Book/Printed Material The Negro in Africa and America African American Pamphlet Collection copy
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Image 1 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy The Negro in Africa and America.
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 2 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy THE NEGRO IN AFRICA AND AMERICA. 1 1 Address at the University of Virginia, July, 1905. By G. Stanley Hall. There is evidence that for centuries before slaves were imported to America…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 3 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 3 The present status of a representative tribe is illustrated in the Vei territory which is three hundred miles long and two hundred wide on the seaboard from Gallinas to Cape Mount.…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 4 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 4 violators of virtue are whipped, dragged over town and proclaimed outcasts. The mother engages him to a girl when he is a small child so that she can train her aright.…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 5 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 5 the chiefs are called together and sign a “paper of friendship.” “Not being able to read they touch the pen and somebody signs their name to the document which puts them…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 6 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 6 the natives are carried out, that complaints from native chiefs reach the home government, that native women be protected, and that when European husbands abandon them they should be made to…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 7 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 7 of his interest in the story he has to tell. They also object to the liquor traffic. “A trade worth millions is annually carried on between the Sudan and the Mediterranean,…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 8 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 8 that predisposed him to revel in the heaven of Mohammedanism to which he has there been converted with ease and in numbers probably unprecedented in missionary annals. The negro fatalism, too,…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 9 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 9 were captured or bought with rum, and enjoining great care of their health on the homeward voyage. This selection of the best, which Dr. Thomson estimates has within Christian centuries robbed…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 10 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 10 namely, of gravitating toward those territories where he multiplies fastest. So, conversely, negroes are attracted least toward those sections of the country where their rate of increase is least. As all…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 11 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 11 estimated at from one and a half to three and a half times greater than that of the whites. This is only partly due to their transportation from equatorial Africa, because…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 12 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 12 of blood with the whites brings approximation to the pathological conditions of the latter. Many of these differences are so radical that a Southern physician has said in substance, perhaps somewhat…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 13 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 13 and when we think of the Dumases, Pushkin, and many others, we see that it certainly can produce an occasional genius. There is much reason to think that mixture has played…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 14 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 14 in the presence of the whites. A recent writer says, “Ninety-nine per cent. of the whites regard all with any negro blood as about alike.” It is idle to censure a…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 15 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 15 of this punishment for rape, slightly known before the war. The brutality of these assaults is often such that the most staid communities and heads of families, who have strongly and…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 16 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 16 enormous waste and confusion, an indebtedness equalling the entire cost of the war plus the value of the slaves as property, negroizing more or less one-third of the States of the…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 17 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 17 who took part in the Civil War are exempt from these qualifications. Mr. Crumpacker, like Mr. Dunn also from Indiana, has repeatedly introduced proposals to restrict representation in the South. These…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 18 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 18 as freedom not to work, and so came the au rebours days of misery where so many Southern novelists and essayists are finding rich fields for literary exploitation. The situation in…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 19 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 19 suffrage and office-holding for the ignorant, or at least welcomes an educational qualification. For myself, I doubt if any educational institution in the world's history ever showed, in those who attend…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 20 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy 20 generally. Some have suggested a special permanent commission of those most competent and interested, white and black, to be consulted both by philanthropists and legislators. One of the most hopeful facts…
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
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Image 21 of African American Pamphlet Collection copy
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley) - African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- Date: 1905
About this Item
Title
- The Negro in Africa and America
Names
- Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley), 1844-1924
- African American Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
Created / Published
- [n.p., 1905]
Headings
- - African Americans
- - Black people--Africa
- - Black race
Notes
- - "Address at the University of Virginia, July, 1905."
- - Cover title.
- - Includes bibliographical footnotes.
Medium
- 20 p. 23 cm.
Call Number/Physical Location
- E185.6 .H2
- E185 .A254 container H, no. 121 Another copy. Formerly part of YA Collection: YA 15453. Source unknown.
Digital Id
Library of Congress Control Number
- 45052627
Online Format
- online text
- image