The story of the Negro, the rise of the race from slavery,  | 
| I. | Part I 
THE NEGRO IN AFRICA  | 
| II. | 
| V. | 
| VI. | 
| VII. | 
| VIII. | 
| IX. | 
| X. | 
| XI. | 
| XII. | 
| XIII. | 
| XIV. | 
| XV. | 
|  The story of the Negro, | ||

I. THE STORY OF THE NEGRO 
VOLUME I
I. Part I 
THE NEGRO IN AFRICA


I. The Story of the Negro
CHAPTER I 
FIRST NOTIONS OF AFRICA
SOME years ago, in a book called "Up From 
Slavery," I tried to tell the story of my own 
life. While I was at work upon that book the 
thought frequently occurred to me that nearly all 
that I was writing about myself might just as well 
have been written of hundreds of others, who began 
their life, as I did mine, in slavery. The difficulties 
I had experienced and the opportunities I had discovered, 
all that I had learned, felt and done, others 
likewise had experienced and others had done. In 
short, it seemed to me, that what I had put into the 
book," Up From Slavery," was, in a very definite way, 
an epitome of the history of my race, at least in the 
early stages of its awakening and in the evolution 
through which it is now passing.
This thought suggested another, and I asked 
myself why it would not be possible to sketch the 
history of the Negro people in America in much the 
same way that I had tried to write the story of my 

my own personal knowledge or through my acquaintance
with persons and events, and adding to that
what I have been able to learn from tradition and from
books. In a certain way the second book, if I were
able to carry out my design, might be regarded as
the sequel of the first, telling the story of a struggle
through two and one-half centuries of slavery, and
during a period of something more than forty years
of freedom, which had elsewhere been condensed
into the limits of a single lifetime. This is, then, the
task which I have set myself in the pages which
follow.
There comes a time, I imagine, in the life of every 
boy and every girl, no matter to what race they 
belong, when they feel a desire to learn something 
about their ancestors; to know where and how 
they lived, what they suffered and what they achieved, 
how they dressed, what religion they professed and 
what position they occupied in the larger world about 
them. The girl who grows up in the slums of a 
large city, the Indian out in the wide prairie, the 
"poor white" boy in the mountains of the Southern 
states, and the ignorant Negro boy on a Southern 
plantation, no matter how obscure their origin, each 
will feel a special interest in the people whose fortunes 
he or she has shared, and a special sympathy 
with all that people have lived, and suffered and 
achieved.

The desire to know something of the country 
from which my race sprang and of the history of my 
mother and her people came to me when I was still 
a child. I can remember, as a slave, hearing snatches 
of conversation from the people at the "Big House" 
from which I learned that the great white race in 
America had come from a distant country, from which 
the white people and their forefathers had travelled 
in ships across a great water, called the ocean. As 
I grew older I used to hear them talk with pride about 
the history of their people, of the discovery of 
America, and of the struggles and heroism of the 
early days when they, or their ancestors, were fighting 
the Indians and settling up the country. All 
this helped to increase, as time went on, my desire 
to know what was back of me, where I came from, 
and what, if anything, there was in the life of my 
people in Africa and America to which I might point 
with pride and think about with satisfaction.
My curiosity in regard to the origin and history 
of the dark-skinned people to which I belong, led me 
at first to listen and observe and then, later, as I got 
some schooling and a wider knowledge of the world, 
to inquire and read. What I learned in this way only 
served, however, to increase my desire to go farther 
and deeper into the life of my people, and to find out 
for myself what they had been in Africa as well as in 
America.
What I was first able to hear and to learn did not, 

satisfaction. In the part of the country in which I
lived there were very few of my people who pretended
to know very much about Africa. I learned,
however, that my mother's people had come, like
the white people, from across the water, but from
a more distant and more mysterious land, where
people lived a different life from ours, had different
customs and spoke a different language from that
I had learned to speak. Of the long and terrible
journey by which my ancestors came from their
native home in Africa to take up their life again
beside the white man and Indian in the New World,
I used to hear many and sinister references, but not
until I was a man did I meet any one, among my
people who knew anything definite, either through
personal knowledge or through tradition, of the
country or the people from whom my people sprang.
To most of the slaves the "middle passage," as the
journey from the shore of Africa to the shore of
America was called, was merely a tradition of a
confused and bewildering experience, concerning
whose horrors they had never heard any definite
details. Nothing but the vaguest notions remained,
at the time I was a boy, even among the older people
in regard to the mother country of my race.
In slavery days the traditions of the people who 
lived in the cabins centred almost entirely about 
the lives and fortunes of the people who lived in the 

cabin fireside related to what this or that one had
seen on some distant journey with "old master,"
or perhaps to the adventures they had when master
and they were boys together.
It has often occurred to me that people who talk 
of removing the Negro from the Southern states and 
colonising him in some distant part of the world do 
not reflect how deeply he is rooted in the soil. In 
most that the white man has done on this continent, 
from the time Columbus landed at San Salvador 
until Peary penetrated farthest North, the Negro 
has been his constant companion and helper. Any 
one who considers what the Negro has done, for 
example, in the Southern states alone, in cutting 
down the forests, clearing the land, tilling the soil 
and building up the farms and the cities, will recognise 
that, directly and indirectly, his labour has been 
an enormous contribution to the civilisation of the 
Western world. Any one, on the other hand, who 
will listen to the songs that we sing, and the anecdotes 
that are told by the Negro and concerning him; any 
one who will read the literature and the history of 
the Southern states, will see that the Negro has 
contributed, not merely his labour, but something 
also of his inner life and temperament to the 
character and quality of the South.
Until freedom came the life of the Negro was so 
intimately interwoven with that of the white man 

history. To the slave on the plantation the "Big
House," where the master lived, was the centre of
the only world he knew. It was after freedom came
that the masses of the Negro people began to think
of themselves as having a past or a future in any way
separate and distinct from the white race. There
were always some among them, like Frederick
Douglass, who were different in this respect
from the masses. They became the fugitive
slaves.
After I began to go to school I had my first opportunity 
to learn from books something further and 
more definite about my race in Africa. I cannot say 
that I received very much encouragement or inspiration 
from what I learned in this way while I was in 
school. The books I read told me of a people who 
roamed naked through the forest like wild beasts, 
of a people without houses or laws, without chastity 
or morality, with no family life and fixed habits of 
industry.
It seems to me now, as I recall my first definite 
impressions of my race in Africa, that the books I 
read when I was a boy always put the pictures 
of Africa and African life in an unnecessarily cruel 
contrast with the pictures of the civilised and highly 
cultured Europeans and Americans. One picture 
I recall vividly was in the first geography I studied. 
It was the picture of George Washington placed side 

and a dagger in his hand. Here, as elsewhere, in
order to put the lofty position to which the white race
has attained in sharper contrast with the lowly
condition of a more primitive people, the best among
the white people was contrasted with the worst among
the black.
Naturally all this made a deep and painful impression 
upon me. At this time I had the feeling, which 
most of us are likely to have when we are young and 
inexperienced, that there must be something wrong 
with any person who was in any way, whether in 
dress or manners, markedly different from the persons 
and things to which I was accustomed. It 
seemed to me at that time a mark of degradation that 
people should go about with almost no clothes upon 
their backs. It did not occur to me that, possibly, 
the difference in the customs of wearing clothes in 
Africa and in America, and the difference in the 
feeling that people in Europe and in Africa have 
about clothes, was largely a matter of climate. It 
seemed to me that a human creature who would 
willingly go about with a ring in his nose must be a 
very fierce and terrible sort of human animal, but 
it never occurred to me to have any such feelings in 
regard to the persons whom I had seen wearing 
ornaments in their ears. In spite of all this, I still 
held fast to the notion that a race which could 
produce as good and gentle and loving a woman as 

geographers had failed to discover.
It is hard for one who is a member of another race 
and who has not had a like experience to appreciate 
the impression that has often been made upon me, 
and upon other members of my race as they have 
listened, as inexperienced boys and girls, to public 
speeches in which the whole Negro race was 
denounced in a reckless and wholesale manner, or 
as they have read newspapers and books in which 
the Negro race has been described as the lowest and 
most hopeless of God's creation. Sometimes, when 
I was a young man, I was driven almost to despair by 
the hard and bitter, and frequently, as it seemed to 
me, unjust statements about my race. It was 
difficult for me to reconcile the ruthless denunciations 
which men, with whom I was acquainted, would 
make in their public speeches, with the uniform 
courtesy and kindness which they had shown to me 
and others of my race in all their private relations. 
Even now it is difficult for me to understand why so 
many Southern white men will allow themselves, for 
the purpose of enforcing an argument or in the heat 
of a political discussion, to go so far in the denunciation 
of the Negro as to do injustice to their own better 
natures and to their actual feelings toward coloured 
people whom they meet, perhaps, in business, or 
toward the servants employed in their own household, 
the woman who cooks their food, looks after 

these facts because they serve to illustrate the singular
relations of interdependence and opposition in
which the white and black people of the South stand
to each other to-day, all of which has had and is having
a very definite influence upon the development of
my people in the South.
The hard and discouraging statements which I 
was compelled to hear in regard to my race when I 
was a boy, had, at different times, two very different 
effects upon me. At first they sometimes made me 
feel as if I wanted to go away to some distant part of 
the earth and bury myself where I might be a stranger 
to all my people, or at least where the thing that we 
call race prejudice did not exist in the way it does in 
the Southern states. Sometimes I thought of doing 
something desperate which would compel the world, 
in some way or other, to recognise what seemed to 
me the wrongs of my race. But afterward, and on 
second thought, the effect was to drive me closer to 
my own people, to make me sympathise with them 
more intimately and more deeply, to feel toward 
them as I did toward my own dear mother who had 
brought me into the world when she and they were 
slaves.
In the end there grew up within me, as a result of 
both these feelings, a determination to spend my life 
in helping and strengthening the people of my race, 
in order to prove to the world that whatever had 

to respect them in the future, both for what they were
and what they should be able to do. I made up my
mind, also, that in the end the world must come to
respect the Negro for just those virtues for which
some people say he is despised, namely because of
his patience, his kindliness, and his lack of resentment
toward those who do him wrong and injustice.
The feelings that divided my mind and confused 
my purposes when I was a young man, have also 
divided the members of my race. The continual 
adverse criticism has led some of us to disavow our 
racial identity, to seek rest and try our successes as 
members of another race than that to which we were 
born It has led others of us to seek to get away 
as far as possible from association with our own race, 
and to keep as far away from Africa, from its 
history and from its traditions as it was possible 
for us to do.
My attention was first called to this disposition of 
members of certain section of my race to get away 
from themselves, so to speak; to be ashamed, in other 
words, of their history and traditions, when I found 
them bashful or lukewarm in regard to singing the 
old songs which are the peculiar and unique product 
of Negro life and civilisation in this country. I have 
heard musical critics, whose judgment the world 
respects, say that the old plantation hymns and songs 
were among the most original contributions that 

of the so-called fine arts, and this not merely for their
intrinsic charm and beauty but for their qualities,
which make it possible for the trained musician to
develop out of them more elaborate and refined
musical forms, such as have been given to them
recently by the Negro composer, Coleridge-Taylor.
For myself, though it has been my privilege to hear
some of the best music both in Europe and America,
I would rather hear the jubilee or plantation songs
of my race than the finest chorus from the works of
Handel or any other of the great composers that I
have heard. Besides, this music is the form in which
the sorrows and aspirations of the Negro people, all
that they suffered, loved, and hoped for, in short their
whole spiritual life, found its first adequate and satisfying
expression. For that reason, if for no other,
it should be preserved.
What I have said here of my own feelings in regard 
to my race is representative of the feelings of thousands 
of others of the black people of this country. 
Adverse criticism has driven them to think deeper 
than they otherwise would about the problems which 
confront them as a race, to cling closer than they 
otherwise would have done to their own people, to 
value more highly than they once did, the songs 
and the records of their past life in slavery. The 
effect has been to give them, in short, that sort of 
race pride and race consciousness which, it seems 

that is in them.
So it was that, thinking and studying about the 
origin and the destiny of my people, and of all of the 
forces that were working for and against them in my 
own country and elsewhere, the desire to know more 
about the history of my own people steadily increased 
and I tried, as well as I was able, to understand the 
Negro thoroughly, intimately, in those qualities 
in which, as a race, he is weak, as well as in those 
qualities in which he is strong.
This habit of observation and study of my own 
race, in the way I have described, led me to inquire 
into the personal histories of the men and women of 
my own race whom I have met in all parts of the 
United States. I sought to make myself acquainted 
with their difficulties and their successes, to understand 
their feelings and their habits of thought, to 
discover the inner drift and deeper currents of their 
lives; for any one who knows to any extent the 
character of the Negro people, knows that they have, 
just as other people, an outside and inside, and 
one cannot always tell what is going on deep down 
in their hearts merely from looking in their faces. 
Sometimes the Negro laughs when he is angry and 
cries when he is happy. Very often, has it seemed 
to me, the Negro himself does not know or fully 
understand what is going on in the depth of his own 
mind and heart.

Perhaps it will not be out of place for me to say 
here, at the beginning of this book, that the more 
I have studied the masses of the race to which I 
belong, the more I have learned not only to sympathise 
but to respect them. I am proud and happy 
to be identified with their struggle for a higher and 
better life.
Now and then I have read or heard it said that, in 
consequence of the inconveniences, the hardships 
and the injustices that members of my race frequently 
suffer, because of the colour of their skins, there was 
something exceptional and tragic about the situation 
of the Negro in America, "the tragedy of colour," 
as one writer has called it. No doubt there is much 
that is exceptional in the situation of the Negro, not 
only in America, but in Africa. No one is more 
willing than I to admit this to be true. But hardships 
and even injustice, when they concern the 
relations of people who are divided by creed, by 
class, or by race, are not exceptional. On the 
contrary, they are common, and every race that has 
struggled up from a lower to a higher civilisation has 
had to face these things. They have been part of its 
education. Neither is there, as far as my experience 
goes, anything peculiarly tragic connected with the 
life of the Negro, except in the situation of those 
members of my race who, for one reason or another, 
have yielded to the temptation to make a secret of 
their lowly birth and appear before the world as 

man knows, or has heard, of such cases, and in the
whole history of the Negro race there are few sadder
stories than some of these lives. I should say it was
only when an individual suffers from his own folly,
rather than the mistakes of others, that he is likely
to become the hero of a tragedy. This is just as true
of a race. The Negro race has suffered much
because of conditions for which others were responsible.
As a rule Negroes have had very little chance
thus far, to make mistakes of their own. We have
not been free long enough. While the world hears
a great deal about "the tragedy of colour" and
other phrases of the so-called Negro problem, I have
observed that the world hears little, and knows,
perhaps, less about the Negro himself. This is true
of white people but it is also true of coloured people.
Some time ago, I had the privilege of meeting at 
Cambridge, Mass., a group of about twenty-five 
young coloured men who were studying at Harvard 
University. I found that most of these young men 
had a high standing in the University, were respected 
by their professors and, upon inquiring in regard to 
the subjects of their studies, I learned that several of 
them had taken extended courses in history. They 
seemed to know in detail, the story of Greek and 
Roman and English civilisations, and prided themselves 
upon their knowledge of the languages and 
history of the French and German peoples. They 

England and were perfectly familiar with the story
of Plymouth Rock and the settlement of Jamestown,
and of all that concerned the white man's civilisation
both in America and out of America. But I found
that through their entire course of training, neither
in the public schools, nor in the fitting schools, nor
in Harvard, had any of them had an opportunity
to study the history of their own race. In regard to
the people with which they themselves were most
closely identified, they were more ignorant than they
were in regard to the history of the Germans, the
French, or the English. It occurred to me that this
should not be so. The Negro boy and girl should
have an opportunity to learn something in school
about his own race. The Negro boy should study
Negro history just as the Japanese boy studies Japanese
history and the German boy studies German
history.
Let me add that my knowledge of the Negro has 
led me to believe that there is much in the story 
of his struggle, if one were able to tell it as it deserves 
to be told, that it is likely to be both instructive and 
helpful, not merely to the black man but also to the 
white man with whom he is now almost everywhere, 
in Africa as well as America, so closely associated. 
In the last analysis I suppose this is the best excuse 
I can give for undertaking to tell "The Story of 
the Negro."

CHAPTER II 
THE AMERICAN NEGRO AND THE NATIVE AFRICAN
THE stories which I heard as a child were 
what the average American Negro boy is 
likely to hear in regard to his African ancestors, 
and my chief reasons for repeating them is 
that they were very largely mistaken and need to be 
corrected.
I had always heard Africa referred to as the 
"Dark Continent"; I pictured it to myself as a 
black, sunless region, with muddy rivers and gloomy 
forests, inhabited by a people, who, like everything 
else about them, were black. I supposed that the 
nearer I got to the original African, the blacker I 
would find him, and that all lighter coloured Negroes 
I had seen were a spurious sort, whose blood had 
been adulterated by mixture with some of the lighter 
races. I was much surprised, therefore, to learn, 
when I came to study the native races of Africa, that 
the man, whom scientists believed to be the original 
African, namely, the Bushman—and with him I 
include his near relatives, the Dwarfs of Central 
Africa—was not black but yellow; that the Negro, 
the real black man, is after all merely one of the 

else, probably Asia, no one knows exactly
where or how.
In a recent volume upon "The Native Races of 
South Africa," George W. Stow says in regard to 
relations of the Bushmen and the other Negro people 
of South Africa:
It seems somewhat surprising that so many writers have continued 
to class these people [Bushmen] with the Negroes and other 
dark-skinned species of men; whereas, if we are to judge from 
the physical appearance, with a solitary exception of the hair, no 
two sections of the human race could be more divergent. Their 
closest affinities in this respect are certainly more frequently to be 
found among those inhabiting the Northern Hemisphere than any 
other portion of the world.[1]
On the other hand it appears from native traditions 
that, with the exception of the Bushmen, all the native 
peoples emigrated from the North to the South. 
Other traditions state that, "when their forefathers 
migrated to the South, they found the land without 
inhabitants, and that only the game and the Bushmen 
were living in it."
It is an indication of the low estimate which the 
other South African tribes put upon the Bushmen 
that they did not count them as "inhabitants."
One who studies the books about Africa will read 
a great deal about the true Negro who lives, as the 
books tell us, in the Soudan, a part of Africa that is 

that the original African was not a black man and
not a Negro, in the strict scientific sense of the word,
I was led to explore, as well as I was able by the aid
of books and maps, that part of Africa where the
Negro is supposed to be at home. I wanted to find
more about the real black man.
The true Negro, I learned, is only one section of 
what is ordinarily known as the Negro race; the 
other is the Bantu, a mixed people, generally brown 
in colour, who were the first invaders of South Africa, 
driving out the original Bushmen, and gradually 
extending themselves over most of that part of the 
continent below the equator.
Negroland, stretching clear across the country, 
or at least from the Atlantic to the Nile, as 
far north as the Desert of Sahara and as far 
south as the equator, is a wide region, and there 
are many different tribes and many different 
types of people inhabiting it. From the North 
Arab invaders and merchantmen have entered the 
country and mingled with the earlier and darker 
races. Wave after wave of conquest has poured 
itself out over the rich lands between the desert 
and the mountains that divide these inland regions 
from the coast and hundreds of years of slave-raiding 
have so broken up and intermingled the 
different racial stocks that it is as hard for one, not 
an expert, to find the "true Negro" in Africa—that 

find the colour line in the United States.
How difficult this sometimes is I may, perhaps, 
illustrate by an experience of my own a few years 
ago in Alabama. I was travelling at this time with 
one of our students at Tuskegee, who was very light 
in colour, when we had some distance to go in a 
carriage. At the end of our journey, the owner of 
the carriage, who was a white man, collected fifty 
cents from me but called upon the student who was 
with me for a dollar. After considerable argument 
and some inquiry, we discovered that it was the 
rule to charge white men a dollar for the same service 
for which Negroes paid only fifty cents, and my 
companion had been taken for a white man. But 
even after this the student was not inclined to pay the 
extra price. He seemed to think fifty cents was too 
much pay for being a white man, at least for so short 
a time.
Upon another occasion, when an important exposition 
was being held in one of our Southern states, 
I recall that, in order to encourage Negroes to attend, 
the exposition authorities decided that on certain 
days of the week coloured people could be admitted 
at half price. The white people were to pay the 
regular price, fifty cents. The notion of the managers 
was that many coloured people were staying 
away from the exposition because they were too 
poor to pay the regular entrance fee, and that if the 

who could not otherwise afford it, would go. The
event proved that the calculations of the managers
were correct. Large numbers of coloured people
crowded into the exposition on Negro day, but at the
end of two weeks the doorkeepers had become desperate.
They wanted to throw up their jobs because,
as they said, it was too embarrassing work to pick
out, by their colour, the black people from the white.
As an illustration of the way in which the intermingling 
of the racial stocks has come about in 
Africa, I may mention the fact that, when Dr. Barth, 
in 1850, first visited the Negro city of Kano, which is 
the most important trading centre of Western Soudan, 
he found it, a place of thirty to forty thousand 
inhabitants, which at certain seasons of the year 
was increased to sixty thousand, divided into 
numerous quarters, each of which was inhabited by 
a different type of people. One quarter was devoted 
almost exclusively to Arab merchants; a second was 
inhabited by Fellani, the ruling class; still other 
quarters were taken up by different tribes of the 
subject people, among them the merchant and 
manufacturing people, the Hausas. In addition to 
these, there were the slaves—gathered from all 
portions of the country but principally from the 
tribes living near the coast—who made up nearly 
half the population.[2]

I cannot now remember where I first got the idea 
that a man who was dark in colour was necessarily 
more ignorant and in a lower stage of civilisation 
than one who was lighter. At any rate there seemed 
to be a general understanding to that effect, when I 
was a boy—at least among most people. Perhaps 
it was due to the fact that on the plantations, as a 
rule, lighter coloured slaves were more often employed 
as house servants, and, because of their more 
intimate association with their masters, were held 
in higher esteem and had more opportunities for 
advancement than the field hands. Perhaps it was 
merely a reflection of the general opinion, which 
slaves somehow imbibed, that everything white was 
good and everything black was bad. I recall that 
in the matter of religion, although, it may never have 
been directly referred to, we, always understood that 
God was white and the Devil was black.
In any case I grew up with the idea that in Africa 
the lowest and most degraded type of man was black, 
and the blacker he was the further down in the scale 
of civilisation I expected him to be. The fact seems 
to be that this is nowhere true in Africa. For 
instance, the Hausas, the great trading people of the 
Soudan, who live in walled cities and carry on a trade 
extending over the whole region between the West 
Coast and the Nile, are, according to Dr. Charles 
Henry Robinson, "as black as any people in the 
world." The Bushmen, on the other hand, who, 

risen above the hunting stage of civilisation.
No one question, I may say right here, is more 
frequently asked me than this: "What is the relative 
ability of the Negro of mixed and unmixed blood?" 
I usually answer that my experience and observation 
convince me that, where the environment has been 
equally favourable, there is no difference in ability.
As an illustration I may say that at Tuskegee it has 
been customary to award the honour of delivering 
the valedictory address to the student making the 
highest average in scholarship, industrial work and 
deportment, and during a period of about twenty 
years, ten of those who gained this honour were 
Negroes of pure blood. I understand that at 
Hampton Institute, in Virginia, where they have had 
an experience covering a considerably longer period, 
the same thing has been found to be true. I might 
add that the late J. C. Price, during his lifetime by 
all odds the leading and most prominent man of his 
race in North Carolina and one of the most eloquent 
men in the country, was pure black. The two leading 
and most progressive men, in commercial and 
business directions, in the State of Mississippi, 
Isaiah T. Montgomery and Charles Banks, have no 
mixture of blood. W. W. Brown, who founded the 
largest and most successful fraternal organisation 
that has ever existed among the black people in 
America, was a pure black. It would not be 

is one other name that should not be omitted—
Major R. R. Moten, Commandant at the Hampton
Institute, Hampton, Va., who is one of the few
Negroes in this country who can trace his ancestry,
in an unbroken chain, back to his people in Africa.
The most conspicuous example of a success in literature
is, perhaps, Paul Lawrence Dunbar, the poet,
who was a man of unmixed blood.
Let me add that, as my observation and experience 
of human life have widened, I have learned 
to doubt the wisdom of laying down any general 
rules that fix for all times the status of any people, 
or determine in advance the progress they are able 
or likely to make under conditions different from 
those in which they happened, at the present time, 
to be found.
I had a lesson in this respect a few years ago at 
Tuskegee. It happened that in one of the geography 
classes, which at that time were studying Africa, the 
students came one day upon a passage in which the 
Bushmen were described as the lowest type of 
human being to be found in Africa. The writer 
went on to describe this people in a way which made 
our students feel that the Bushmen were about as 
low, degraded and hopeless a type of human nature 
as could well be imagined.
While the class was discussing this passage, a boy 
in the back of the room raised his hand and indicated 

he had recently come from South Africa and knew
something of the natives, and he did not agree with
the statements in the geography. He went on to
say that his mother was a Bushwoman and that his
father was a Hottentot, a tribe which is generally
supposed to be closely related to the Bushmen. He
had been born in the bush. Afterward, while he
was still a small boy, his father and mother had
moved into town and he had been enabled in this
way to get something of an education. As the
young Bushman happened to stand near the head of
his class and spoke with personal knowledge of both
his father's and mother's people, as well as of the
other tribes of South Africa, what he had to say was
listened to with the greatest interest and attention.
When he followed it up by going to his room and
bringing back photographs with which to illustrate
his statement, both the class and the teachers were
convinced that, however much truth there might be
in the general description given in geographies, the
Bushmen who, for a hundred years or more, had been
hunted like wild beasts by the other stronger tribes
of South Africa, were to a very large extent, the
victims of circumstances.[3]

This incident helped to confirm me in the belief 
that in our efforts to help the weaker peoples of the 
earth, we should not despair even in the case of the 
most humble and backward of the human family. 
In mathematics and in physical sciences it is possible 
to make exact statements and lay down laws that are 
universal and unchanging, but in what concerns 
human life and history we cannot be so precise and 
definite. Human beings are constantly doing 
unprecedented things and it is usually, I suspect, the 
unexpected and unprecedented things that men do 
that are the most important.
As a boy I had been accustomed to hear Africa 
referred to as one hears of Mexico, as if it were a 
place where a comparatively homogeneous people 
lives, having much the same customs, language, and 
civilisation; in short, as if it were a country instead 
of a continent. It was some time before I was able 
to realise the vast extent and variety of the territory 
over which the dark races of Africa are spread. 
Africa is larger and considerably more varied in its 
geographical structure than North America. The 
territory occupied by the dark races of Africa, for 
example is more than two times that occupied by the 
United States.

I found also that I had only the vaguest notion of 
the multitude of different peoples that inhabit Africa 
and the variety of civilisations represented among 
its inhabitants, not only among the more advanced 
races along the Mediterranean but also among the 
Negro peoples who still hold possession of nearly 
seven-eighths of the continent. For instance, Sir 
Harry H. Johnston says of the people inhabiting 
the English protectorate of Uganda, where a careful 
study has been made of the native peoples: 
Within the limits of the Protectorate are to be found specimens 
of nearly all the more marked types of African man—Congo 
Pygmies, and the low types of the Elgon and Semliki forests, 
the handsome Bahima, who are negroids and are as much related 
to the ancient Egyptians as to the average Negro, the gigantic 
Turkana and the wiry and stunted Andorobo, the Apollo-like 
Masai, the naked Nile tribes, and the scrupulous clothed Baganda. 
These last again are enthusiastic, casuistic Christians, while other 
tribes of the Nile provinces are fanatical Mohammedans. The 
Bahima are burdened with a multiplicity of minor deities, while 
the Masai and kindred races have practically no religion at all. 
Cannibalism lingers in the western corners of the protectorate; 
while natives of the other provinces are importing tinned apricots 
or are printing and publishing in their own language summaries 
of their history.[4]
Speaking of the popular notion of the African 
people to which I have referred, Professor Jerome 
Dowd, a Southern white man who resides in Charlotte, 
N. C., author of a recent sociological study 
of the African races, says: 

When the average European or American white man thinks or 
writes of the Negroes he considers them as one race and attributes 
to them certain traits which are supposed to be equally common to 
all groups and to all localities. This is a mistaken view and may 
be likened to an attempt to class all of the Aryan peoples as a 
homogeneous race, having common features and traits. In fact 
the Negroes of the world, just as the Aryans, are scattered over a 
great area, live in different environments and have varied and 
opposite mental and physical peculiarities. Indeed, the Negro 
races of the world differ from each other even more widely than the 
different branches of the Aryan stock. In Africa, for example, 
the Negroes are distributed over the territory of much greater 
extent and of greater physical diversity than is true of the Aryan 
races of Europe. They also differ more than the Aryan races in 
general appearance, in stature, physiognomy, and mental and moral 
constitution. Hence, to speak of all Negroes in Africa as one 
race, having common characteristics, is as misleading and is as 
unscientific as if we should consider all Europeans and Americans 
as of one race, and attribute to all of them the same traits.[5]
Another statement which one frequently hears, 
made indiscriminately of the dark races of Africa, 
is that they are constitutionally lazy and cannot be 
induced to work. I shall have something to say 
about the Negro as a labourer later in this work; 
here it is, perhaps, sufficient to recall the fact that 
in the greater portion of Africa the black man is still 
almost the only labourer. It is he who builds the 
railways and the bridges, digs the gold in the South 
African mines, and collects the rubber in the Congo 
forests. Miss Mary Kingsley, in her volume, 
"Travels in West Africa," says of the Kruboys, 

Africa; for without their help the working of the
Coast would cost more lives than it already does,
and would be in fact practically impossible." In
his book on Tropical Africa, Henry Drummond,
describing the way in which the natives come from
far and near to try the sensation of methodical work
on the building of the Cape to Cairo railway, says:
The severest test to which the Native of Central Africa has yet 
been put is in the construction of the Stevenson Road between 
Lakes Nyassa and Tanganyika. Forty-six miles of this road have 
already been made, entirely by native labour, and the work could 
not have been better done had it been executed by English navvies. 
I have watched by the day a party of seventy Natives working upon 
the road. Till three or four years ago, none had ever looked upon 
a white man, nor till a few months previously had one of them ever 
seen a spade, a pick-axe or a crow-bar. Yet these savages handle 
these tools to such purpose that with only a single European 
superintendent they have made a road full of difficult cuttings 
and gradients, which would not disgrace a railway contractor at 
home. The workmen keep regular hours, six in the morning till 
five at night, with a rest at midday—work steadily, continuously, 
willingly and, above all, merrily. This goes on in the heart 
of the tropics, almost under the equator itself, where the white 
man's energy evaporates and leaves him so limp that he cannot be 
an example to his men.[6]
The fact is, very little comes out of Africa, from an 
elephant's tusk to a diamond, that is not the result 
of the labour of the African. This does not mean that 
the native labourer is always as persistent and 
intelligent as he should be, nor that native labour is, 

Experience has shown that one tribe is more useful
in one form of labour and another tribe in some other
form. What the African has needed most to make
him a better labourer has been the same incentive
to work which the white man had. Where one stick
sharpened forms a spear, two sticks make a fire, and
fifty sticks a place to live, there is little incentive to
systematic and persistent work. This completeness
and modesty of wants is, in my opinion, at the bottom
of the difficulty in Africa. The truth is that the
Negro in Africa or out of it develops in industrial
efficiency, as other human beings do, in response to
his needs and his opportunities.
I had this fact impressed upon me in a very 
striking way during a recent visit to Cleveland, 
Ohio, when I went to see a little brass foundry 
run by a coloured man who is engaged in the 
manufacture of those little brass wheels that run 
along the trolley wires of our electric railways and, 
by means of the trolley pole connect the cars with 
the electric current.
The operation of casting these wheels, as I was 
informed, requires unusual skill and experience, 
because it is necessary to secure just the right degree 
of hardness and toughness in the metal, and I was 
the more interested in noticing the way in which 
this man and his assistants did their work because 
I recall that the art of working in iron was one of the 

immemorial, of the people of my race.
Dr. Franz Boas, Professor of Anthropology at 
Columbia University, says that, "while much of the 
history of early invention is shrouded in darkness, 
it seems likely that at the time when the European 
was still satisfied with rude stone tools, the African 
had invented or adapted the art of smelting ore."
I had been reading a few days before a description 
of the rude methods by which, with little more than 
a simple bellows and a charcoal fire, native Africans 
reduced the ores and forged the implements, many of 
them of great beauty as well as usefulness, which one 
may still meet with in many parts of Africa.
I am not sufficiently familiar with the detailed 
methods of smelting ores and casting metals to be 
able to even suggest the vast distance between the 
primitive methods of the Native African and the 
infinitely more intricate and complicated technique 
of the modern industry. The thought, the study 
and the invention of thousands, perhaps of millions 
of minds, have contributed to create the very conditions 
of the modern iron industry. The contrast 
between the Native African, working laboriously 
in the solitude of the African forests, with his primitive 
tools, after a traditional method, and the 
American Negro, in his own foundry, with the 
advantage of all the machinery, knowledge, and the 
skill that modern science and modern invention have 

is impressive enough. But this contrast does not
represent the difference in innate qualities in the
men themselves, but rather the difference in the
civilisations that surround them.
It probably requires just as much skill and just 
as much patience to make one of those long and 
graceful spearheads you may see on the end of an 
African lance as it does to make the trolley wheel; 
but it takes all our civilisation to make the trolley 
wheel possible.
In what I have written thus far in regard to Africa 
and African peoples I have sought to emphasise 
the vastness of the territories which they inhabit; 
the distances which divide them from one another; 
the variety of physical types in which they are 
represented; the complicated social relations that 
sometimes exist among them, and the difficulty of 
making general statements, laying down general 
laws that hold good at all times and all places for all 
of the African peoples.
There is, however, a tie which few white men can 
understand, which binds the American Negro to the 
African Negro; which unites the black man of 
Brazil and the black man of Liberia; which is 
constantly drawing into closer relations all the 
scattered African peoples whether they are in the old 
world or the new.
There is not only the tie of race, which is strong in 

specially important in the case of the black man.
It is this common badge of colour, for instance, which
is responsible for the fact that whatever contributes,
in any degree to the progress of the American Negro,
contributes to the progress of the African Negro,
and to the Negro in South America and the West
Indies. When the African Negro succeeds, it helps
the American Negro. When the African Negro
fails, it hurts the reputation and the standing of the
Negro in every other part of the world.
I have rarely met in America any one of my race 
who did not, in one way or another, show a deep 
interest in everything connected with Africa. The 
millions of Negroes in America are almost as much 
interested, for example, in the future of Liberia and 
Abyssinia, as they are in their own country. There 
is always a peculiar and scarcely definable bond that 
binds one black man to another black man, whether 
in Africa, Jamaica, Haiti, or the United States. 
One evidence of this interest of the Negro in America 
in the Negro in Africa is the work that the 
American Negro churches are doing in Africa to help 
civilise and Christianise their brethren there. There 
is scarcely any branch of the Negro church in America 
that does not have an organisation through which it 
is sending men and women and money into some 
portion of Africa. The readiness with which some 
of the strongest and brightest men and women in 

ready to return to Africa and give their lives in an
effort to uplift their fellows, indicates the strong
racial tie that binds the black people of the world
together.
On the other hand, it is true that Negroes in other 
parts of the world are beginning to interest themselves 
more and more in the fortunes of the Negro 
in America. In a very marked degree the one 
hundred and thirty millions of black people outside 
of America are looking to the ten millions of 
Negroes in the United States for guidance and for 
inspiration. They are watching closely the progress 
of these American Negroes. They are beginning to 
realise that if it is possible for the ten million black 
men in America, surrounded by modern machinery 
and all the other forces of civilisation, to get into line 
and march with the procession, that it is also possible 
for them, in time, to follow, somewhat more 
slowly, perhaps, but in the same direction.
 "Every race of man, savage or civilised, that came in contact with them [the 
Bushmen] appropriated their land without a single pretext of justification, and 
waged a war of extermination against them as soon as they resisted or resented the 
wrong that was done them. The pastoral tribes of natives and colonial flock-owners 
could not appreciate the feelings of attachment which those who lived by the chase 
alone had to their hunting-grounds, while the constant encroachments which were 
made upon them impressed the untutored minds of the hunter race with the idea 
that the whole world was arrayed against them. Their almost fierce love of 
independence, their almost equally unalterable determination to maintain and die 
in their primitive modes of life, utter contempt—at least of the majority of them—
for all pastoral or agricultural pursuits, made them to be looked upon by all the 
larger and more robust of the African races as a species of wild animal, which it was 
praiseworthy to exterminate whenever an opportunity offered."—"Discoveries in 
North and Central Africa," Henry Barth, Ph. D., Vol. I, p. 215.

CHAPTER III 
THE AFRICAN AT HOME
SOME time during the latter part of 1899, 
or the early part of 1900, I received through 
the German Embassy, in Washington, a 
letter saying that the German Colonial Society 
wanted a number of students from Tuskegee to go 
out to German West Africa to teach the natives how 
to produce cotton by American methods.
While I had been a student at Hampton Institute, 
Virginia, it was one of my ambitions, as it has been 
the ambition of a great many other Negro students 
before and since, to go out some day to Africa as a 
missionary. I believed that I had got hold at 
Hampton of a kind of knowledge that would be 
peculiarly helpful to the Native Africans and I felt 
that my interest in the people out there, vague and 
indefinite as it was, would in some way or other help 
and inspire me in the task of lifting them to a higher 
plane of civilisation.
After I went to Tuskegee I gave up my ambition 
of going to Africa. I had not been long there, 
however, before I was convinced that I could, perhaps, 
be of larger usefulness through the work I was 

service I wanted to perform, Africans who came as
students to America, and by sending from Tuskegee
men and women trained in our methods, as teachers
and workers among the native peoples. The
request I received through the German Embassy
was, therefore, particularly welcome to me, for
it gave me an opportunity to realise, in a direct
way, the ambition I had never wholly lost
sight of.
A group of our best students was selected for this 
African mission. They went out to Togoland, West 
Africa, and began to establish stations in different 
points in that colony, and then started in to grow 
cotton, using the native labour as far as they were 
able, but necessarily, at first, doing a large part of the 
work themselves.
They met all sorts of difficulties. They found the 
American cotton was not suited to African soil, and 
were compelled to cross it with native varieties in 
order to produce an hybrid type that possessed the 
valuable qualities of both. They had considerable 
difficulty, at first, with the native labourers. I 
remember that John Robinson, one of the party who 
remained to carry out the work after the others had 
returned home, told me of an incident, which made 
me see, in a way in which I had not been able to see 
before, that the education of the native African in 
the white man's civilisation must begin much farther 

are likely to imagine.
Among the other things this party had taken out to 
Africa was a wagon, which had been manufactured 
by the students at Tuskegee. While this wagon was 
being unloaded and put together, the native porters 
looked on with interest, never having seen anything 
that went on wheels before. After the wagon had 
been loaded ready to start the attention of members 
of the party was turned for a time in another 
direction. When they came back to the wagon 
they were greatly surprised to see that the natives 
had unloaded and taken it apart, and were busily 
engaged in fastening its wheels and other parts on 
their heads, preparatory to carrying them, along with 
the other goods, to their destination in the interior. 
Mr. Robinson explained to them, through an interpreter, 
the use of the wagon, and tried to show them 
the advantage of it. They were interested in seeing 
this curious machine of the white man work, but 
they were quite positive in their conviction that the 
good old-fashioned way of carrying everything on 
their heads was the better. Now that roads have 
been opened up and the natives have actually seen a 
wagon worked, Mr. Robinson tells me they take it 
as a hardship if they are asked to carry anything.
During the time this experiment in educating the 
Native African was going on, I followed its progress, 
through the accounts I received from students on 

Colonial Society, with close attention and intense
interest. It was the nearest I had come, up to that
time, to anything like a practical and intimate
acquaintance with the African at home.
Among the first thing the Tuskegee students did 
in Africa was to build for themselves comfortable 
houses, to supply them with well made but simple 
furniture, to put in these houses not only the necessities, 
but some of the comforts of life. I was interested 
to note that, within a few months the Natives 
and, especially the women, had gotten the notion 
that they wanted the same kind of houses and some 
of the same kind of furniture. The women naturally 
made their wants known to the men, and before these 
students had been in Africa half a dozen years the 
Natives in their vicinity had reached the point where, 
with the training they had received and with the 
desire they had gained for better homes to live in, 
better tools to work with, and for all the other advantages 
which the black man in America seemed to 
possess over the black man in Africa, they were 
performing about as satisfactory service as the same 
class of human beings would have performed in any 
other part of the world.
Native Africans have been sent from Africa to 
Tuskegee. Our Tuskegee students have returned 
from time to time and made their reports of 
successes. Thus in a very vital and practical manner 

progress and civilisation of our brethren in the
darker continent.
Some time ago in looking through the pages of 
some magazine or book of science, I ran across a 
statement that, when men first began to study the 
stars systematically and with telescopes, they discovered 
a certain class of errors in their calculations 
which were due to the personality of the observers. 
One man's brain, acting quicker, would record the 
stars as moving more rapidly; another would record 
them as moving more slowly than their actual 
movements. It became necessary, therefore, in 
order to make the calculations correct, to study and 
take account of these personal aberrations.
It has occurred to me, in the course of my reading 
about the African peoples, that it would contribute 
much to the accuracy of our knowledge, if some study 
were made of the sort of errors that creep into our 
observations of human beings. Important as it is 
that we should have a correct knowledge of the stars, 
it is more important that we should have an accurate 
knowledge of men. For instance, I have noticed that 
a man born and reared in the Southern states 
invariably looks upon the Negro with different eyes 
from the man born and reared in the Northern 
states. In their reports and interpretations of the 
simplest facts they are often widely divergent in their 
views. Even when they agree with each other about 

that their agreement was due to a misunderstanding.
Frequently amusing situations occur in the discussion 
of the Negro. Many of these have occurred 
in my presence. It seldom occurs, for instance, when 
I am travelling on a train that the discussion 
does not turn on the question as to what is the 
physical, moral, and mental effect on the individual 
when he is of mixed blood. One man will argue 
very seriously that there should be no mixture of 
blood, for the reason that he is quite sure that wherever 
there is a mixture it results in a weakened 
individual, bodily, mentally, morally. Within ten 
or fifteen minutes another man will begin, in the 
absence of the first, to discuss the same subject and 
will, in an equally serious and positive manner, 
state that wherever in all history the Negro has been 
able to accomplish anything of value to the world 
it had been because he had some tincture of white 
blood in his veins.
During these discussions I am sometimes reminded 
of an incident that occurred during my early boyhood, 
which, because it illustrates a phase in the development 
of the Negro in America, I may be permitted 
to mention it here. Very soon after the days of 
slavery and even before the public school system had 
been organised, there arose in the community a 
discussion among our people as to whether the world 
was round or flat. It lasted for several days, and 

factions. During the discussion a coloured man
came along, a school teacher, who had very little
actual learning, and made application to open a
school. The question as to whether the world was
flat or round was submitted to him, or rather he was
asked how he would treat the question in the schoolroom,
and he replied that he was prepared to teach
either "flat," "round," or just as the individual
family requested.
The continual discussion of the Negro often 
reminds me, as I have stated, of this story. The 
Negro question or the Negro himself seems able to 
be accommodated to almost any and every shade 
of opinion. That explains how two men with 
diametrically opposite views sometimes come to an 
agreement about the Negro; one thinks he should be 
flat and not round, the other thinks he should be 
round and not flat; but both agree that there is 
something wrong with him.
If it is difficult for people of the same race to understand 
one another when they are talking about things 
in regard to which their experience has been different, 
it is still more difficult for one race to pass judgment 
upon another, particularly when these races differ 
so widely from one another as the white man and 
the Negro. Dr. Franz Boas has called attention to 
this difficulty in a paper before the American Association 
of Science. "As the white race is the civilised 

is considered as the characteristic feature of a lower
type; . . . the greater the difference between
the intellectual, emotional and moral processes and
those found in our civilisation, the harsher the
judgment of the people."[1]
Under these circumstances it is natural enough 
that the black man, who is furthest removed physically 
from the white man, should suffer more than 
others from the sort of prejudice Professor Boas describes. 
With the possible exception of the Jew, no 
race has ever been subjected to criticisms so 
searching and candid, to state it mildly, as the Negro. 
And yet I 
have found that those who have known and understood 
the Negro best, have usually been kindest in 
their judgment of him and most hopeful of his future.
For instance, the late Miss Kingsley, an Englishwoman, 
who seems to have entered deeper into 
the mind of the West African than most others, 
says of the West Coast Negro: 
The true Negro is, I believe, by far the better man than the 
Asiatic; he is physically superior, and he is more like an Englishman 
than the Asiatic; he is a logical, practical man, with feelings 
that are a credit to him, and are particularly strong in the direction 
of property. He has a way of thinking he has rights whether he 
likes to use them or no, and he will fight for them when he is 
driven to it. Fight you for a religious idea the African will not; 
he is not the stuff you make martyrs out of, nor does he desire to 
shake off the shackels of the flesh and swoon into Nirvana. . . . 

thousands of Englishmen of the stand-no-nonsense, Englishman's-house-is-his-castle
type. Yet, withal, a law-abiding man, loving
a live Lord, holding loudly that women should be kept in their
place, yet often grievously henpecked by his wives, and little better
than a slave to his mother whom he loves with the love he gives
to none other.[2]
Concerning the affection which the African has 
for his mother, Miss Kingsley quotes the Rev. 
Leigh ton Wilson.
Mr. Wilson was born and educated in South 
Carolina. In 1834 he went to Africa as a missionary 
and remained there for eighteen years, in close 
contact with the civilisation of the forefathers of the 
present American Negroes. He was among the first 
missionaries to Africa. He remained in the active 
service of the Southern Presbyterian Church until 
his death in 1886. While in Africa he studied the 
languages and reduced the native tongue of some of 
the tribes to writing. He says: 
Whatever other estimate we may form of the African, we may 
not doubt his love for his mother. Her name, whether dead or 
alive, is always on his lips and in his heart. She is the first thing he 
thinks of when awakening from his slumbers and the last thing he 
remembers when closing his eyes in sleep; to her he confides secrets 
which he would reveal to no other human being on the face of the 
earth. He cares for no one else in time of sickness, she alone must 
prepare his food, administer his medicine, perform his ablutions, 
and spread his mat for him. He flies to her in the hour of his 
distress, for he well knows if all the rest of the world turn against 
him, she will be steadfast in her love, whether he be right or wrong. 

one of his fellowmen it would be to resent an insult offered to his
mother. More fights are occasioned among boys by hearing
something said in disparagement of their mothers than all other
causes put together. It is a common saying among them, if a
man's mother and his wife are both on the point of being drowned,
and he can save only one of them, he must save his mother, for
the avowed reason if the wife is lost he may marry another, but he
will never find a second mother. . . .[3]
Mr. Wilson points out that the Africans of the 
Grain Coast have long since risen above the hunting 
life; they have fixed habitations, cultivate the soil 
for means of subsistence, have herds of domestic 
animals, construct for themselves houses which are 
sufficient to protect them alike from the scorching 
heat of the sun and the chilly damps of the night; 
they show a turn for the mechanical arts, and in the 
fabrication of implements of warfare and articles of 
ornament they display surprising skill.
"As we see them in their native country," he 
continues, "they show none of that improvidence 
or want of foresight for which they have almost 
become proverbial in this country, which shows that 
circumstances have made them what they are in this 
respect. They plant their crops with particular 
reference to the seasons of the year, and they store 
away provisions for their future wants with as much 
regularity as any people in the world, so that times 
of scarcity and want are less frequent among them 

degree of civilisation."
Referring to the farms of the Kru people, the 
tribes from which the seamen of the West Coast 
are drawn, Mr. Wilson says: 
The Natives of the Kru country cultivate the soil to some 
considerable extent. Their farms are generally two or three 
miles distant from the villages, and are made at this distance to 
keep them out of the reach of their cattle. Nearer to the 
villages they have inclosed gardens in which they raise small 
quantities of plantains, corn, bananas, peas, beans, and a few 
other vegetables.
Of the mechanical skill of the neighbouring 
Ashanti people, whose territory is in the English 
Gold Coast colony, Mr. Wilson tells us, "that they 
manufacture gold ornaments of various kinds and 
many of them of much real taste. They fabricate 
swords, agricultural implements, wooden stools, and 
cotton cloths of beautiful figures and very substantial 
texture."[4]
From time to time, as Tuskegee graduates have 
returned from the various stations in Africa in which 
they have been at work, they have brought back with 
them specimens of native workmanship in iron, 
wood and leather. I have frequently been impressed 
with the beauty of some of the designs that native 
craftsmen have worked out upon their spears and in 
their homespun cotton cloth. The leather tanned 
by some of these native tanners is often surprisingly 

the specimens of the native handicrafts have been
placed on exhibition in the museum at Tuskegee, and
in one or two cases we have been able to reproduce
in our classes in basketry the shapes and designs of
some of these native articles.
"Nothing, perhaps," says Professor Franz Boas, 
"is more encouraging than a glimpse of the artistic 
industries of the native African. A walk through 
the African museums of Paris and London and 
Berlin is a revelation. I wish you could see the 
sceptres of African kings, carved of hardwood and 
representing artistic form; or the dainty basketry 
made by the people of the Kongo River and of the 
region of the Great Lakes of the Nile, or the grass 
mats of their beautiful patterns.
"Even more worthy of our admiration," he 
continues, "is the work of the blacksmith who 
manufactures symmetrical lance heads, almost a 
yard long, or axes inlaid with copper and decorated 
with filligree. Let me also mention in passing the 
bronze castings of Benin and the West Coast of 
Africa, which, although perhaps due to Portuguese 
influences, have so far excelled in technique any 
European work, that they are even now almost 
inimitable."[5]
The blacksmith seems to occupy a very important 
place in the social life of Africa. Travellers have 

inaccessible parts of the continent, where they may
be seen collecting the native iron and copper ores;
smelting and reducing them, and then working them
in their primitive forges, into hoes, knives, spear and
arrow heads, battle-axes, wood-working tools, rings
and hatchets.
Just as everywhere in the Southern states to-day, 
especially in the country districts, at the crossroads, 
or near the country store, one finds the Negro black 
smith, so, in some of the remote regions in Africa, 
every village has, according to its size, from one to 
three blacksmiths. Each smith has an apprentice 
and his art is a craft secret most zealously guarded.
Samuel P. Verner, like the Rev. Leighton Wilson, 
a Southern white man and missionary of the 
Southern Presbyterian church, says in his book, 
"Pioneering in Central Africa," of these African 
blacksmiths: 
The proficiency of some of these men is astonishing. I 
frequently have my work done by them and their skill amazed 
me. They have the art of tempering copper as well as of making 
soft steel. Some of the objects of their craft which I placed in 
the National Museum at Washington are revelations to the 
uninitiated in their remarkable complexity and variety.
Mr. Verner's mission station was in the Kongo 
Free State, on the upper courses of the Kasai, in 
the heart of savage Africa where the people have 
never been touched by the influences of either the 
European or Mohammedan civilisations. Speaking 

tribes, Mr. Verner says:
Some of these Africans are wonderfully adept. They can 
produce a geometrical figure whose perfection is amazing. Their 
tools are of the simplest, yet they can carve figures of men and 
animals, pipes, bowls, cups, platters, tables, and fantastic images. 
I saw a chair carved out of a solid block of ebony. Their work 
in ivory is also rare and valuable and I believe their talent in 
those lines ought to be developed.
Throughout West Africa, wherever the European 
has not established his trading factory, the native 
market is an institution which is a constant source 
of surprise to travellers. These markets are the 
native clearing houses for the produce of the soil 
and the fabricated articles of the land. They are 
generally the centre of the trading operations of a 
district ranging from ten to thirty miles. Here will 
be seen vegetables and fruit, poultry, eggs, live pigs, 
goats, salt of their manufacture, pottery of their own 
make, strips of cloth, grass-woven mats, baskets 
and specimens of embroidery and art work, besides 
numberless other articles of various sorts and 
kinds which are essential to African comfort and well 
being. From the small group of native merchants 
who travel with their wares within a radius of 
thirty or fifty miles, to the large caravans of the Hausa 
traders who cross the Desert of Sahara, and at times 
reach the Eastern and Western confines of the 
continent, everywhere in Africa the black man is a 
trader.

Among the more primitive tribes the village markets 
are confined to two or three hundred buyers or sellers, 
but in the greater markets like that of Kano and 
Upper Nigeria, twenty or thirty thousand traders 
will be gathered together at certain seasons of the 
year. It is an interesting fact, as indicating the 
African's interest in trade, that in many tribes the 
market place is considered sacred ground, and, in 
order that trade may be carried on there without 
interruption, no strife is permitted within its 
precincts.
Professor Boas, writing in 1904, said: 
The Negro all over the African continent is either a tiller of 
the soil or the owner of large herds; only the Bushmen and a few 
of the dwarf tribes of Central Africa are hunters. Owing to the 
high development of agriculture, the density of population of 
Africa is much greater than that of primitive America and 
consequently the economic conditions of life are more stable.
It may be safely said that the primitive Negro community 
with its fields that are tilled with iron and wooden implements, 
with its domestic animals, with its smithies, with its expert woodcarvers, 
is a model of thrift and industry, and compares favourably 
with the conditions of life among our own ancestors.[6]
It is just as true in America, as it is in Africa, that 
those who know the Negro intimately and best have 
been, as a rule, kindest and most hopeful in their 
judgments of him. This may seem strange to those 
who get their notion of the Southern white man's 
opinion of the Negro, from what they see in the 
press and hear from the platform, during the heat of a 

for one reason or another, have allowed themselves
to become embittered. Southern opinion of the
Negro, particularly as it finds expression in the press
and on the platform, is largely controversial. It has
been influenced by the fact that for nearly a hundred
years the Negro has been the football in a bitter
political contest, and there are a good many Southern
politicians who have acquired the habit of berating
him. The Negro, in the South, has had very
little part in this controversy, either before or since
the war, but he has had a chance to hear it all, and
it has often seemed to me, if, after all that has taken
place, the Negro is still able to discuss his situation
calmly, the white man should be able to do so
also. But that is another matter.
Nineteen times out of twenty, I suppose, a stranger 
coming South, who inquires concerning the Negro 
from people he meets on the train or on the highways, 
will get from these men pretty nearly the same 
opinion he has read in the newspapers or heard in 
political speeches. These criticisms of the Negro 
have been repeated so often that people have come 
to accept and repeat them again without reflection. 
The thing that shows this to be true is, that the very 
men who denounced all Negroes will very likely 
before the conversation is ended tell of one, and 
perhaps, half a dozen individual Negroes in whom 
they have the greatest confidence.

A Southern white man may tell you, with the 
utmost positiveness, that he never knew a single 
Negro who would not steal—except one. Every 
white man knows one Negro who is all right—a 
model of honesty, industry, and thrift—and if he 
tries to remember, he will think of other Negroes in 
whom he has the greatest confidence, and for whom 
he has a very genuine respect. Considering that 
there are a good many more white people in the 
South than there are Negroes, it seems to follow, 
logically, that in spite of what one hears about the 
Negro in general, there are a good many individual 
Negroes who are pretty well thought of by their 
white neighbours.
It is well to take into consideration, also, that 
when Southern people express their confidence and 
their respect for an individual black man, they are 
speaking of one whom they know: on the contrary, 
when they denounce in general terms the weakness 
and the failure of the Negro race, they have in mind a 
large number of whom they know a great deal less.
I do not mean to suggest that there is no justification 
for the criticism of the Negro that one often hears 
in the South. I have never thought or said that 
the Negro in America was all that he should be. It 
does seem to me, however, that the Negro in the 
United States has done, on the whole, as well as he 
was able, and as well as, under all the circumstances, 
could be reasonably expected.

It was not unusual, particularly in the early part 
of the last century, to find among the slaves men 
who could read and write Arabic and were learned 
in the lore of the Koran. W. B. Hodgson, a Southern 
slave holder, published in 1857 a paper in which 
he gave an account of a Negro slave who had translated 
the gospel of John into Negro dialect, using 
"the letters of the Koran, the book of his first religious 
instruction, in transcribing the gospel, the book 
of his second instruction and conversion, and in the 
adopted dialect of his land of captivity." Most of 
the slaves came from what were known as the pagan 
tribes of the coast. In spite of the fact that so large 
a proportion of the slaves came from these interior 
tribes it was not until Mungo Park made his famous 
first journey to the interior of the Soudan in 1795 
that the Western world knew anything definite 
about that region. The eminent German traveller 
and scholar, Dr. Henry Barth, first reached the 
famous commercial city of Kano in 1850, and until 
1900 it was said not more than five Europeans had 
ever visited that city. The accounts that travellers 
give of the region and the people present a picture 
of African life so different from that of the coast cities 
that I am tempted to quote at some length from these 
descriptions.
Several peoples, of strikingly different characteristics, 
contributed to form the several loosely connected 
states which now form the British Colony of Northern 

The most important and interesting of these are the
Hausas and the Fulahs or Fellani, as they are sometimes
called. The Fulahs are noted for their military
spirit; the Hausas for their commercial enterprise.
One has a light complexion and the other is dark.
The Fulahs are an equestrian people, with a 
cavalry armed with lances and swords. They are 
zealous Mohammedans with a knowledge how to 
"divide and govern." Their independent character 
is described by the proverbial saying that "a Fulah 
man slave will escape or kill his master, and that a 
Fulah girl slave will rule the harem or die." The 
Hausas are superior to the Fulahs in the arts of 
peace. They are possessed of unusual industry, 
judgment and intelligence and have a considerable 
degree of literary taste. The Hausas carry on the 
internal trade of the North and Central Soudan. 
They are well clothed and have many well built 
cities with population sometimes of from twenty 
to sixty thousand. Barth, in describing Kano, 
which is, perhaps, to West Africa, what Chicago is 
to the United States, tells us that he mounted on 
horseback, "rode for several hours round all the 
inhabited quarters, enjoying at his leisure from the 
saddle the manifold scenes of public and private 
life, of comfort and happiness, of luxury and misery, 
of industry and indolence, which were exhibited in 
the streets, the market places, and in the interior of 

filled with articles of native and foreign produce
with buyers and sellers in every variety of figure,
complexion, and dress." Now an "open terrace of
clay with a number of dye-pots and people busily
employed in various processes of their handicraft;
here a man stirring the juice and mixing with indigo
some colouring wood in order to give it the desired
tint, there another drawing a shirt from the dye-pot,
there two men beating a well-dyed shirt"; further
on, "a blacksmith busy with his tools in making a
dagger, a spear or the more useful ornaments of
husbandry," and, in another place, "men and women
hanging up their cotton thread for weaving."
The market of Kano, said to be the largest in 
Africa, is celebrated for its cotton cloth and leather 
goods. Traditions of Kano go back over a thousand 
years. It is surrounded by walls of sun-dried clay 
from twenty to thirty feet high and fifteen miles in 
circumference.
The greatest chieftain that ever ruled in West 
Africa, Mohammed Askia, lived in Kano. He 
became ruler in 1492 and held sway over a region 
probably as large as the German Empire. Barth 
tells us that Mohammed Askia was an example of 
the highest degree to which Negroes have attained in 
the way of political administration and control. 
His dynasty, which was entirely of native descent, is 
the more remarkable if we consider that this Negro 

by the most learned and rigid Mohammedans. Not
only did he consolidate and even extend his empire,
but went in 1495 on a pilgrimage to Mecca accompanied
by 1,500 armed men, 1,000 on foot and 500 on
horseback, and founded there a charitable institution.
He extended his conquests far and wide from what
is now the centre of Nigeria, westward almost to
the borders of the Atlantic Ocean and northward to
the south of Morocco. Askia governed the subjected
tribes with justice and equity. Everywhere
within the borders of his extensive dominions his
rule spread well-being and comfort.[7]
The career of Mohammed Askia is possibly the 
best example of the influence of Mohammedanism 
on that portion of Africa from which our American 
slaves were taken.
 "Discoveries in North and Central Africa," Henry Barth. See also, "A 
Tropical Dependency: an outline of the ancient history of the Western Soudan 
with an account of the modern settlement of northern Nigeria," Thora L. Shaw, 
(Lady Lugard.)

CHAPTER IV 
THE WEST COAST BACKGROUND OF THE AMERICAN 
NEGRO
SLAVES were probably brought to America 
from every part of Africa, for the slave trade 
seems to have penetrated, before it ended, to 
every corner of the continent. But the larger number 
of them came, undoubtedly, from the West Coast. It 
is said that, at one time, 200,000 slaves sailed annually 
from the West Coast of Africa, and during a 
period of two hundred years, it is estimated that 
3,200,000 slaves were shipped to America from a 
single point in the Niger Delta.[1]
 These people of 
the West Coast were, for the most part, the broken 
fragments of races that had been driven to the sea 
by the stronger races of the interior. They did not 
represent the highest to which the black man had 
attained in Africa, and their contact with the white 
man of the slave-trading class during the four 
hundred years or more that the foreign slave trade 
was in existence, did not improve them.
The African slave trade was not the source of all 
that was evil in the native life of the West Coast, 

trade did not, for instance, cause the destructive
tribal wars among the Natives, but it incensed them.
It added the motive of gain and gave the savage
warfare the character of a commercial enterprise.
The evils of the traffic did not end, however, with
the immediate and tangible destruction that it
wrought. It corrupted the native customs and
destroyed the native industries. It substituted the
cheap machine-made European goods for the more
artistic native manufactures, which take a great deal
more time and energy to produce.
"At the present time," says Professor Boas, "the 
distribution of Negro culture in Africa is such that 
in all the regions where the whites have come in 
contact with the Negro, his own industries have 
disappeared or have been degraded. As a consequence, 
all the tribes that live near the coast of 
Africa are, comparatively speaking, on a low level 
of industrial culture. It is but natural that the 
blacksmith, who can exchange a small lump of rubber 
picked up in the woods for a steel knife, prefers this 
method of obtaining a fine implement to the more 
laborious one of making a rather inefficient knife of 
soft iron with his primitive tools. It is not surprising 
that the cheap cotton goods replace the fine grass-cloth 
and the bark-cloth which the African women 
prepare. The European trader carries to the coast 
of Africa only the cheap products of European 

the white man's method of work."[2]
Of course the degradation of the native industries, 
in the way Professor Boas has described it, is not confined 
to Africa nor to the slave trade; it goes on 
wherever machine-made goods come in contact with 
native and home-made products. Much the same 
thing may be seen among the Negro farmers in the 
Southern states where they have yielded to the 
temptation to raise nothing but cotton—what is 
called the "money crop." For example, the Tuskegee 
Institute is located in the midst of one of the 
finest sweet potato growing soils in the world. Notwithstanding 
this, canned sweet potatoes used to 
be shipped into this part of Alabama. It requires 
less work to use the canned sweet potatoes which 
have been dug, cleaned, and cooked, than it does to 
prepare the land, produce the sweet potato crop, 
clean them, and cook them. But it makes the farmer 
dependent upon the store-keeper or more frequently 
on the money-lender.
One of my favourite ways of emphasising this 
mistake, in my talks to the Negro farmers, is to get 
a basket of canned vegetables from the store, show 
them what they are buying, calculate what they are 
paying for them, and make clear to them how much 
they could save and how much more independent 
they would be if they raised these things at home.

It may be interesting to note here exactly what it 
was the white man gave the black man for those 
cargoes of human beings that were shipped from 
Africa to America. The list of trade goods was 
somewhat different at different periods of the slave 
traffic and for different parts of the coast. The 
following is a list of trade goods as used in the latter 
part of the seventeenth century for the region about 
Sierra Leone: 
| French brandy or rum | Earrings | 
| Iron bars | Dutch knives | 
| White calicoes | Hedging bills and axes | 
| Sleysiger linen | Coarse laces | 
| Brass kettles | Crystal beads | 
| Earthen cans | Painted calicoes (red), called  chintz  | 
 
| All sorts of glass buttons | |
| Brass rings or bracelets | Oil of olive | 
| Bangles and glass beads of sundry  colours  | 
Small duffels | 
| Ordinary guns | |
| Brass medals | Muskets and fuzils | 
| Gunpowder | All sorts of counterfeit pearls | 
| Musket balls and shot | Red cotton | 
| Old sheets | Narrow bands of silk stuffs or  worsted, about half a yard broad for women, used about their waists  | 
 
| Paper | |
| Red caps | |
| Men's shirts | 
In those early days it was customary to reckon the 
value of slaves in hides and in bars or iron. A slave 
was worth at Gambia from twelve to fourteen bars of 
iron, which is equal in value to about one-half a 
hogshead of brandy.
The slave trade brought to the surface the worst in 

marts of the coast towns it was usually the worst
elements of both races that met, but it was here that
the African got his first notion of the white man's
civilisation, and it was here also that the white man
gained his first and most intimate acquaintance with
the African.
There is, I understand, a very natural and a very 
widespread distrust among the Natives of the coast 
towns and of the civilisation they represent.
One hears so little from the Natives themselves in 
regard to this subject, or any other for that matter, 
that I am tempted to quote here a statement of Miss 
Kingsley which gives an insight into the way the 
African mother looks upon these matters: 
It is to the mass of African women, untouched by white culture, 
but with an enormous influence over their sons and brothers, that 
I am now referring as a factor in the dislike to the advance of 
white civilisation; and I have said they do not like it because, 
for one thing, they do not know it; that is to say, they do not know 
it from the inside and at its best, but only from the outside. 
Viewed from the outside in West Africa white civilisation, to a 
shrewd mind like hers, is an evil thing for her boys and girls. She 
sees it taking away from them the restraints of their native culture, 
and in all too many cases leading them into a life of dissipation, 
disgrace, and decay; or, if it does not do this, yet separating the 
men from their people. . . . Then again both the native 
and his mother see the fearful effects of white culture on the young 
women, who cannot be prevented in districts under white control 
from going down to the coast towns and to the devil. It is 
this that causes your West African bush chief to listen to the old 
woman whom you may see crouching behind him, or you may not 

listen to the white man, it is bad for you."[3]
The Negro people of the country districts in the 
Southern states are, I suspect, much more like the 
masses of the Africans, who live beyond the influences 
of the coast towns, than any other portion of any race 
in the United States. As often as I can find the time 
to do so, I get out into the country among this class 
of people. I like to sleep in their houses, eat their 
food, attend their churches, talk with them as they 
plant and harvest their crops. In this way I have 
gotten the inspiration and material for much that I 
have written and much that I have had to say from 
time to time about the Negro in America.
In recent years I have noticed among the people, 
in what I have called "the country districts," a 
growing distrust for the city, not unlike that distrust 
of the Africans in the bush for the coast towns. 
Among the debating societies that are frequently 
formed among the country people, and in the 
churches and in the school houses, wherever the 
people get together, as they are fond of doing, to 
talk over their local affairs or discuss some abstract 
question, one of the favourite topics of discussion 
is the relative merits of the town and country. In 
the absence of other forms of excitement it frequently 
happens that a whole community will divide on some 
purely abstract question of this kind, and the debate 

younger people are for the city and its opportunities,
but the older people are for the country and its
independence.
The most self-reliant and substantial characters 
among my race that I know in the South are those 
who have been so surrounded as not to get hold of 
the vices and superficialities of towns and cities, 
but remained in the country where they lead an 
independent life. I have seen many of these characters 
who have come to our Tuskegee Negro 
conferences. I have in mind one man in particular, 
J.M. Sanifer, a farmer from Pickins County, Alabama, 
who comes to our Negro conference every year. 
The first thing that he usually exhibits when he 
begins to speak is a new suit of clothes. The history 
of this suit of clothes is interesting. The wool out of 
which it has been made has been grown upon the 
backs of sheep owned by himself and pastured on his 
land. The wool has been woven into cloth by his 
wife. The garments have been made entirely by his 
wife and daughters. This man takes great pride in 
explaining to his fellow members of the conference 
how he produces his own clothes, his own food, and 
I remember on one occasion he mentioned that during 
the previous twelve months he had had, except 
coffee, nothing in his home in the way of food that had 
not been produced on his farm. Mr. Sanifer has had 
very little of what we sometimes call "book learning," 

the study of things as well as from the study of books.
There were some things that the African learned in
American slavery; there are some other and quite
different things the American Negro is now beginning
to learn in freedom. None of these more fundamental
matters are ordinarily taught from books;
but if they are to be counted as part of what we
call education, then Mr. Sanifer is educated.
I have suggested in what I have already written 
some of the reasons why the white man has not found 
the black man at his best on the West Coast and 
particularly in the West Coast towns. To judge 
the African by what one may see in these coast towns 
or by what one may see in South Africa, or in the 
Nile regions of the Soudan, or wherever the native 
African has come in close contact with white civilisation, 
is much the same as if one were to judge the 
civilisation of America by what one can see in the 
slums of great cities. The people who live in these 
slums are, for the most part, uneducated, and have 
lost many of the habits and customs that make life 
decent and dignified. But few people, I dare say, 
would wish to pass judgment, either on the future 
of America or of the people who live in the city slums 
merely from what they were able to see there during 
a hurried or casual visit.
The descriptions of travellers often give one the 
impression that the moral, religious, and intellectual 

fantastic superstitions. But the African religion is
not a mere superstition.
"After more than forty years' residence among 
these tribes," says Rev. R. H. Nassau, "fluently 
using their language, conversant with their customs, 
dwelling intimately in their huts, associating with 
them in the varied relations of teacher, pastor, friend, 
master, fellow-traveller and guest, and in my special 
office as missionary, searching after their religious 
thought (and therefore being allowed a deeper 
entrance into their soul life than would be accorded 
to a passing explorer) I am able unhesitatingly to 
say that among all the multitude with whom I have 
met, I have seen or heard of none whose religious 
thought was only a superstition."[4]
In reading Dr. Nassau's book, I was impressed 
with the fact that Fetishism, as he defines it, is not 
merely a West African religion, but a West African 
system of thought, a general point of view and way 
of looking at things which enters into all the Native's 
ideas, and gives its colour to most of the affairs of 
his daily life.
This way of looking at and interpreting things so 
thoroughly pervades everything West African, is so 
different from our way of looking at things and is, as 
it seems to me, so important to any one who wants 
to get at the back of the African's mind, and find 

that I am tempted to quote again here at some length
from Miss Kingsley on this subject. She says:
One of the fundamental doctrines of Fetish is that the connection, 
of a certain spirit with a certain mass of matter, a material 
object, is not permanent; the African will point out to you a lightning-stricken 
tree and tell you that its spirit has been killed; 
he will tell you when the cooking pot has gone to bits that it has 
lost its spirit; if his weapon fails it is because some one has 
stolen or made sick its spirit by means of witchcraft. In every 
action of his daily life he shows you how he lives with a great, 
powerful spirit-world around him. You will see him before starting 
out to hunt or fight rubbing medicine into his weapons to 
strengthen the spirits within them, talking to them the while; 
telling them what care he has taken of them, reminding them of 
the gifts he has given them, though those gifts were hard for him 
to give, and begging them in the hour of his dire necessity not to 
fail him. You will see him bending over the face of a river talking 
to its spirit with proper incantations, asking it when it meets a 
man who is an enemy of his to upset his canoe or drown him, or 
asking it to carry down with it some curse to the village below which 
has angered him, and in a thousand other ways he shows you what 
he believes if you will watch him patiently.[5]
The fundamental difference between the African 
and the European way of thinking seems to be that 
for the African there is no such thing as dead matter 
in the world. Everything is alive, and for that 
reason there is no such thing as a machine, at least 
in the sense that we think of it. We are inclined to 
look at the physical world about us as if everything 
that happened was turned out relentlessly by some 

that the world is alive in every part; it is a world of
spirits and persons like ourselves.
Miss Kingsley continues: 
The more you know the African the more you study his laws 
and institutions, the more you must recognise that the main 
characteristic of his intellect is logical, and you see how in 
all things he uses this absolutely sound but narrow thought-form. 
He is not a dreamer or a doubter; everything is real, very 
real, horridly real to him. It is impossible for me to describe 
it clearly, but the quality of the African mind is strangely 
uniform. This may seem strange to those who read accounts of 
wild and awful ceremonials, or of the African's terror at the white 
man's things; but I believe you will find all people experienced in 
dealing with uncultured Africans will tell you that this alarm and 
brief wave of curiosity is merely external, for the African knows, 
the moment he has time to think it over, what the white man's thing 
really is, namely, either a white man's Juju or a devil.
It is this power of being able logically to account for everything 
that is, I believe, at the back of the tremendous permanency 
of Fetish in Africa, and the cause of many of the relapses into it 
by Africans converted to other religions; it is also the explanation 
of the fact that white men living in districts where death and danger 
are every-day affairs, under a grim pall of boredom, are liable to 
believe in Fetish, though ashamed of so doing.[6]
African medicine, so far as it has any system at all, 
is based on Fetish. The African believes that 
diseases are caused by an evil spirit, and the efficacy 
of drugs depends on the benevolent spirits, which, 
being put into the body, drive away the malevolent 
disease-causing spirits.
"There is," says Miss Kingsley, "as in all things 

mixed up with West African medical methods.
Underlying them throughout there is the Fetish
form of thought, but it is erroneous to believe that
all West African native doctors are witch doctors,
because they are not. One of my Efik friends, for
example, would no more think of calling in a witch
doctor for a simple case of rheumatism than you
would think of calling in a curate or a barrister; he
would just call in the equivalent to our consulting
physician, the country doctor, the Abiadiong. But
if he started being ill with something exhibiting
cerebral symptoms he would have in the witch doctor
at once."
What Miss Kingsley calls the Abiabok is really 
the village apothecary, who is also a sort of country 
doctor whose practice extends over a fair-sized district, 
wherein he travels from village to village. 
Big towns have resident apothecaries, and these 
apothecaries are learned in the properties of 
herbs, and they are surgeons as far as surgery 
is ventured upon. "A witch doctor," says Miss 
Kingsley, "would not dream of performing an 
operation."
Ex-President G. W. Gibson of Liberia, with whom 
I have talked, who went out to Africa as a boy, shortly 
after the colony was founded, speaks the native 
language fluently and has a long and intimate 
acquaintance with the native peoples, says that 

are very effective. For instance, the people in
Liberia are frequently troubled with rheumatism
and dropsy. For these diseases, he says, no
medicines have been found equal to those of the
Native doctor.
Like all the other crafts in Africa the use of drugs 
is a trade secret, and the native doctor has to go 
through a long apprenticeship before he is allowed 
to practise. It is not unusual, Mr. Gibson 
says, for some one living in the settlements, 
white men as well as black, to go out to those 
Bush doctors to obtain relief from certain kinds 
of disease.
Sometimes the coloured people in America, 
particularly those of the older generation, have had 
very quaint notions about medicine, but many of 
them, even those most ignorant of books, seem to be 
natural doctors or nurses. Frequently at Tuskegee 
a boy or girl having after been given the best care 
by our resident physician has remained sick for 
several months with few signs of recovery. Then 
the mother of this student would come to the institution 
and ask permission to take her child home for 
a few weeks. Notwithstanding the fact that the 
mother lived a long way in the country, miles from 
any doctor, the student would return within a 
few weeks in an apparently sound and healthy 
condition.

The methods of the witch doctor, as distinguished 
from the methods of the ordinary village doctor, 
seem to me, to a certain extent, like those of the 
Christian Scientist, at least in so far as he seeks to 
work directly on the soul and to drive out the disease 
by driving the idea of it out of the patient's mind. 
The witch doctor has to do with malevolent spirits, 
but as some of these malevolent spirits are human 
beings, his methods often take the form of a criminal 
proceeding, he being called in to assist in the conviction 
of the persons who are responsible for the 
disease. It is these criminal proceedings that 
have given the witch doctor his present bad 
reputation. And yet it is admitted that the witch 
doctors, as a rule, are very skilful in ferreting 
out crime.
One of the most interesting books in regard to 
Africa which I have been able to lay my hands on is 
Sarbah's "Fanti Customary Laws," a collection made 
by a native lawyer and member of the English bar, 
from cases tried under English jurisdiction in 
native courts. This customary law corresponds, in 
the life of the Fanti people, a tribe inhabiting 
what is known as the Gold Coast, to the common 
law of England, and Mr. Sarbah, in collecting it in a 
permanent form has performed a service for his 
people not unlike that of Blackstone for the English 
common law. Everywhere in Africa where the life 
of the people has not been disturbed by outside 

is law relating to property, to morality, to the protection
of life, in fact, in many portions of Africa
law is more strictly regarded than in many civilised
countries.[7]
"No other race on a similar level of culture," says 
Professor Boas, "has developed as strict methods 
of legal procedure as the Negro has. Many of his 
legal forms remind us strongly of those of mediæval 
Europe. For instance, it is hardly a coincidence 
that the ordeal as a means of deciding legal 
cases when all other evidence fails, has been 
used in Europe as well as throughout Africa, 
while it seems to be entirely unknown in ancient 
America."
In looking at the social institutions of the African 
we must not ignore his popular assemblies that are 
generally held in the palaver house or in the open air. 
Here matters legislative as well as judicial are settled. 
Though there are no written laws, certain ancient 
customs and usages form the precedent for discussion 
and settlement. When a law has been agreed 
upon, it is customary in some of the coast tribes 
for a public crier to proclaim it through the town. 
This is repeated at dusk when all the people are 
supposed to be at home so that no one can 
plead ignorance in case the law is violated. In 

following is an example:
In this case I come as a witness and I will speak.
If I tell lies, I will go in the bush and serpent bite me;
If I go in a canoe, the canoe will sink and I drown;
If I climb a palm-tree I must fall and die.
You (God) let the thunder fall and kill me.
If I tell the truth, then I am safe in Thee.
The native African tribes, which have never been 
touched by the Mohammedan civilisation have, 
as is generally known, no written literature. Only 
one tribe, the Vei people who live in the hinterland 
of Sierra Leone and Liberia, have invented an 
alphabet.[8]
 But Africans are great story-tellers and, 
according to Leighton Wilson, they have almost 
any amount of "unwritten lore, in the form of 
fables, allegories, traditionary stories and proverbial 
sayings, in which is displayed no small share of 
close observation, lively imagination and extraordinary 
shrewdness of character." He describes one 
famous African story-teller, Toko, by name, who 
might have been an ancestor of Joel Chandler 
Harris's "Uncle Remus."
"Toko," he says, "has a very remarkable and 
intelligent countenance, strongly marked with the 

whole composition. He is careless in dress, unpretending
in his manners, but his shrewdness and
unbounded humour, almost in spite of himself,
peer out at every turn in conversation. When he
sets out to rehearse one of his favourite fables, all his
humour is at once stirred up, and he yields himself
to the spirit of the story. He is all glee himself, the
hearer cannot for his life avoid being carried along
with him. The wild animals of the woods are
summoned before his audience, they are endowed with
all the cunning and shrewdness of man and before
you are aware of it, you have before your imagination
a perfect drama."
Heli Chatelain, who has collected some of this 
unwritten literature in a volume entitled "Folk 
Tales of Angola," says that those who "think the 
Negro is deficient in philosophical faculties ignore 
their proverbs which both in direction and depth of 
meaning, equal those of any other race."
"At the bottom of patience," says one of these 
proverbs, "there is heaven." "Hold a true friend 
with both hands," says another. "Hope is the pillar 
of the world," and, "He is a heathen who bears 
malice," are others.
Perhaps the Native African, except under 
Mohammedan influences, has been less successful 
in building up and maintaining permanent and lasting 
governments than in other directions, but he has been 

supposed.
Professor Boas, speaking of some Negro Central 
African tribes that have never come under Mohammedan 
influence, says: 
The power of organisation that manifests itself in Negro communities 
is quite striking. Travellers who have visited Central 
Africa tell of extended kingdoms, ruled by monarchs, whose power, 
however, is restricted by a number of advisers. The constitution 
of all such states is, of course, based on the general characteristics 
of the social organisations of the Negro tribes, which, however, 
have become exceedingly complex with the extension of the 
domain of a single tribe over neighbouring peoples.
The Lunda empire, for instance, is a feudal state governed by a 
monarch. It includes a number of subordinate states, the chiefs of 
which are independent in all internal affairs, but who pay tribute 
to the emperor. The chiefs of the more distant parts of the country 
send caravans carrying tribute once a year, while those near by have 
to pay more frequently. The tribute depends upon the character of 
the produce of the country. It consists of ivory, salt, copper, 
slaves, and even, to a certain extent, of European manufactures. 
In case of war the subordinate chiefs have to send contingents to 
the army of the emperor. The succession in each of the subordinate 
states is regulated by local usage. Sons and other relatives of 
the subordinate chiefs are kept at the court of the emperor as a 
means of preventing disintegrations of the empire.
A female dignitary occupies an important position in the government 
of the state. She is considered the mother of the emperor. 
She has a separate court, and certain districts pay tribute to her. 
Both the emperor and female dignitary must be children of one of 
the two head wives of the preceding emperor. The emperor is 
elected by the four highest counsellors of the state, and his election 
must be confirmed by the female dignitary; while her election takes 
place in die same way, and she must be confirmed by the emperor. 
The office of counsellors of the state is hereditary. Their power is 

the emperor and the female dignitary, as described before. Besides
this, there is a nobility, consisting, as it would seem, of the wealthy
inhabitants, who have the privilege of expressing their opinion in
regard to the affairs of the state. This empire is known to have
existed since the end of the sixteenth century, although its extent
and importance have probably undergone many changes. It
would seem that sometimes the boundaries of the state were limited,
and that at other times many tribes were subject to it. In 1880 the
state was about as large as the Middle Atlantic states.
One reason for the instability of the kingdoms 
that have grown up and flourished from time to 
time on the Western Coast is, as Mr. Dowd has 
pointed out, that the forests and rivers cut the 
population into fragments and prevent cooperation.
It is interesting to note that Negro freedmen have 
not only established governments in Haiti in 
America, Liberia in Africa, but from 1630 to 1700 
fugitive slaves maintained the Negro State of 
Palmares in what is now Brazil, against all the other 
slave-holding provinces of that colony. Negro 
slaves, imported from East Africa to become guards 
of palaces and fighting seamen for the Indian princes, 
became so powerful that they carved out states for 
themselves, one or more of which are still ruled by 
Negro princes, as dependencies of the government 
of India.[9]
Of the native states of Central Africa none have 
been more studied, or better known than the 

Winston Churchill, M. P., writes concerning the
country and the people:
The Kingdom of Uganda is a fairy tale. You climb up a 
railway instead of a bean stalk, and at the end there is a wonderful 
new world. The scenery is different, the vegetation is 
different, and, most of all the people are different from anything 
elsewhere to be seen in the whole range of Africa. Instead of 
the breezy uplands we enter a tropical garden: in place of naked 
painted savages clashing their spears and gibbering in chorus to 
their tribal chiefs, a complete and elaborate policy is presented. 
Under a dynastic King, a parliament, and a powerful feudal 
system, an amiable, clothed, polite, and intelligent race dwell 
together in an organised monarchy upon the rich domain between 
the Victoria and Albert Lakes. More than two hundred thousand 
natives are able to read and write. More than one hundred 
thousand have embraced the Christian faith. There is a court, 
there are regents and ministers and nobles, there is a regular 
system of native law and tribunals; there is discipline, there is 
industry, there is culture, there is peace.
This description of conditions in Uganda strikes 
me as the more interesting because this progress has 
been made in a land where the white man cannot 
live. "Every white man," says Mr. Churchill, 
"seems to feel a sense of indefinable depression. 
A cut will not heal, a scratch festers. In the third 
year of residence even a small wound becomes a 
running sore. One day a man feels perfectly well; 
the next, for no apparent cause, he is prostrated 
with malaria, and with malaria of a peculiarly 
persistent kind, turning often in the third or fourth 
attack to blackwater fever. In the small European 

two suicides. Whether, as I have suggested in
East Africa, it be the altitude, or the downward ray
of the Equatorial sun, or the insects, or some more
subtle cause there seems to be a solemn veto placed
upon the white man's permanent residence in these
beautiful abodes."
It has often seemed to me that, in estimating the 
possibilities of the Negro race, one should not overlook 
the extraordinary capacity of the Negro for 
adapting himself, whether in Africa or in America, 
to the conditions in which he finds himself. It is 
this power of fitting himself into, and adapting himself 
to, new conditions, which has enabled him to survive 
under conditions in which other peoples have 
perished. The Indian in the West Indies, in South 
America and North America, the Sandwich Islanders, 
the Australians and the New Zealanders have 
steadily receded before the advance of the white 
civilisation. The Negro is the only primitive people, 
as I have said elsewhere, which has looked the white 
man in the face and lived.
The Natives of South Africa are an illustration of 
the quality I refer to. The changes which the white 
man has made, during the last fifty years in South 
Africa, have brought enormous hardship to the native 
peoples. Against these changes they have frequently 
rebelled, but in the end, as they saw they were facing 
the inevitable, they have sought to adapt themselves 

they have not died out. On the contrary, they have
steadily increased in numbers as the inter-tribal wars
died out.
I remember some years ago meeting a young 
African who had come to Tuskegee as a student from 
the region around Johannesburg, South Africa. He 
had managed to save a considerable sum of money 
at the time of the late Boer war in South Africa, and 
he had made use of that money to come to America 
to get an education. He had not learned, at this 
time, to speak our language fluently, and it was with 
some difficulty that he expressed himself in English. 
I managed to get from him, however, a vivid impression 
of the change that had come over him and his 
people since the white men first invaded their country. 
He had grown up, he said, in the kraal, with no 
thought and no ambition to do otherwise, than his 
father had done before him—to till a little strip of 
land, to tend the cattle, and, as he said, "to play." 
In the simplicity of this life there was no thought and 
no care for the future, no notion that life could ever 
be other than it was. Looking back upon it, this 
seemed one long, unbroken holiday. He very well 
understood how crude and how aimless this savage 
life was likely to seem to people who lived in a higher 
stage of civilisation, but he made no apologies for it. 
He said it was "glorious"; that was his word.
But the white man came, and soon all was changed. 

had long been acquainted with the missionaries and
liked them. But after the discovery of gold and
diamonds the white man came in ever increasing
numbers, bringing with him strange customs and
wonderful machinery.
At the same time came the drought and pestilence 
and a great war. For the first time within his 
memory people began to die of hunger. Many of 
the young men left their villages and went into the 
mines and then wandered away into the cities and 
never came back. The old men were much troubled 
and began to sit long in council considering what was 
to be the future of the people and what was the best 
thing to do.
Out of all this unrest there has grown up among 
the Natives an ardent desire for education. It is 
pathetic to note the earnestness with which, at the 
present time, these people are seeking the white 
man's education in order that they may fit themselves 
and their people for the white man's civilisation. 
And this desire for education, so far as I can learn, 
is not confined to those who live in the settlements 
but it has taken hold, also, of the people living in the 
remote regions, wherever a Christian missionary has 
penetrated.
Some of the African chiefs have sent their sons as 
students to Tuskegee and I have frequently been 
touched by the appeals for assistance in the way of 

and from other sources.[10]
An incident quoted by Archibald Colquhoun in a 
recent book on South African affairs, gives some 
idea of the earnestness of this desire of the Natives 
for education.
A Native family, squatting on a Dutch Africander 
farm, earned between them a small sum weekly for 
rooting up prickly pear, the farmer's pest. Not 
being near any school, they paid the whole sum, 

educated man from the nearest kraal) to act as
tutor to their children, and they subsisted on what
they could glean, or (it is to be feared) steal. When
they were questioned on the subject these people were
perfectly clear as to their motive, which was to give
their children a better chance in the world. "In the
face of such a strong demand," says Mr. Colquhoun,
"it is useless to make any attempt to stop the tide of
progress. If Natives cannot get the education they
demand in South Africa, they can and will go to
America for it."[11]

 "Fanti Customary Laws, a brief introduction to Principles of the Native 
Laws and Customs of the Fanti and Akan Sections of the Gold Coast, with a 
Selection of Cases thereon Decided in the Law Courts," John Mensah Sarbah.
 It [the Vei language] possesses a syllabic alphabet of over two hundred 
characters, invented in 1834 by Doalu Bukerè, a powerful member of the tribe. 
This writing system is even still used in correspondence and for recording 
family events, and in it the inventor wrote a history of his nation and a treatise 
on ethics,—Africa, Elisee Reclus, Vol. III, p. 218.
 As showing the widespread desire for education among these people a report 
of an educational meeting, which I ran across some time ago, struck me as significant. 
As a result of a general invitation 160 natives of note assembled December 28, 1905, 
at Lovedale, the seat of the first important industrial school for Natives in Africa. 
They came from the most populous districts of Cape Colony, from Bechuanaland, 
from the Orange Free State and from Basutoland. There were pastors of all 
denominations, chiefs of tribes sent by their headchiefs, men of influence representing 
no special part of the country, among them two editors of native newspapers.
This meeting was called at the instance of Dr. James Stewart, who for forty 
years had been the director of the Lovedale school. The commission appointed 
after the Boer war to investigate the condition of the natives had recommended, 
after two years investigation, the establishment of a university for blacks. The 
purpose of this meeting was to secure the carrying out of this project. Unfortunately, 
five days before the assembly convened Dr. Stewart died. He did 
not live to see the realisation of his plan, but the meeting was a success. It was 
announced at this meeting that if the Natives would raise $100,000 among their 
own people the Government would give the school an annual grant of $50,000. 
After two days of discussion the proposition was unanimously endorsed by the 
convention.
The report of this meeting makes the following comment upon the 
proceedings:
"A remarkable fact in regard to the action of this convention was the spirit 
of union that reigned. The Natives who had come together from all points of 
the compass, laid wholly aside their tribal jealousies and their bloody quarrels 
of former times. More than that the ordinary barriers which divide the sects 
seemed no longer to exist; the Lutherans voted with the Presbyterians, the 
Anglicans with the Wesleyans and the Congregationalists. Finally the Native 
chiefs put off their dignities and surrendered for the time being their prerogatives 
in order to discuss and to vote in the ranks with their subjects. The blacks who 
had never been able to unite for war, when the whites were killing and robbing 
them of their lands, were all now of one mind and purpose for establishing a 
great center of higher education for all the natives of South Africa."
|  The story of the Negro, | ||