327
Gallagher, Buell G., 581
Gangs, 1619
Gara, Larry, 834
Gardner, Burleigh B., 1709
Gardner, Gordon A., 1706
Gardner, Mary R., 1709
Garfinkel, Herbert, 449
Garrison, Lucy M., comp., 1344
Garvey, Amy J., 202
Garvey, Marcus, 203,
Gaskins, Ruth L., 387
Gass, Gertrude Z., 484
Gates, Robbins L., 582
Gauerke, Warren E., 585
Gay, William T., 1609
Geis, Gilbert, 717
Geismar, Maxwell, 1486
Genovese, Eugene D., 835
ed., 417
Georgetown, D.C., 942
Georgia Historical Quarterly, 1413
Gerrymander, 1447
bibliography, 13
Gewecke, Clifford G., 154
Ghana, 717
Gibson, Althea, 204
Gibson, Gertrude, illus., 1204
Gibson, John S., 633
Gibson, John W., 70
Gilbert, Ben W., 1576
Gilbert, Olive, 205
Gillard, John T., 1672
Gillogly, David K., 538
Ginzberg, Eli, 428, 450, 456, 583, 1505
ed., 407
Glazer, Nathan, 1766
ed., 505
Glenn, Norval D., 721
Gloster, Hugh M., 960
Goff, Regina M., 1748
Goldblatt, Harold S., 506
Golden, Harry L., 177, 333, 1491, 1532
Goldston, Robert C., 747
Goldwin, Robert A., comp., 1014
ed., 1015
Gomillion, Charles G., about, 1447
Gonzales, Ambrose E., 694- 694a
Goodman, Andrew, about, 124
Goodman, Mary E., 1749
Goodman, P., 1014
Gordon, Edmund W., 584
Gordon, Joan, 1629
Gosnell, Harold F., 1420
Gouldtown, N.J., 1644
Gourlay, Jack G., 451
Government officials and employees, 454, 461
Gow, James, 1212
Graham, Frank P., 1536
Graham, Hugh D., 1459
Graham, Lorenz B., 1093
Graham, Shirley, 206- 207, 1094- 1095
Grant, Joanne, comp., 334
Grantham, Dewey W., 1468
Gray, Alma L., 19
Gray, Thomas R., 878
Greater Minneapolis Interfaith Fair Housing Program, 529
Green, Constance M., 1610
Green, Donald R., 585
Green, Elizabeth L., 961
Green, John M., ed., 1623
Green, Robert L., 586
Green, William T., 1628
Greene, Ellen F., 1295
Greene, Harry W., 587
Greene, Lorenzo J., 452- 453, 748
Greene, Mary F., 588
Greensboro, N.C., 515
Greenville, S.C., 1427
Greer, Scott A., 1715
Gregory, Dick, 208, 335, 1200- 1201
Gregory, Montgomery, ed., 1221
Grier, Eunice S., 507- 509, 520, 1526
Grier, George W., 507- 509, 520, 1526
Grier, William H., 1293
Gries, John M., ed., 523
Griffin, Appleton P. C., 57- 58
Griffin, John A., 638
Griffin, John H., 1716
Grigg, Charles, 349
Griggs, Sutton E., 1096- 1096a
Grigsby, William G., 524
Grimke, A. H., 1403
Grimke, Angelina W., 1216
Grimke, Francis J., 1016- 1017, 1403
Groppi, James E., about, 1593
Gross, Milton, 265
Gross, Seymour L., ed., 962
Gross, Theodore L., comp., 982
Grossack, Martin M., ed., 1294
Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Committee on Social Issues, 589
Guilford Co., N.C., 1554
Guinn, Dorothy C., 1223
Gula, Martin, 1750
Gullahs, 694, 707, 1602, 1651.
See also Sea Islands, S.C.
Gulledge, Ola L., 1375
Gunner, Frances, 1223
Gurin, Patricia, 590
Guzman, Jessie P., 12, 591- 592
Haber, Alan, ed., 1713
Hadley, James S., 1494
Haiti, fiction, 1056
Halasz, Nicholas, 836
Haley, Alex, 237a
Haley, James T., comp., 71
Hall, Charles E., 1736
Hall, Woodrow W., 13
Hallock, Robert, illus., 136
Hamer, Fannie L., 374
Hamilton, Charles V., 318
Hammon, Briton, 209
Hammon, Jupiter, 1281
Hammond, Jabez D., ed., 251
Hampton, Wade, about, 1423
Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va., 1351
Handler, M.S., 237a
Handlin, Oscar, 336, 1584, 1611
Hansberry, Lorraine, 337, 1217
Hansen, Carl F., 593
Hardwick, Richard, 211
Hardy, John E., ed., 962
Hare, Maud C., 212, 1223, 1355
Hare, Nathan, 1717
Harkey, Ira B., 1506
Harlem, New York (City), 1600, 1615, 1631- 1633
Harlem Cultural Council, 90
Harlem Globetrotters, 1781
Harlem Hospital, 1290
Harlem Youth Opportunities Unlimited, New York, 1612
Harmon, John H., 427
Harmon Foundation, 85
Harper, Frances E. W., 1097
Harrington, Michael, 1713
Harrington, Ollie, illus., 1203
Harris, Fred R., 1293
Harris, Jacqueline L., 163
Harris, Joel Chandler, 695
Harris, Theodore D., ed., 198
Harrison, Deloris, 213
Harrison, William P., 1673
Hart, Albert B., 866
Hartshorn, William N., ed., 750
Haskell, Daniel C., 21
Hatch, John D., 82
Hatcher, Andrew D., 367
Hausrath, Alfred H., 1321
Hawkins, Hugh, ed., 214
Hawkins, William G., 215
Hawley, Langston T., 469
Hayden, James J., 933
Hayden, Robert E., 1249- 1250, 1252
comp., 1251
Hayden, Thomas, 1577
Hayden, William, 216
Hayes, Laurence J. W., 454
Hayes, Roland, 1356
about, 134
Hayes, Rutherford B., 594
Haynes, Elizabeth R., 120
Haynes, George E., 455
Haynes, Leonard L., 1674
Hays, Brooks, 1508
Haywood, Charles, 15
Headley, Madge, 1744
Health. See Medicine and health
Healy, James A., Bishop, about, 199
Heaps, Willard A., 1578
ed., 1283
Heartman Negro Collection, 49
Hedgeman, Anna A., 339
Hefner, Hugh M., 1200
Height, Dorothy I., 1509
Henderson, Edwin B., 1774
Henderson, George W., 1098- 1099
Henderson, Mary, 18a
Henkle, Henrietta. See Buckmaster, Henrietta, pseud.
Henning, John F., 456
Henry, Robert S., 906
Henry, Waights G., 409
Henson, Josiah, 217
about, 120
Henson, Matthew A., 218
about, 253
Hentoff, Nat, 1510
comp., 1376
Henton, Comradge L., 1751
Herskovits, Melville J., 1718
Herzog, George, 1367
Hesseltine, William B., ed., 751
Hesslink, George K., 1613
Heyward, Dorothy H. K., 1218
Heyward, Du Bose, 1218
Heywood, Chester D., 1319
Hickey, Neil, 219
Hiestand, Dale L., 456
Higbee, Jay A., 938
Higginson, Thomas W., 918, 1320
Hill, Clifton T., illus., 1272
Hill, Herbert, 595
Hill, John H., 1100
Hill, Joseph A., 1733
Hill, Robert B., 1586
Hill, Samuel E., 474
Hill, Timothy A., 410
Hillery, George A., 1605
about, 966
Hirshson, Stanley P., 1422
Historians, 790
Historical Records Survey, District of Columbia, 17
History, 99, 102, 309, 320, 327, 341, 351, 362, 366- 367, 372, 711- 930, 1472, 1500, 1505, 1507, 1535a, 1567, 1578, 1591, 1632, 1643, 1694, 1724
chronology, 786See also Reconstruction; Slavery, ——names of wars, e.g., Civil War, under names of subjects, places, and regions, e.g., Virginia ——history
Hobson, Julius W., 1507
Hodges, Carl G., comp., 752
Hoffman, James, 554
Hogan, William R., 183
ed., 1616
Holdredge, Helen O., 220
Holland, Annie W., about, 132
Hollander, Barnett, 838
Hollitz, Erwin, 1706
Holmes, Dwight O. W., 598
Holmes, Eugene C., ed., 1019
Holmes, Hamilton, about, 643
Holmes, Samuel J., 411
Holsey, Alban L., 70
Holsey, Lucius H., Bishop, about, 173
Holt, John, 609
Holt, Len, 340
Home Missions Council of North America, 1691
Homer, Dorothy R., 33
Hope, John, 469, 1403
Hopkins, Thomas A., 347
Horne, Lena, 223
about, 140
Horney, Helen, 752
Horowitz, Benjamin, 97
Horton, David S., 1038
Hough, Joseph C., 1675
Housing, 465, 493- 539, 1533, 1553, 1593, 1624
Houston, Tex., 399
Hoving, Thomas P. F., 95
Howard, James, ed., 853
Howard, Oliver O., about, 241
Howard University
Howe, Mark D., 325a
Howells, William D., 1246
Hoyt, Edwin P., 224
Hubbard, Geraldine H., comp., 35
Hughes, Carl M., pseud. See Hughes, John M. C.
Hughes, Everett C., 1607
Hughes, John M. C., 963
Hughes, Langston, 122- 123, 225- 226, 667, 753, 985, 1108, 1110- 1115, 1219, 1244, 1253- 1257, 1259- 1261, 1387
Hughes, Louis, 1628
Hughes, William H., ed., 227
Hull, Marie, illus., 1204
Hullfish, Henry Gordon, ed., 566
See also Comedians
Humphrey, Hubert H., ed., 599
Humphrey, Norman D., 1581
Hundley, Mary G., 600
Hunt, B. H., 1563
Hunter, Charlayne, about, 643
Hunter, Jane E., about, 114
Hunter, Thomas L., 705
Hunton, George K., 229
Hurst, John F., Bishop, 1148
Hurston, Zora N., 697, 1118- 1119
Huson, Carolyn F., 457
Hussey, Edith L., 18a
Hyman, Harold M., comp., 908
ed., 907
Illinois
Imari, Brother, 341
Imes, Nella. See Larsen, Nella
Indiana Co., Pa., 871
Indiana Historical Bureau, 1646
Indians of North America, captivities, 209, 246
Industrial relations, 435, 473
Industrial Relations Counselors, 473
Inger, Morton, 570
Ingram, Tolbert R., ed., 1676
Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va., 754, 1330
Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations (University of Michigan—Wayne State University), 490
Institute of Race Relations, 315
Institute of Social and Religious Research, 539, 1685, 1744
Integrated Education, 602, 658
Integrated Education Associates, 59, 602
Integration. See Segregation
International Research Associates, 603
Isaacs, Edith J. R., 668
Isaacs, Harold R., 342
Ishmael, Woodi, illus., 705
Isom, Mary E., illus., 393
Jackson, Bruce, comp., 698
Jackson, Clyde O., 1357
Jackson, George P., 1358
Jackson, Joseph H., 343
Jackson, Luther P., 458- 459, 1752
Jackson, Mahalia, 230
Jackson, Miles M., 19
Jackson, Robert G., illus., 610
Jackson, Wagner D., 530
Jackson, Walter C., ed., 1284a
Jacobs, Paul, 344
Jacobson, Julius, ed., 460
Jaffe, Abram J., 604
Janowitz, Morris, 1580
Jarrell, Hampton M., 1423
Jarrette, Alfred Q., 1424
Jazz music, 1345, 1348, 1353- 1354, 1361- 1364, 1366, 1368, 1374, 1376, 1381
Jazz musicians, 1348, 1363, 1368, 1374, 1381
Jeffers, Camille, 1767
Jefferson, Isaac, 230a
Jefferson, Thomas, about, 230a, 251
Jenkins, William S., 839
Jernegan, Marcus W., 839a
Jerome, Victor J., 669
John Dewey Society, 566
John F. Slater Fund, New York, 594
Johns Hopkins University, Operations Research Office, 1321
Johns Island, S.C., 1346
Johnson, Andrew, about, 911
Johnson, Charles S., 516, 523, 605, 1545, 1559, 1613a, 1719
Johnson, Clifton H., 20
Johnson, Edward E., 1751
Johnson, Frank R., 840
Johnson, Georgia D., 1262- 1263
Johnson, Guion, 68
Johnson, Guy B., 699- 700, 708, 1371
Johnson, Haynes B., 1614
Johnson, James W., 231, 1120, 1265- 1266, 1511, 1615
Johnson, John A. (Jack), about, 194, 1225, 1772
Johnson, John Rosamond, 1359
ed., 1360
Johnson, Joseph T., 412
Johnson, Lyndon B., 785, 1005, 1020, 1481
Johnson, Mordecai W., about, 118, 134
Johnson, Philip A., 510
Johnson, Roger M., 995
Johnson, T. J., ed., 131
Johnson, William, 1616
about, 183
Johnston, Ruby F., 1677
Joiner, William A., comp., 1617
Joint Health Education Committee, Nashville, 1295
Joint Survey Commission of the Baptist Inter-convention Committee, 1678
Jones, Butler A., 164
Jones, Charles C., 701
Jones, Elizabeth O., illus., 1378
Jones, Eugene K., about, 134
Jones, Everett L., 443
Jones, Howard Mumford, 1320
Jones, Howard O., 1679
Jones, Joseph C., illus., 706
Jones, LeRoi, 1021, 1121- 1122, 1220, 1267, 1361- 1362
Jones, Scipio A., about, 134
Jones, Thomas J., 651a
Jones, William H., 511
Jordan, Lewis G., 1680
Jordan, Winthrop D., 754
Joseph, Donald, 675
Journal of Negro Education, index, 37a
Journalists. See Press— biography
Jubilee Singers, 1055
Julius Rosenwald Fund, 1, 72, 1295
Just, Ernest E., about, 134
Justice, administration of, 354, 1761
Juvenile literature, 101, 111, 117, 122- 123, 139- 140, 187, 213, 268, 702, 711, 768, 805, 897, 921, 1230, 1507, 1578
Kahn, Tom, 345
Kaiser, Inez Y., 388
Kalven, Harry, 346
Kansas, 579
Kaplan, Louis, 21
Kardiner, Abram, 1296
Karon, Bertram P., 1297
Katz, Daniel, 590
Katz, Shlomo, ed., 1524
comp., 755
Kauffer, Edward McKnight, illus., 1259- 1260
Kaufman, William I., 389
Kay, Barry, 530
Keckley, Elizabeth H., 232
Keech, William R., 1425
Keeler, Miriam, 472
Keil, Charles, 1363
Kelley, Ann, illus., 710
Kelley, William M., 1123- 1125
Kellogg, Charles F., 1388
Kemble, Frances A., 841
Kendall, Robert, 606
Kendall College, Evanston, Ill., 1037
Kennedy, Robert F., 347
Kenney, John A., 1298
Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, Public Affairs Conference Center, 1014
Kephart, William M., 1759
Kerner Commission. See U.S. National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders
Key, Valdimer O., 1426
Killens, John O., 1126- 1128, 1513
Kilpatrick, James J., 607
Kilpatrick, William H., 581
King, Donald B., ed., 1022
King, Glen D., 1492
King, Martin Luther, 124, 350- 352, 354, 1014, 1023- 1024, 1411, 1484, 1680a
Kinzer, Robert H., 431
Kirkeby, W. T. E., 1364
Kirsch, Robert, 1573
Kitt, Eartha, 233
about, 140
Kleiner, Robert J., 1305
Knapp, Robert B., 608
Knight, Charles L., 512
Knights of the White Camelia, 903
Knoxville, Tenn., 1536
Koblitz, Minnie W., 22
Koger, Azzie B., 1681
Kohl, Herbert R., 609- 610
Konvitz, Milton R., 353
Korey, William, ed., 368
Korn, Bertram W., 842
Kornbluh, Joyce L., comp., 446
ed., 1713
Kornhauser, Stanley H., 611
Kozol, Jonathan, 612
Kraus, Henry, 513
Krehbiel, Henry E., 1365
Krislov, Samuel, 461
Kunstler, William M., 354
Kvaraceus, William C., 633
Kytle, Elizabeth L., 234
Labor and laboring classes, 438, 448, 455, 477a, 486, 832, 839a, 1704.
See also Slave labor, Trade-unions
Ladd, Everett C., 1427
Lader, Lawrence, 843
Lake, Verge, ed., 941
Lancaster, Emmer M., 23
Lancaster, H. Carrington, 1269
Lane, Lunsford, about, 215
Langhorne, Orra H. M. G., 1618
Langston, John M., about, 120
Lanusse, Armand, comp., 1269
Larer, Marian L., illus., 181
Larkins, John R., 1720
Larsson, Clotye M., ed., 1721
Latham, Frank B., 844
Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial, New York, 802
Laurenti, Luigi, 514
Lauter, Sylvia, 1523
Law enforcement, 1492, 1759, 1760- 1761. See also Police
Lawrence, Jacob, illus., 1256
Lawson, James, 345
Lead Belly, about, 1367
Leaman, Samuel H., 515
Leckie, William H., 1322
Ledbetter, Huddie, about, 1367
Lee, Alfred M., 1581
Lee, Frank F., 1618a
Lee, Irvin H., 1323
Lee, L. Tennent, ed., 540
Lee, Reba, pseud., 235
Lee, Ulysses G., 1324
ed., 975
Legal status, 376, 378, 575, 822, 913- 947, 1015
LeGette, Blythe, 177
Legislators, 1413
Lehrer, Stanley, ed., 555
Leighton, Frances S., 264
Leighton, George R., 1313
Leinwand, Gerard, comp., 355
Leland, Charles G., 702a
Leskes, Theodore, 353
Lessing, L., 415
Lester, Julius, 1514
comp., 845
Levene, Helene H., comp., 752
Levin, Arthur J., 522
Levitt, Arthur, 1592
Levy, Charles J., 356
Lewis, Anthony, 357
Lewis, Claude, 236
Lewis, Hylan, 1619, 1722, 1767
Lewis, John, about, 145
Liberia, 801
poetry, 1277
Libraries, 603
Lichello, Robert, 237
Liebow, Elliot, 1619
Lief, Harold, 1309
Lightfoot, Claude M., 1515
Lightfoot, Philip M., about, 1447
Lightfoot, Robert M., 1759a
Lincoln, Abraham, about, 148, 232, 791, 821- 822, 910, 1012
Lincoln, Charles Eric, 757, 1025, 1682- 1683
Lincoln, Mary Todd, about, 232
Lincoln University, Chester Co., Pa., American Studies Institute, 39
Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo., School of Journalism, 5
Lindsay, Arnett G., 427
Lipsyte, Robert, 208
Liston, Sonny, about, 308
Little, Malcolm, 237a, 758, 1026- 1027, 1484
Little Rock, Ark., 544, 551, 559, 635, 1508
Littlejohn, David, 964
Lloyd, Arthur Y., 846
Locke, Alain L., 82, 86- 87, 99a, 955, 1366
Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., 726
Loescher, Frank S., 1684
Lofton, John, 847
Logan, Frenise A., 1620
Logan, Rayford W., 185, 760- 762, 799
Loggins, Vernon, 965
Loguen, Jermain W., 848
Lokos, Lionel, 238
Lomax, Alan, 1346
ed., 1367
Lomax, John A., ed., 1367
Long, Herman H., 516
Lott, Albert J., 1299
Lott, Bernice E., 1299
Louisiana, 389, 393, 1309, 1381, 1587, 1599, 1637, 1732
Louisiana Historical Association, 876
Louisville, Ky., 1476
L'Ouverture, Toussaint. See Toussaint Louverture, François D.
Love, John L., 1403
Love, Nat, 240
Love, Rose L., ed., 702
Lovejoy, Owen, about, 242
Lowe, Richard, illus., 679
Lowenstein, Ralph L., ed., 1013
Lubell, Samuel, 1516
Lucas, John, 1368
Lufkin, Raymond, illus., 718
Lundy, Benjamin, about, 819
Lyda, John W., 1621
Lyford, Joseph P., 1481
Lyle, Jack, ed., 1456
Lynk, Miles V., 1300
Mabry, William A., 1430
McCall, Dan, 967
McCann, Gerald, illus., 122
McCarthy, Charles H., 910
McCauley, Patrick, ed., 638
McCollum, Ruby, 228
McCone Commission, 1575
McConnell, Roland C., 1325
McCoo, Edward J., 1223
McCord, Charles H., 1723
McCord, William M., 1621a
McCulloch, Margaret C., 64
McDonald, Erwin L., 1491
McEntire, Davis, 514
ed., 505
MacEóin, Gary, 229
McFeely, William S., 241
McGill, Ralph, 541
McGinnis, Frederick A., 613- 614
McGrath, Earl J., 615
McGraw, James R., 335
McGuinn, Henry J., 1744
Macguire, Robert R., illus., 1070
Mack, Raymond W., 1028
McKay, Claude, about, 953
McKitrick, Eric L., 911
ed., 849
McLoughlin, William G., 812
McManus, Edgar J., 850
McMillan, Lewis K., 616
McNamee, Lawrence F., 25
Macon Co., Ala., 1613a
McPherson, James M., 763- 764
McQuade, Walter, 415
McWhiney, Grady, ed., 912
McWilliams, Carey, 1517
McWorter, Gerald A., 570
Madden, Martin B., 196
Maddox, Harry, illus., 1204
Magdol, Edward, 242
Magoun, F. Alexander, 243
Mahammitt, Sarah H. T., 390
Mahier, Edith, illus., 1273
Major, Clarence, comp., 1270
Majors, Monroe A., 126
Malcolm X. See Little, Malcolm
Malcolm X Society, Detroit, 341
Mallery, David, 617
Mallory, Edward J., ed., 1775
Malvin, John, 244
Malzberg, Benjamin, 1301
Mandelbaum, David G., 1326
Manes, Isabel C., ed., 317
Mangum, Charles S., 939
March on Washington Movement, 449, 1023
Marfuggi, Joseph R., 163
Margolies, Edward, 966
Market surveys, 399
Marrant, John, 246
Marriage, 1763
Marshall, F. Ray, 462- 464, 474
Marshall, Herbert, 247
Marshall, Paule, 1132
Marshall, Thurgood, about, 127, 145
Martin, Robert E., 1019
Marx, Barbara, 18a
Marx, Gary T., 1518
Mary Peter, Sister, 375
Maryland, 1622, 1627, 1654, 1681
Mason, Charles N., ed., 368
Mason, Julian D., ed., 1282
Mason, Monroe, 1327
Massachusetts, 1317, 1604, 1648
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for International Studies, 342
Mather, Frank L., ed., 79
Matheus, John, 1223
Matlack, Lucius C., 162
Matthews, Brander, 1265
Matthews, Donald R., 1431
Matthews, Joseph B., 1389
May, Ernest R., 725
May, Samuel J., 851
Mayhew, Leon H., 465
Mays, Benjamin E., 160, 968, 1685
Mazyck, Walter H., 765
Medal of Honor, 1323
Medicine and health, 858, 1286- 1311.
See also Nurses, Physicians
Medico-Chirurgical Society of the District of Columbia, about, 1286
Meece, Leonard E., 620
Melbourn, Julius, 251
Meltzer, Milton, 252, 667, 753, 768- 769
Memphis, Tenn., 1618b
Mendelsohn, Jack, 360
Merchant marine officers, 258
Meredith, James H., 621
about, 127
Merriam, Alan P., 26
Messner, Stephen D., 517
Metcalf, George R., 127
Methodist Church (United States)
Methodists, 1662.
See also African Methodist Episcopal Church
Mexico, 198
Meyer, Gladys E., 622
Meyer, Sylvan, 1462
Meyers, Sandra G., 604
Meyerson, Martin, 518
Micheaux, Oscar, 1136
Michigan, 182, 1601, 1606, 1613, 1623, 1648a
Middle West, 794
Midstream, 1524
Migration, 102, 442, 1719a, 1742
bibliography, 43
Military service, 197, 765, 1312- 1343
Millea, Thomas V., 1686
Miller, Abie, 1724
Miller, Elizabeth W., 27
Miller, Floyd, 253
Miller, Helen S., 1390
Miller, Herman P., 413
Miller, Joe A., comp., 446
Miller, Kelly, 1030, 1328, 1403
Miller, Loren, 940
Miller, Margery, 254
Miller, May, 1223
ed., 1224
Miller, Warren, 1137
riots, 1593
Milwaukee County Historical Society, 1628
Ministers. See Clergymen
Minneapolis, 529
Minnesota, 1642
Minorities, 505, 1028, 1490, 1517, 1635
Missions, 1673
Mississippi, 183, 1451, 1480, 1506, 1519, 1616, 1641, 1652
Mississippi Valley, folk-lore and folk-tales, 677
Missouri
Mitchell, George S., 438
Mitchell, Loften, 670
Mitchell, Roland, 350
Mitchell Co., Tex., 165
Momboisse, Raymond M., 1582
Monroe, N.C., 380
Montgomery, Ala., 270, 1501, 1609
Monticello, Va., 230a
Moody, Anne, 1519
Moon, Bucklin, 1520
ed., 990
Moon, Henry L., 1432
Moore, Archie, 255
Moore, Geraldine H., 1625
Moore, Peter W., about, 132
Moore, Richard B., 1725
Morais, Herbert M., 1302
Morgan, John W., 623
Morin, Relman, 638
Morris, Richard B., 850
Morrow, Everett F., 256
Morsbach, Mabel, 728
Morton, Richard L., 1433
Moseley, J. H., 128
Moton, Robert R., 70, 257, 1521
Mott, Abigail F., comp., 129
Moy, Seong, illus., 695
Moynihan, Daniel P., 1768- 1769
Muhammad Ali, 1772
Muhammad Mosque of Islam No. 2, 1689
Mulzac, Hugh, 258
about, 145
Murphy, Beatrice M., ed., 1271- 1272
Murphy, Raymond J., ed., 1031
Murphy, William S., 1573
Murray, Daniel A. P., 28
Murray, Florence, ed., 74
Murray, Freeman H. M., 88
Murray, Lindley, 129
Murray, Pauli, 130
ed., 941
Music, 685, 688- 689, 698- 700, 955, 1344- 1381
bibliography, 15See also Jazz music, Songs
Musicians, 951, 1348, 1355, 1361, 1366, 1368, 1372, 1374, 1381
Myers, Phineas B., 1391
Myrdal, Gunnar, 1483, 1726, 1730- 1731
Nabrit, James M., 1022
Names, 1725
Nash, Paul, 547
Nast, Bernhard, illus., 1108
Nathan, Hans, 1369
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 494, 1287- 1288, 1522
National Association of Dramatic and Speech Arts, about, 672
National Association of Independent Schools, Committee on Educational Practices, 617
National Association of Intergroup Relations Officials, 368
National Baptist Convention of the United States of America, Foreign Mission Board, 1656
National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, 996, 1661
National Collection of Fine Arts, 96
National Conference on Equal Employment Opportunity, Washington, D.C., 1962, 467
National Conference on Small Business, Washington, D.C., 1961, 432
National Council of Negro Women, 391
National Council of Teachers of English, 8, 42
National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America,
National Dental Association, 1292
National Education Association of the United States, Research Division, 625
National Industrial Conference Board, 468
National Medical Fellowships, 1303
National Opinion Research Center, 457, 570
National Planning Association, Committee of the South, 469
National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students, 565, 626, 632
National Urban League, 414, 986, 1392- 1393, 1523
Neal, Larry, comp., 987
Needham, Maurice D., 519
Negro Bibliographic and Research Center, 3a
Negro Culinary Art Club of Los Angeles, 392
Negro Health Survey, Pittsburgh, 1304
Negro-Jewish relations, 1488, 1524
Negro Publication Society of America, 857
Negroes in art, 83, 86- 89, 95, 665, 955, 1215, 1221, 1224
Negroes in literature, 86- 87, 665, 670, 952, 954- 955, 957, 959- 962, 969- 970, 974, 1215, 1221, 1223- 1224
Nell, William C., 1329
Nelson, Alice R. M. D., ed., 1032
Nelson, Bernard H., 363
Nelson, John H., 969
Nelson, Truman J., 1583
Neshoba Co., Miss., 124
Nevins, Allan, 926
New England, 843
slavery, 748
New Haven, Conn., 1648b
New Jersey Library Association, Bibliography Committee, 32
New Orleans, 519, 1309, 1381, 1599, 1732
riots, 1587
New South (Atlanta), 1525
New York (City), 1483, 1611, 1631- 1633, 1639, 1659
Board of Education, 771Office of Intergroup Education, 611City University of New York, 90Harlem Hospital, 1290housing, 495Interdepartmental Neighborhood Service Center, 1629Metropolitan Museum of Art, 95police, 1583Practising Law Institute, 372segregation, 1481See also Harlem, New York (City)
New York (State), 1592
New York Times, 357
New York Urban League, 90
Newbold, Nathan C., ed., 132
Newman, Dorothy K., 416
Newman, Shirlee P., 259
News Year, 328
Newspapers
Nichols, Charles H., 133
Nichols, James L., 70
Nichols, Mary D., ed., 1412
Nicholson, Joseph W., 1685
Nicol, Helen O., 472
Niles, John Jacob, 1370
Niles, Walter L., 1290
Nilon, Charles H., 970
Nipson, Herbert, ed., 1011
Noble, Jeanne L., 627
Nolan, William A., 1434
Nolen, Claude H., 1528
Nonviolence, 1382
Norfleet, Marvin B., 628
Norfolk, Va., 564
Norris, John Franklyn, about, 293
North Carolina, 215, 418, 429, 1620, 1650, 1754
North Carolina Mayors' Co-operating Committee, 1650
Northrup, Herbert R., 476- 477a
ed., 475
Northwood, Lawrence K., 521
Nowlin, William F., 1435
Nunn, William C., 913
Nutrition, 653
Nye, Russel B., 363a
Oak, Vishnu V., 1459a
Oakland, Calif., 398
Art Museum, 89
Oberlin College, Library, 35
Occupational training, 398
Odd Fellows, Grand United Order of, in America, 1383
Odum, Howard W., 1371
Ogden, Frederic D., 1436
O'Grady, Janine G., 1648
O'Hanlon, Thomas, 415
Ohio, 244, 1341, 1391, 1603, 1617, 1634a
Ohio Historical Society, 1341
Oklahoma City, 1626
Olbrich, Emil, 1437
Oliver, Joseph ("King" Joe), about, 151
Olmsted, Frederick L., 853
Olsen, Jack, 1777
Olsen, Otto H., 260
Olson, Frederick J., 1628
Operation Crossroads Africa, 274
Orden, Bob, ed., 1200
O'Reilly, Charles T., 1630
Organizations, 421, 1382- 1401
O'Sullivan, Tom, illus., 1275
Ott, Eleanore, 393
Ottley, Roi, 261, 772, 1142, 1632- 1633
Ovesey, Lionel, 1296
Ovington, Mary W., 134
Owen, Juliette A., illus., 702a
Owen, Mary A., 702a
Owens, William A., 854
Pain, William, 364
Palfi, Marian, illus., 103
Pancoast, Elinor, 619
Parker, Charles C. (Charlie "Bird"), about, 271
Parker, Donald F., 717
Parker, Robert A., 262
Parker, Seymour, 1305
Parks, Lillian R., 264
Parks, Rosa L., about, 127, 145
Parsons, Elsie W. C., ed., 703
Parsons, Talcott, ed., 1005
Passow, A. Harry, ed., 663
Pattee, Richard, 799
Patterson, Caleb P., 1633a
Patterson, Floyd, 265
Patterson, Frederick D., ed., 227
Patterson, Lindsay, comp., 671, 1372
Pauli, Hertha E., 266
Payne, Daniel A., 1687
Peary, Robert E., 218
Pease, Frederick H., 773
Pease, Jane H., 774
Pease, William H., 774
Peck, James, 1531
Penn, Irvine G., 1460
Penniman, George W., ed., 750
Pennington, Edgar L., 630
Pennington, James W. C., 267, 775
Pennsylvania, 187, 871, 1461, 1608, 1666
Periodicals
Perry, Jennings, 1438
Pershing, John J., 1332
Peskin, Allan, ed., 244
Peterkin, Julia M., 1727
Peters, Paul, 1222
Peters, Phillis. See Wheatley, Phillis
Petersen, William, ed., 1533
Pettet, Zellmer R., 1736
Pettigrew, Thomas F., 27, 365, 1306
Peyton, Thomas R., 1307
Pharr, Robert D., 1147
Phelps-Stokes Fund, 68, 631, 651a, 1534, 1691
Philadelphia, 187, 1461, 1608, 1666
Phillips, Ulrich B., 417, 855- 856
Phillips, Wendell, about, 158
Photographers, 263
Physicians, 171, 211, 237, 492, 1298, 1300, 1303, 1307, 1311
Pickard, Kate E. R., 857
Pickens, William, 1148
Piech, Paul P., illus., 1020
Pierce, Joseph A., 433
Pike, James S., 1439
Pinkney, Alphonso, 776
Pipes, James, 1273
Pippin, Horace, about, 93
Pitts, Elsie W., ed., 1650
Pitts, Nathan A., 418
Pittsburgh, 1304
Pittsburgh Courier, about, 282
Plantation life, 417, 855, 858, 1613a, 1712, 1727, 1741
Planter (Steamer), 288
Plato, Ann, 991
Plaut, Richard L., 632
ed., 626
Playwrights, 225- 226, 948, 1209
Pleasant, Mary E., about, 220
Ploski, Harry A., comp., 77
Plotkin, Lawrence, 565
Pointe de Sable, Jean B., fiction, 1094
Poitier, Sidney, about, 140
Police, 372, 441, 1492, 1580, 1583, 1759, 1760- 1761
Polite, Carlene H., 1149
Political parties, 1409, 1416, 1421.
See also Republican Party
Politics, 318, 374, 419, 898, 943, 1402- 1455
biography. See Legislators
Pollard, Edward A., 914
Pool, Rosey E., ed., 1274
Poole, Elijah, 1689
Poor People's Campaign, 1576
Pope, Liston, 1535
Port Royal, S.C., 1636
Porter, Mrs. M. E., 394
Posey, Thomas E., 1634
Postell, William D., 858
Potomac Institute, Washington, D.C., 522
Potter, David M., 417
Poverty, 413, 480, 526, 633, 1640, 1713, 1752, 1767
Powdermaker, Hortense, 1728
Powell, Adam Clayton, 777
Powledge, Fred, 1535a
Practising Law Institute, 372
Preaching, 1688
Prejudice, 1016, 1518, 1564, 1745
President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership, Washington, D.C., 1931, 523
Presidents, U.S., 264.
See also names of individual Presidents
Press, 325a, 1013, 1429, 1456- 1462
See also Newspapers, Periodicals
Preston, Edward, 268
Price, Arthur Cooper, 1753
Price, Daniel O., 564
Price, Hugh D., 1440
Price, Leontyne, about, 140
Price, Margaret W., 1441
Price, Thomas, 277
Priest, Madge H., 539
Priests. See Clergymen
Prince Edward Co., Va., 586, 637
Princeton University, Program in American Civilization, 39
Prints, 94
Private schools, 585, 617, 651a
Proctor, H. H., 1758
Proctor, Samuel D., 366
Progressivism, 371
Protestant churches, 1674, 1684, 1690.
See also names of individual denominations, e.g., Baptists, Methodists
Prothro, James W., 1431
Proudfoot, Merrill, 1536
Psychology, 381, 568, 589, 789, 1293- 1294, 1296- 1297, 1299, 1306, 1309, 1486, 1513
Public Affairs Committee, 531, 1313, 1731
Public opinion, 1404, 1497, 1554
Puckett, Newbell N., 704
Puerto Ricans, 296, 745, 1611, 1640
Pushkin, Aleksandr S., about, 120
Putnam, Carleton, 1537
Quarles, Benjamin, 739, 778- 779, 1330- 1331
Quick, Charles W., ed., 1022
Quillin, Frank U., 1634a
Quint, Howard H., 1538
Race, 1503- 1504, 1530, 1548, 1729, 1755
Race discrimination, 313, 321, 729, 932, 935, 946, 1522, 1527, 1549, 1564
Race relations, 64, 135, 176, 349, 359, 381, 943, 994, 1306, 1463- 1591, 1608, 1660, 1683- 1684, 1698, 1703, 1714, 1721, 1745, 1749, 1760
and employment, 486anthologies, 994Connecticut, 1489, 1618adirectories, 72District of Columbia, 1610drama, 1211essays and addresses, 323, 785, 997- 998, 1003, 1006- 1007, 1018, 1021, 1026- 1028, 1031, 1035, 1037, 1043, 1503in literature, 959Kentucky, 1476Maryland, 1622New Jersey, 1577Pennsylvania, 1608South Carolina, 1439Southern States, 316, 919, 1422, 1428, 1479, 1490- 1491, 1493, 1495, 1497, 1502, 1525, 1532, 1555, 1566, 1569astudy and teaching, 611Virginia, 1655
Raim, Ethel, 1346
Rainwater, Lee, 1768
Raleigh, N.C., 429
Ramsey, Frederic, 1373
ed., 1374
Ranch life, 165
Randall, James G., 915
Randel, William P., 1539
Randolph, Asa Philip, 446, 1472
Randolph, John, about, 251
Range, Willard, 634
Ransom, Reverdy C., Bishop, 81
ed., 1701
Raper, Arthur F., 1540
Rapid City, S.D., 1338
Rapier, James T., about, 195
Rapkin, Chester, 524
Ratchford, B. U., 469
Reconstruction, 260, 642, 716, 730, 751, 883- 930, 1334, 1413- 1414, 1439
fiction, 1198
Record, Jane C., ed., 635
Record, Wilson, 1394, 1442, 1635
ed., 635
Redden, Carolyn L., 62
Reddick, Lawrence D., 270
Redding, Jay Saunders, 135, 770, 780- 782, 971, 1034, 1150, 1203, 1244
Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel, Elkins Park, Pa., 842
Regimental histories, 1315, 1317, 1319- 1320, 1322, 1333, 1337
See also names of places and regions, e.g., Georgia, Southern States
Reid, Ira De A., 40, 799, 1627, 1678
ed., 1464
Reid, Margaret G., 525
Reimers, David M., 1690
Reitzes, Dietrich C., 1308
Religion and the church, 262, 285, 307, 682, 968, 1207, 1656-1701, 1741.
See also Church and race problems, Clergymen, Slavery, ——and the church; names of denominations and faiths, e.g., Baptists, Jews
Republican Party, 877, 908, 1409, 1416
Research and Action Associates, 495
Research Analysis Corporation, 1321
Reuter, Edward B., 1541
Rhode Island, 1594
Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society, 1333
Richardson, Ben A., 136
Richardson, Clement, ed., 73
Richardson, Harry V., 1691
Richardson, Joe M., 916
Richardson, Willis, 1223
Riley, Jerome R., 1443
Ringe, Helen H., 479
Roach, Margaret, ed., 1661
Robb, Bernard, 705
Roberts, Bruce, 1473
Roberts, Owen J., 542
Roberts, Warren E., 683
Robeson, Eslanda G., 272
Robeson, Paul, 273
Robinson, James H., 274
Robinson, John R. (Jackie), 275- 276, 1778
Robinson, Louie, 1779
Robinson, Luther (Bill "Bojangles"),
about, 140
Robinson, Wilhelmena S., 137
Rockhurst College, Kansas City, Mo., 1661
Rodman, Selden, 93
Roelof-Lanner, T. V., ed., 94
Rogers, Elymas P., 848
Rogers, Joel A., 138, 783- 784, 1151, 1542, 1729
Rohrer, John H., ed., 1309
Rollins, Bryant, 1152
Rollins, Charlemae H., 139- 141, 1228
Romero, Patricia W., 1340
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1332
Roper, Moses, 277
Rose, Willie L. N., 1636
Rosen, Alex, 1570
Rosenwein, Sam, 330
Ross, Arthur M., ed., 480
Ross, David P., ed., 98
Ross, Frank A., 43
Ross, Malcolm H., 481
Rossi, Peter H., 1586
Roussève, Charles B., 1637
Roussève, Numa J., illus., 1599
Roussève, Ronald J., 1035
Rowan, Carl T., 278, 1543- 1544, 1642
Rowan, Richard L., 482
ed., 475
Rowland, Mabel, ed., 279
Rozwenc, Edwin C., ed., 859
Rubin, Louis D., ed., 594
Ruchames, Louis, 483
ed., 860
Rudwick, Elliott M., 280- 281, 766, 1584, 1728
comp., 1029
Rukeyser, William S., 415
Rumbough, Constance H., 1545
See also Plantation life
Russell, John H., 1638
Rust, Brian A. L., 151
Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J., Urban Studies Center, 527
Rutledge, Aaron L., 484
Ryan, Orletta, 588
Sable, Jean B. Pointe de, fiction, 1094
Sackler, Howard O., 1225
Sagarin, Edward, 431
St. Helena Island, S.C., 699
Sale, John B., 706
Salk, Erwin A., 44
Salomon, Chester V., 1628
Sam, Alfred C., about, 717
San Diego, Calif., Fine Arts Gallery, 89
San Francisco Bay region, 221, 1635
San Pedro, Calif., 513
Sanborn, Franklin B., 861, 1758
Sandburg, Carl, 148
Sanders, Wiley B., ed., 1754
Sandle, Floyd L., 672
Saperstein, Abe, 1781
Saunders, Doris E., ed., 367
Savoy, Willard W., 1153
Sawyer, Frank B., ed., 66
Scally, Mary Anthony, Sister, 45
Scarborough, Dorothy, 862, 1375
Scarborough, Ruth, 862
Schechter, Betty, 1444
Scheer, Robert, ed., 1485
Scheiner, Seth M., 1639
Schickel, Richard, 223
Schiedt, Duncan P., 1364
Schiltz, Michael E., 457
Schleifer, Marc, ed., 380
Schlein, Irving, ed., 1344
Schoener, Allon, comp., 95
Schomburg, Arthur A., 1283
comp., 46
Schomburg Collection of Negro Literature and History, 18b, 34
Schools. See Private schools, Public schools
Schorr, Alvin L., 526
Schuchter, Arnold, 419
Schulberg, Budd, ed., 993
Schuman, Howard, 1586
Schuyler, George S., 282, 1153a
Schuyler, Philippa D., 283
Schwerner, Michael H., about, 124
Scientists, 191, 207, 211, 221, 237.
See also Explorers, Physicians
Scott, Dred, about, 844
Scott, Emmett J., 1332
Scott, John A., 841
Scottsboro case, 1756
Scruggs, Lawson A., 142
Sea Islands, S.C., 580, 1346, 1602, 1636, 1651
Seaton, Shirley, 711
Seattle, 521
Segal, Ben D., ed., 368
Segregation, 214, 309, 365, 759, 1308, 1339, 1462, 1464, 1467, 1474- 1476, 1501a, 1513, 1526a, 1531, 1535a, 1545, 1550, 1552, 1562- 1563, 1565, 1746
and mental health, 1294and the press, 1459bibliography, 52Georgia, 936humor, 1200in child care, 1750in libraries, 603in restaurants, 1536in sports, 1777Kentucky, 1476New York (City), 1483North Carolina, 1554South Carolina, 1538Tennessee, 1536Virginia, 1547See also Race discrimination
Sellers, James B., 863
Sellers, James E., 1692
Sevareid, Arnold Eric, 1473
Sexton, Patricia C., 636, 1640
Shannon, Alexander H., 1546
Shapiro, Karl, 1276
Shapiro, Nat, comp., 1376
Sharon, Henrietta B., illus., 1230
Shelby, Gertrude M., 707
Shenton, James P., ed., 917
Shepard, Leslie, 1370
Sherlock, P. M., 286
Sherman, George R., 1333
Sherrard, Owen A., 864
Shoemaker, Don, ed., 640
Shogan, Robert, 1585
Short stories, 1049, 1051, 1064, 1067- 1068a, 1082, 1085, 1109- 1110, 1113, 1115, 1122- 1123, 1148, 1166, 1183, 1275
Shugg, Roger W., 865
Shuttlesworth, Fred, about, 145
Siebert, Wilbur H., 866
Sieg, Vera, 47
Sierra Leone, 801
Silberman, Charles E., 1546a
Silver, James W., 1641
Silverman, Martin, ed., 611
Simmons, William J., 143
Simms, William R., ed., 1393
Simpson, George E., 1461
Sinclair, William A., 918
Singers. See Entertainment; Musicians
Singletary, Otis A., 1334
Singleton, George A., 284, 1693
Skaggs, William H., 919
Skin diseases, 1310
Sklar, George, 1222
Slater Fund for Negro Education, 594
Slave insurrections, 808- 809, 823, 836, 840, 847, 854, 878
Slave trade, 811, 820, 825, 845, 864, 867, 869
Slavery, 363a, 417, 723, 731, 775, 788, 804- 805, 808- 882, 921, 933, 1312, 1495, 1559
biographies and narratives, 133, 155, 157, 162, 169, 183, 185- 186, 196, 216, 230a, 232, 243, 251, 267, 277, 289, 298, 300, 829, 845about, 870District of Columbia, 942sources, 881Massachusetts, 852Mississippi, 875New England, 748Ohio, 816Pennsylvania, 877aTennessee, 1633aTexas, 853fiction, 1110
Sleeper, Charles F., 1694
Slichter, Sumner H., 477a
Sloan, Irving J., 786
Slums, 527
Smalley, Webster, 1219
Smalls, Robert, about, 288
Smith, Amanda B., 285
Smith, Charles E., ed., 1374
Smith, Charles S., ed., 1687
Smith, Ezekiel E., about, 132
Smith, Henry, 1234
Smith, James Wesley, 1547
Smith, Lillian E., 369
Smith, Myrtle E., 395
Smith, Robert C., 637
Smith, Samuel D., 1445
Smith, Wendell, 275
Smithsonian Institution, National Collection of Fine Arts, 96
Smuts, Robert W., 450
Snethen, Worthington G., comp., 942
Sobel, Lester A., ed., 370
Social conditions, 339, 382, 400, 405, 414, 420, 426, 453, 492, 523, 552, 562- 563, 571, 605, 670- 671, 721, 803, 828, 939, 1290, 1296- 1297, 1306, 1511, 1559, 1672, 1702- 1270
Social Democratic Federation, 345
Social Science Research Council, 43, 1719a
Socialist Party (U.S.), 345
Socially handicapped children, 584, 588, 609, 644, 663
Societies. See Organizations
Society for the Advancement of Education, 555
Somerville, John A., 286
Songs, 56, 685, 688, 695, 697, 700, 1344, 1346, 1351, 1353, 1359, 1367, 1369- 1371, 1377
The South. See Southern States
South Carolina, 847, 1427, 1538, 1647
Episcopalians, 1700music, 1346social conditions, 1741State College, Orangeburg, School of Graduate Studies, 108See also Sea Islands, S.C.
South Dakota, 1338
Southampton Insurrection, 1831, 809, 823, 840, 878
Southern, David W., 371
Southern Commission on the Study of Lynching, 1540
Southern Education Reporting Service, 638- 640
Southern Regional Council, 585, 601, 1441, 1462, 1525
Southern States, 425, 947, 1373, 1422, 1479, 1491, 1495, 1525, 1528, 1532, 1566, 1569a, 1716, 1719, 1722, 1740
Southern Study in Higher Education, 659
Southwest, New, 165, 198, 688- 689
Sovern, Michael I., 485
Spanish-American War, 1315, 1335
Sparkman, J. R., 1563
Spearman, Walter, 1462
Spears, John R., 867
Spellman, A. B., 144
Spellman, Cecil L., 641
Spencer, Gerald A., 1310- 1311
Spencer, Samuel R., 287
Spero, Sterling D., 486
Spingarn, Arthur B., 18
Spirituals, 1347, 1356, 1358- 1360, 1378- 1379
Stahl, David, ed., 372
Stanton, William R., 1548
Starkey, Marion L., 869
Starling, Marion W., 870
Starr, Isidore, comp., 331
Statistics, 411, 1461, 1605, 1617, 1648, 1701, 1733- 1736.
See also under specific topics, e.g., Housing, ——statistics
Staudenraus, P.J., 787
Staupers, Mabel K., 487
Stearns, Marshall W., 41
Steel industry and trade, 482
Stephenson, Clarence D., 871
Stephenson, Gilbert T., 943
Sterling, Dorothy, 288, 373, 921
Sterling, Philip, ed., 1203
Sterne, Emma G., 145
Sterner, Richard M., 420, 1726
Sternlieb, George, 527
Stetler, Henry G., 440, 500 -501, 1489
Steward, Austin, 289
Steward, Theophilus G., 1335, 1644
Steward, William, 1644
Stewart, Maxwell S., 1731
Still, James, 290
Still, Lavinia, about, 857
Still, Peter, about, 857
Still, William, 872
Still, William G., about, 118
Stillman, Richard J., 1336
Stillman College, Tuscaloosa, Ala., about, 540
Stock, Mildred, 247
Stokely, James, 1497
Stokes, Anson Phelps, 68, 1534
Stokes, Carl, about, 1454
Stone, Chuck, 1036
Stoney, Samuel G., 707
Storey, Juanita, 711
Storing, H. J., 1014
Stover, William H. M., 1549
Straker, David Augustus, 922
Stribling, Mattie L., 1204
Strickland, Arvarh E., 1395
Strong, Donald S., 1446
Strother, Horatio T., 873
Stuart, Merah S., 421
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, 1401
See also Universities and colleges ——students
Sturges, Gertrude E., 1290
Styron, William, about, 1002
Suffrage. See Elections, Voting
Sugarman, Tracy, 374
Suggs, James D., 692
Sussmann, Frederick B., ed., 372
Swint, Henry L., 642
ed., 923
Sydnor, Charles S., 875
Taeuber, Alma F., 528
Taeuber, Karl E., 528
Tales. See Folk-lore and folk-tales, Short stories
Talley, Marshall A., 1656
Talley, Thomas W., comp., 1377
Talmadge, Herman E., 1550
Tannenbaum, Frank, 788
Tanner, Henry O., about, 952
Taper, Bernard, 1447
Tate, Thaddeus W., 1645
Tatum, E. Ray, 293
Tatum, Elbert L., 1448
Taylor, Alrutheus A., 924- 925
Taylor, Alva W., 317
Taylor, Deems, 283
Taylor, Joe G., 876
Taylor, Susie K., 1337
Teachers and teaching, 611, 642, 644
bibliography, 54
Teaneck, N.J., 573
Ten Broek, Jacobus, 945
Terrell, Mary C., 294
Terry, Paul W., ed., 540
Texas, 165
Texas Folklore Society, 688- 689
Textbooks, bibliography, 29
Theater. See Actors; Drama; Entertainment; Minstrels, Music; Musicians, Plays; Playwrights
Theatre Arts, 668
Theobald, Robert, 1037
13th amendment, about, 56, 931
Thoburn, James M., Bishop, 285
Thomas, Howard E., 375
Thomas, Jesse O., 295
Thomas, Norman, 345
Thomas, Piri, 296
Thomas, Ruby, 111
Thomas, Will, 297
Thompson, Alma M., 50
Thompson, Daniel C., 1309, 1732
Thompson, Edgar T., 50
ed., 1551
Thompson, Era B., 297a
Thompson, John, 298
Thompson, William, 1309
Thornbrough, Emma L., 1646
comp., 299
Thurman, Howard, 1042, 1378- 1379, 1552
about, 307
Thurman, Sue B., ed., 391
Tillman, James A., 529
Tilly, Charles, 530
Tindall, George B., 1563, 1647
Titus, Frances W., 205
Toben, R. L., illus., 683
Tobias, Channing H., 110, 1534
Tomkins, Silvan S., 1297
Toomer, Jean, 1159
Topeka, Kan., Board of Education, appellee, 579
Torrence, Frederic R., 1226
Tourgée, Albion W., about, 260
Toussaint Louverture, François D., about, 120
fiction, 1056
Towler, Juby E., 1760
Townsend, William H., 791
Trade-unions, 438, 448, 460, 463, 470, 477a, 486, 1533
Traill, Sinclair, 1364
Tredegar Company, Richmond, 814
Trefousse, Hans L., 877
Treworgy, Mildred L., 51
Trillin, Calvin, 643
Trottenberg, Arthur D., 1005
Trotter, James M., 1380
Troup, Cornelius V., 147
Trubowitz, Sidney, 644
Truman, Harry S., 1038
Trumbull Park, Chicago, 497
Truth, Sojourner, about, 120, 161, 205, 266
Tuberculosis, 1304
Tubman, Harriet R., about, 120, 127, 164, 177a
Tufts University, Lincoln Filene Center for Citizenship and Public Affairs, 633
Tulane University of Louisiana, Urban Life Research Institute, 1309
Tumin, Melvin M., 1554
Turner, Arlin, ed., 316
Turner, Darwin T., ed., 972
Turner, Edward R., 877a
Turner, Lorenzo D., 973
ed., 979
Turner, Lucy M., 1279
Turner, Nat, 809, 840, 878, 1002
Tuskegee, Ala., 201, 1425, 1447
bibliography, 13
Tuskegee Institute
Tussman, Joseph, ed., 946
Twentieth Century Fund, 485
Twin Cities metropolitan area, 437
Tyms, James D., 1695
Ulmann, Doris, illus., 1727
Underground railroad, 815- 816, 834, 848, 866, 871- 873
United Community Services of Metropolitan Boston, 1648
United Parents Associations of New York City, 622
U.S.
Advisory Committee on Education, 660Army Air Forces, about, 1318Bureau of Education. See U.S. Office of EducationBusiness and Defense Services Administration, 23Children's Bureau, 1750Commission to the Paris Exposition, 1900, 28CongressConstitution1st amendment, about, 346Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare, 424Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, Library, 55Dept. of LaborDept. of State, 1001Dept. of the Army, 467Office of Military History, 1324Economic Development Administration, about, 398history. See History,Housing and Home Finance Agency, Office of Program Policy, 534Military Academy, West Point, about, 197National Center for Educational Statistics, 567National Commission on Negro History and Culture, about, 792Division of Vocational Education, 653President, 1961-1963 (Kennedy), 378President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity, 439President's Committee on Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces, 1339Social Security Administration, Division of Research and Statistics, 526Supreme Court, 946Welfare Administration, 1629Women's Bureau, 472
United States Committee for the First World Festival of Negro Arts, 96
U.S. Negro World, 66
Universal Negro Improvement Association, 179
Universities and colleges, 565, 581, 590, 598, 604- 605, 615- 616, 623, 634, 652, 659
Urban League of Dayton, Ohio, 1391
Urban League of Greater New York, 90
Urban League of Greater Providence, 1594
Urban League of Westchester County, 506
Urban renewal, 1715, 1738- 1739
Vander, Harry J., 1450
Vander Zanden, James W., 1555
Van Deusen, John G., 793
Van Doren, Carl, 206
Van Doren, Charles, 770
Vanecko, James J., 570
Van Ellison, Candice, 95
Van Vechten, Carl, 1261
Varela, Horace, illus., 115, 724
Varner, Clyde F., ed., 711
Vaughan, Curtis M., 1556
Vesey, Denmark, about, 847
Virginia, 458- 459, 1547, 1618, 1638, 1655
Voegeli, V. Jacque, 794
Vollmar, William J., 1628
Voorhis, Harold V., 1396
Vose, Clement E., 535
Voting, 1402- 1403, 1412, 1415, 1425, 1428- 1429, 1432, 1438, 1441, 1443, 1446, 1449, 1451a, 1453, 1533
bibliography, 57
Vroman, Mary E., 1396a
WINS. See Women's Integrating Neighborhood Services
Wachtel, Dawn, 490
ed., 795
Wagandt, Charles L., 796
Wagner, Jean, 974
Wain, Louis, illus., 702a
Walker, A. B., illus., 677a
Walker, Maggie L., about, 114, 134
Walker, Marion E., ed., 1590
Wallace, Daniel W., about, 165
Wallace, Jesse T., 1451
Wallace, John, 926
Waller, Fats, about, 140, 1364
Walrond, Eric, 1166
Wanless, Julia, 752
War of 1812, 1343
Ward, Samuel R., 300
Ward, Thomas P., 1167
Wardlaw, Ralph W., 1451a
Ware, Charles P., comp., 1344
Warner, Robert A., 1648b
Warner, William L., ed., 1709
Warren, Francis H., comp., 1623
Warren, Robert Penn, 379, 1557
Washington, Booker T., 218, 301, 425, 434, 655, 797, 1039- 1040, 1737
Washington, Mrs. Booker T., 70
Washington, Chester L., 239
Washington, Ernest Davidson, ed., 1040
Washington, George, about, 765
fiction, 1100
Washington, Jennie, illus., 195
Washington, John E., 148
Washington, Joseph R., 1696- 1697
Washington, Josephine T., 142
Washington, Nathaniel J., 1649
Washington (State), 521
Washington, D.C., 1619, 1752, 1767
Washington Center for Metropolitan Studies, Washington, D.C., 657
The Washington Post, 1576
Waskow, Arthur I., 1591
Watkins, Sylvestre C., ed., 992
Watters, Pat, 1452
Watts Writers' Workshop, 993
Waxman, Julia, 1
Waynick, Capus M., ed., 1650
Ways, Max, 415
Weatherby, William J., 1558, 1632
Weatherford, Willis D., 1559, 1698
Weaver, Robert C., 415, 536, 600, 1481, 1738- 1739
bibliography, 55
Webb, Constance, 302
Webb, Frank J., 1168
Weeks, Stephen B., 1453
Wegelin, Oscar, 1281
Weinberg, Kenneth G., 1454
Weinberg, Meyer, 59
Welch, Norval, 258
Welsch, Erwin K., 60
Wesley, Charles H., 303, 491, 798- 799, 804, 1340- 1341, 1397- 1399, 1429
ed., 799
Wesson, William H., 469
West, Dorothy, 1169
West Virginia, 1634
Westchester Co., N.Y., 506
Westin, Alan F., ed., 1041
Weyl, Nathaniel, 800
Whaley, Marcellus S., 1651
Wharton, Vernon L., 1563, 1652
Wheatley, Phillis, 16, 1282- 1284
White, Charles, 97
White, Newman Ivey, ed., 1284a
White, Ralph, illus., 682
White, Walter F., 304, 1170- 1171, 1290, 1560- 1561
Whiteman, Maxwell, 61
Whiting, Helen A. J., 426
Whyte, James H., 927
Wicker, Tom, 1588
Wiggins, James R., 325a
Wiggins, Samuel P., 659
Wightman, Orrin S., 1653
Wilberforce Negro Colony, Middlesex County, Ont., about, 289
Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio, 614.
Wiley, Bell I., 1740
Wilkins, Roy, 229
about, 127
Williams, Chancellor, 1172
Williams, Daniel H., about, 171
Williams, Daniel T., 62
Williams, Edgar, 1781
Williams, Egbert A. (Bert), about, 140, 279
Williams, Eric, 799
Williams, Ethel L., 80
Williams, George W., 801, 928, 1342
comp., 994
Williams, John G., 1741
Williams, Lacey K., 196
Williams, Martin T., 1381
Williams, O. R., 1562
Williams, Robert F., 380
Williams, R. M., 1563
Williams, Sally, about, 155
Williamsburg, Va., 1645
comp., 1563
Williamson, Margaret T., illus., 1370
Willis, Pauline, 111
Wilmington, Del., 530
Wilson, Charles H., 661
Wilson, James Q., 1406, 1420, 1455
Wilson, Joseph T., 930, 1285, 1343
Wilson, Theodore B., 947
Wiltse, Charles M., ed., 880
Winslow, Eugene, illus., 98
Winston, Ellen E. B., 420
Winston-Salem, N.C., 1427
Wit and humor. See Humor.
Witchen, Elsie, 1304
Wolff, Reinhold P., 538
Wolfgang, Marvin E., 1762
Women
Women's Integrating Neighborhood Services, 495
Wood, Forrest G., 1564
Wood, M. S., comp., 129
Woodson, Carter G., 427, 453, 492, 662, 802, 804- 805, 1699, 1742- 1743
ed., 803, 1044
Woodward, Comer Vann, 806, 1563, 1565, 1636
Woodward, Joseph H., 1700
ed., 1744
Work, F. J., 1617
ed., 75
Work Conference on Curriculum and Teaching in Depressed Urban Areas, Columbia University, 1962, 663
Workman, Willie M. C., about, 234
World Festival of Negro Arts, 1st, Dakar, 1966, 96
World War, 1939-1945, 1313, 1318, 1324
fiction, 1126
Wright, Bruce M., ed., 1244
Wright, Charles S., 1176- 1177
Wright, James M., 1654
Wright, John J., 321
Wright, Louis T., about, 134
Wright, Marion M. T., 664
Wright, Nathan, 381, 1567- 1568
Wright, Richard, 305, 1034, 1178- 1183, 1227, 1569, 1607
ed., 81
Wright, Stephen J., 996
Writers' Program
Wylie, Evan M., 230
Wynn, Daniel W., 1400
X, Malcolm. See Little, Malcolm
Yale University, Institute of Human Relations, 1648b
Yancey, William L., 1768
Yates, Elizabeth, 307
Yellin, Robert, illus., 1346
Yergan, Max, about, 134
Yoder, Don, 699
Young, Andrew S. N. ("Doc"), 150, 308, 1780
Young, Whitney M., 295, 338, 382
about, 127
Young Women's Christian Association, 1509
Younge, Sammy, about, 201
Yulsman, Jerry, illus., 1200 - 1201
Zangrando, Robert L., comp., 312
Zilversmit, Arthur, 882
Zinkoff, Dave, 1781
Transcriber's Note
Additional Library of Congress call numbers are indicated by [TR: ].
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36—SOCIAL CONDITIONS