Page:Journal of Negro History, vol. 7.djvu/151



Volume I contains more than 250 pages of dissertations entitled:

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The Negroes of Cincinatti prior to 1861, by.

The Story of Maria Louise Moore and Fannie M. Richards, by.

The Passing Tradition and the African Civilization, by.

The Mind of the African Negro as reflected by His Proverbs, by.

The Historic Background of the Negro Physician, by.

The Negro Soldier in the American Revolution, by.

Freedom and Slavery in Appalachian America, by.

Antar, the Arabian Negro Warrior, Poet and Hero, by.

Colored Freemen as Slave Owners in Virginia, by.

The Fugitives of the Pearl, by.

Lorenzo Dow, by.

The Attitude of the Free Negro toward African Colonization, by.

People of Color in Louisiana, Part I, by.

The Work of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel among the Negroes of the Colonies, by.

The Defeat of the Secessionists in Kentucky in 1861, by.

The Negroes of Guatemala during the Seventeenth Century, by.

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

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What the Negro was thinking during the Eighteenth Century.

Letters showing the Rise and Progress of the early Negro Churches of Georgia and the West Indies.

Eighteenth Century Slaves as advertised by their Masters.

Transplanting Free Negroes to Ohio.

The Proceedings of a typical Colonization Convention.

Travelers' Impressions of American Slavery from 1750 to 1800.

Some Letters of Richard Allen and Absalom Jones.

Volume II contains 292 pages of dissertations entitled:


 * The African Slave Trade, by.
 * The Negro in the Field of Invention, by.
 * Anthony Benezet, by.
 * People of Color in Louisiana, Part II, by.
 * The Evolution of the Slave Status in American Democracy, by.

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