Page:Journal of Negro History, vol. 7.djvu/14

 It contains also 93 pages of documents of the following series:

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An Act concerning the Indians of Massachusetts.

Some Negro Members of Reconstruction Conventions and Legislatures and of Congress, compiled by Monroe N. Work.

John G. Thompson, the Original Carpet-bagger.

Additional information and corrections in Reconstruction Records.

Speech of William H. Gray in the Arkansas Constitutional Convention, 1868.

A letter addressed to the City Council of Washington, in 1833.

A Prince William County, Virginia, Court Record of 1756. Letters on Reconstruction.

Volume VI contains 361 pages of the following current articles:

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Fifty Years of Negro Citizenship as qualified by the United States Supreme Court, by.

Remy Ollier, a Mauritian Journalist and Patriot, by.

A Negro Colonization Project in Mexico, 1895, by.

The Economic Condition of the Negroes of New York Prior to 1861, by.

Making West Virginia a Free State, by.

Canadian Negroes and the John Brown Raid, by.

The Negro and the Spanish Pioneers in the New World, by.

The Material Culture of Ancient Nigeria, by.

The Negro in South Africa, by.

The Baptism of Slaves in Prince Edward Island, by.

The Negro Migration of 1916–1918, by.

Volume VI contains also 144 pages of the following documents:

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James Madison's Attitude toward the Negro.

Advice given Negroes a Century ago.

The Appeal of the American Convention of Abolition Societies to Anti-slavery Groups.

Reports of the American Convention of Abolition Societies on Negroes and on Slavery, their Appeals to Congress, and their Addresses to the Citizens of the United States.

'''Persons who preserve their single numbers in good condition may obtain any one of these volumes by returning the corresponding numbers with $1.00. This means that the subscriber receives full credit for the subscription fee of $2.00 in making this exchange.'''