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BIBLIOGRAPHY
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

As the public has not as yet paid very much attention to
Negro History, and has not seen a volume dealing primarily
with the migration of the race in America, one could hardly
expect that there has been compiled a bibliography in this
special field. With the exception of what appears in Still's
and Siebert's works on the Underground Railroad and the
records of the meetings of the Quakers promoting this movement,
there is little helpful material to be found in single
volumes bearing on the antebellum period. Since the Civil
War, however, more has been said and written concerning the
movements of the Negro population. E. H. Botume's First
Days Among the Contrabands
and John Eaton's Grant, Lincoln
and the Freedmen
cover very well the period of rebellion. This
is supplemented by J. C. Knowlton's Contrabands in the University
Quarterly
, Volume XXI, page 307, and by Edward L.
Pierce's The Freedmen at Port Royal in the Atlantic Monthly,
Volume XII, page 291. The exodus of 1879 is treated by J.
B. Runnion in the Atlantic Monthly, Volume XLIV, page 222;
by Frederick Douglass and Richard T. Greener in the American
Journal of Social Science
, Volume XI, page 1; by F. B. Guernsey
in the International Review, Volume VII, page 373; by E.
L. Godkin in the Nation, Volume XXVIII, pages 242 and 386;
and by J. C. Hartzell in the Methodist Quarterly, Volume
XXXIX, page 722. The second volume of George W. Williams's
History of the Negro Race also contains a short chapter
on the exodus of 1879. In Volume XVIII, page 370, of Public
Opinion
there is a discussion of Negro Emigration and Deportation
as advocated by Bishop H. M. Turner and Senator Morgan
of Alabama during the nineties. Professor William O.
Scroggs of Louisiana University has in the Journal of Political
Economy
, Volume XXV, page 1034, an article entitled Interstate
Migration of Negro Population
. Mr. Epstein has published
a helpful pamphlet, The Negro Migrant in Pittsburgh.


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Most of the material for this work, however, was collected from
the various sources mentioned below.

BOOKS OF TRAVEL

Brissot De Warville, J. P. New Travels in the United States
of America: including the Commerce of America with
Europe, particularly with Great Britain and France
. Two
volumes. (London, 1794.) Gives general impressions, few
details.

Buckingham, J. S. America, Historical, Statistical, and Descriptive.
Two volumes. (New York, 1841.)

Eastern and Western States of America. Three volumes.
(London and Paris, 1842.) Contains useful information.

Olmsted, Frederick Law. A Journey in the Seaboard Slave
States, with Remarks on their Economy
. (New York,
1859.)

A Journey in the Back Country. (London, 1860.)

Journeys and Explorations in the Cotton Kingdom. (London,
1861.) Olmsted was a New York farmer. He recorded
a few important facts about the Negroes immediately
before the Civil War.

Woolman, John. Journal of John Woolman, with an Introduction
by John G. Whittier
. (Boston, 1873.) Woolman
traveled so extensively in the colonies that he probably
knew more about the Negroes than any other Quaker of
his time.

LETTERS

Boyce, Stanbury. Letters on the Emigration of the Negroes
to Trinidad
.

Jefferson, Thomas. Letters of Thomas Jefferson to Abbé
Grégoire, M. A. Julien, and Benjamin Bannelcer
. In Jefferson's
Works, Memorial Edition
, xii and xv. He comments
on Negroes' talents.

Madison, James. Letters to Frances Wright. In Madison's
Works
, vol. iii, p. 396. The emancipation of Negroes is
discussed.

May, Samuel Joseph. The Right of the Colored People to
Education
. (Brooklyn, 1883.) A collection of public letters
addressed to Andrew T. Judson, remonstrating on the
unjust procedure relative to Miss Prudence Crandall.


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Mcdonogh, John. "A Letter of John McDonogh on African
Colonization addressed to the Editor of the New Orleans
Commercial Bulletin."
McDonogh was interested in the
betterment of the colored people and did much to promote
their mental development.

BIOGRAPHIES

Birney, William. James G. Birney and His Times. (New
York, 1890.) A sketch of an advocate of Negro uplift.

Bowen, Clarence W. Arthur and Lewis Tappan. A paper
read at the fiftieth anniversary of the New York Anti-Slavery
Society, at the Broadway Tabernacle, New York
City, October 2, 1883. An honorable mention of two
friends of the Negro.

Drew, Benjamin. A North-side View of Slavery. The Refugee:
or the Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada. Related
by themselves, with an Account of the History and
Condition of the Colored Population of Upper Canada
.
(New York and Boston, 1856.)

Frothingham, O. B. Gerritt Smith: A Biography. (New
York, 1878.)

Garrison, Francis and Wendell P. William Lloyd Garrison,
1805–1879. The Story of his Life told by his Children
.
Four volumes. (Boston and New York, 1894.) Includes
a brief account of what he did for the colored people.

Hammond, C. A. Gerritt Smith, The Story of a Noble Man's
Life
. (Geneva, 1900.)

Johnson, Oliver. William Lloyd Garrison and his Times.
(Boston, 1880. New edition, revised and enlarged, Boston,
1881.)

Mott, A. Biographical Sketches and Interesting Anecdotes
of Persons of Color; with a Selection of Pieces of Poetry
.
(New York, 1826.) Some of these sketches show how
ambitious Negroes succeeded in spite of opposition.

Simmons, W. J. Men of Mark; Eminent, Progressive, and
Rising, with an Introductory Sketch of the Author by
Reverend Henry M. Turner
. (Cleveland, Ohio, 1891.) Accounts
for the adverse circumstances under which many
antebellum Negroes made progress.


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AUTOBIOGRAPHIES

Coffin, Levi. Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, reputed President
of the Underground Railroad
. Second edition. (Cincinnati,
1880.) Contains many facts concerning Negroes.

Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick
Douglass, as an American Slave
. Written by himself.
(Boston, 1845.) Gives several cases of secret Negro
movements for their own good.

The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass from 1817 to
1882
. (London, 1882.) Written by himself. With an
Introduction by the Right Honorable John Bright, M.P.
Edited by John Loeb, F.R.G.S., of the Christian Age.
Editor of Uncle Tom's Story of his Life.

HISTORIES

Bancroft, George. History of the United States. Ten
volumes. (Boston, 1857–1864.)

Brackett, Jeffrey R. The Negro in Maryland. Johns Hopkins
University Studies. (Baltimore, 1889.)

Collins, Lewis. Historical Sketches of Kentucky. (Maysville,
Ky., and Cincinnati, Ohio, 1847.)

Dunn, J. P. Indiana; A redemption from, Slavery. (In the
American Commonwealths, vols. XII, Boston and New
York, 1888.)

Evans, W. E. A History of Scioto County together with a
Pioneer Record of Southern Ohio
. (Portsmouth, 1903.)

Farmer, Silas. The History of Detroit and Michigan or the
Metropolis Illustrated
. A chronological encyclopedia of
the past and the present including a full record of territorial
days in Michigan and the annals of Wayne County.
Two volumes. (Detroit, 1899.)

Harris, N. D. The History of Negro Servitude in Illinois and
of the Slavery Agitation in that State, 1719–1864
. (Chicago,
1904.)

Hart, A. B. The American, Nation; A History, etc. Twentyseven
volumes. (New York, 1904–1908.) The volumes
which have a bearing on the subject treated in this monograph
are W. A. Dunning's Reconstruction, F. J. Turner's
Rise of the New West, and A. B. Hart's Slavery and Abolition.



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Hinsdale, B. A. The Old Northwest; with a view of the thirteen
colonies as constituted by the royal charters
. (New
York, 1888.)

Howe, Henry. Historical Collections of Ohio. Contains a
collection of the most interesting facts, traditions, biographical
sketches, anecdotes, etc., relating to its general
and local history with descriptions of its counties, principal
towns and villages. (Cincinnati, 1847.)

Jones, Charles Colcock, jr. History of Georgia. (Boston,
1883.)

McMaster, John B. History of the United States. Six
volumes. (New York, 1900.)

Rhodes, J. F. History of the United States from the Compromise
of 1850 to the Final Restoration of Home Rule in
the South
. (New York and London, Macmillan & Company,
1892–1906.)

Steiner, B. C. History of Slavery in Connecticut. (Johns
Hopkins University Studies, 1893.)

Stuve, Bernard, and Alexander Davidson. A Complete History
of Illinois from 1673 to 178S
. (Springfield, 1874.)

Tremain, Mary M. A. Slavery in the District of Columbia.
(University of Nebraska Seminary Papers, April, 1892.)

History of Brown County, Ohio. (Chicago, 1883.)

ADDRESSES

Garrison, William Lloyd. An Address Delivered before the
Free People of Color in Philadelphia, New York and other
Cities during the Month of June, 1831
. (Boston, 1831.)

Griffin, Edward Dorr. A Plea for Africa. (New York,
1817.) A Sermon preached October 26, 1817, in the First
Presbyterian Church in the City of New York before the
Synod of New York and New Jersey at the Request of the
Board of Directors of the African School established by
the Synod. The aim was to arouse interest in colonization.

REPORTS AND STATISTICS

Special Report of the Commissioner of Education on the Improvement
of Public Schools in the District of Columbia
,
containing M. B. Goodwin's "History of Schools for the


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Colored Population in the District of Columbia." (Washington,
1871.)

Report of the Committee of Representatives of the New York
Yearly Meeting of Friends upon the condition and wants
of the Colored Refugees
, 1862.

Clarke, J. F. Present Condition of the Free Colored People
of the United States
. (New York and Boston, the American
Antislavery Society, 1859.) Published also in the
March number of the Christian Examiner.

Condition of the Free People of Color in Ohio. With interesting
anecdotes
. (Boston, 1839.)

Institute for Colored Youth. (Philadelphia, 1860–1865.) Contains
a list of the officers and students.

Jones, Thomas Jesse. Negro Education: A study of the
private and higher schools for colored people in the United
States. Prepared in cooperation with the Phelps-Stokes
Fund
. In two volumes. (Bureau of Education, Washington,
1917.)

Official Records of the War of Rebellion.

Report of the Condition of the Colored People of Cincinnati,
1835. (Cincinnati, 1835.)

Report of a Committee of the Pennsylvania Society of Abolition
on Present Condition of the Colored People, etc
., 1838.
(Philadelphia, 1938.)

Statistical Inquiry into the Condition of the People of Color of
the City and Districts of Philadelphia
. (Philadelphia,
1849.)

Statistics of the Colored People of Philadelphia in 1859, compiled
by Benj. C. Bacon. (Philadelphia, 1859.)

Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1898. Prepared by
the Bureau of Statistics. (Washington, D. C., 1899.)

Statistical View of the Population of the United States, A
1790–1830. (Published by the Department of State in
1835.)

Trades of the Colored People. (Philadelphia, 1838.)

United States Censuses.

A Brief Statement of the Rise and Progress of the Testimony
of Friends against Slavery and the Slave Trade
. Published
by direction of the Yearly Meeting held in Philadelphia in
the Fourth Month, 1843. Shows the action taken by
various Friends to elevate the Negroes.


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A Collection of the Acts, Deliverances and Testimonies of the
Supreme Judicatory of the Presbyterian Church, from, its
Origin in America to the Present Time
. By Samuel J.
Baird. (Philadelphia, 1856.)

American Convention of Abolition Societies. Minutes of
the Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates from the
Abolition Societies established in different Parts of the
United States
. From 1794–1828.

The Annual Reports of the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery
Societies, presented at New York, May 6, 1847, with the
Addresses and Resolutions
. From 1847–1851.

The Annual Reports of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
From 1834 to 1860.

The Third Annual Report of the Managers of the New England
Anti-Slavery Society presented June 2, 1835
. (Boston,
1835.)

Annual Reports of the Massachusetts (or New England) Anti-Slavery
Society
, 1831–end.

Reports of the National Anti-Slavery Convention, 1833–end.

Reports of the American Colonization Society, 1818–1832.

Report of the New York, Colonization Society, October 1, 1823.
(New York, 1823.)

The Seventh Annual Report of the Colonization Society of the
City of New York
. (New York, 1839.)

Proceedings of the New York State Colonization Society, 1831.
(Albany, 1831.)

The Eighteenth Annual Report of the Colonization Society of
the State of New York
. (New York, 1850.)

Minutes and Proceedings of the First Annual Convention of
the People of Color. Held by Adjournment in the City of
Philadelphia, from the sixth to the eleventh of June, inclusive
,
1831. (Philadelphia, 1831.)

Minutes and Proceedings of the Second Annual Convention for
the Improvement of the Free People of Color in these
United States. Held by Adjournments in the City of
Philadelphia, from the 4th to the 13th of June, inclusive
,
1832. (Philadelphia, 1832.)

Minutes and Proceedings of the Third Annual Convention for
the Improvement of the Free People of Color in these
United States. Held by Adjournments in the City of


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Philadelphia, in 1833. (New York, 1833.) These proceedings
were published also in the New York Commercial
Advertiser
, April 27, 1833.

Minutes and Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Convention for
the Improvement of the Free People of Color in the
United States. Held by Adjournments in the Asbury
Church, New York, from the 2d to the l2th of June, 1834
.
(New York, 1834.)

Proceedings of the Convention of the Colored Freedmen of
Ohio at Cincinnati, January 14, 1852
. (Cincinnati, Ohio,
1852.)

MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS

Adams, Alice Dana. The Neglected Period of Anti-Slavery
in America
. Radcliffe College Monographs No. 14. (Boston
and London, 1908.) Contains some valuable facts
about the Negroes during the first three decades of the
nineteenth century.

Agricola (pseudonym). An Impartial View of the Real State
of the Black Population in the United States
. (Philadelphia,
1824.)

Alexander, A. A History of Colonization on the Western
Continent of Africa
. (Philadelphia, 1846.)

Ames, Mary. From a New England Woman's Diary in 1865.
(Springfield, 1906.)

An Address to the People of North Carolina on the Evils of
Slavery, by the Friends of Liberty and Equality, 1830
.
(Greensborough, 1830.)

An Address to the Presbyterians of Kentucky proposing a Plan
for the Instruction and Emancipation of their Slaves by
a Committee of the Synod of Kentucky
. (Newburyport,
1836.)

Baldwin, Ebenezer. Observations on the Physical and Moral
Qualities of our Colored Population with Remarks on the
Subject of Emancipation and Colonization
. (New Haven,
1834.)

Bassett, J. S. Slavery, and Servitude in the Colony of North
Carolina
. (Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical
and Political Science. Fourteenth Series, iv-v. Baltimore,
1896.)


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Slavery in the State of North Carolina. (Johns Hopkins
University Studies in Historical and Political Science.
Series XVII., Nos. 7–8. Baltimore, 1899.)

Anti-Slavery Leaders of North Carolina. (Johns Hopkins
University Studies in Historical and Political Science.
Series XVI., No. 6. Baltimore, 1898.)

Benezet, Anthony. A Caution to Great Britain and Her
Colonies in a Short Representation of the calamitous State
of the enslaved Negro in the British Dominions
. (Philadelphia,
1794.)

The Case of our Fellow-Creatures, the oppressed Africans,
respectfully recommended to the serious Consideration of
the Legislature of Great Britan, by the People called
Quakers
. (London, 1783.)

Observations on the enslaving, Importing and Purchasing
of Negroes; with some Advice thereon, extracted from the
Epistle of the Yearly-Meeting of the People called Quakers,
held at London in the Year 1748
. (Germantown, 1760.)

The Potent Enemies of America laid open: being some
Account of the baneful Effects attending the Use of distilled
spirituous Liquors, and the Slavery of the Negroes
.
(Philadelphia.)

A Short Account of that Part of Africa, inhabited by the
Negroes. With respect to the Fertility of the Country;
the good Disposition of many of the Natives, and the
Manner by which the Slave Trade is carried on
. (Philadelphia,
1792.)

Short Observations on Slavery, introductory to Some Extracts
from the Writings of the Abbé Raynal, on the Important
Subject
.

Some Historical Account of Guinea, its Situation, Produce,
and the General Disposition of its Inhabitants. With
an Inquiry into the Rise and Progress of the Slave Trade,
its Nature and Lamentable Effects
. (London, 1788.)

Birney, James G. The American Churches, the Bulwarks of
American Slavery, by an American
. (Newburyport, 1842.)

Birney, William. James G. Birney and his Times. The
Genesis of the Republican Party, with, Some Account of
the Abolition Movements in the South before 1828
. (New
York, 1890.)


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Brackett, Jeffeky R. The Negro in Maryland. A Study of
the Institution of Slavery
. (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins
University, 1889.)

Brannagan, Thomas. A Preliminary Essay on the Oppression
of the Exiled Sons of Africa, Consisting of Animadversions
on the Impolicy and Barbarity of the Deleterious
Commerce and Subsequent Slavery of the Human Species
.
(Philadelphia: Printed for the Author by John W. Scott,
1804.)

Brannagan, T. Serious Remonstrances Addressed to the Citizens
of the Northern States and their Representatives,
being an Appeal to their Natural Feelings and Common
Sense; Consisting of Speculations and Animadversions, on
the Recent Revival of the Slave Trade in the American
Republic
. (Philadelphia, 1805.)

Campbell, J. V. Political History of Michigan. (Detroit,
1876.)

Code Noir ou Recueil d'édits, declarations et arrêts concernant
la Discipline et le commerce des esclaves Nègres des isles
francaises de l'Amêrique (in Recueils de réglemens, édits,
déclarations et arrêts, concernant le commerce, l'administration
de la justice et la police des colonies françaises de
l'Amérique, et les engagés avec le Code Noir, et l'addition
audit code
. (Paris, 1745.)

Coffin, Joshua. An Account of Some of the principal Slave
Insurrections and others which have occurred or been
attempted in the United States and elsewhere during the
last two Centuries. With various Remarks. Collected from
various Sources
. (New York, 1860.)

Columbia University Studies in History, Economics and Public
Law
. Edited by the faculty of political science. The
useful volumes of this series for this field are:
W. L. Fleming's Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama,
1905.
W. W. Davis's The Civil War and Reconstruction in
Florida
, 1913.
Clara Mildred Thompson's Reconstruction in Georgia,
Economic, Social, Political
, 1915.
J. G. de R. Hamilton's Reconstruction in North Carolina,
1914.


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C. W. Ramsdell. Reconstruction in Texas, 1910.

Connecticut, Public Acts passed by the General Assembly of.

Cromwell, J. W. The Negro in American History: Men and
Women Eminent in the Evolution of the American of
African Descent
. (Washington, 1914.)

Davidson, A., and Stowe, B. A Complete History of Illinois
from 1673 to 1873
. (Springfield, 1874.) It embraces the
physical features of the country, its early explorations,
aboriginal inhabitants, the French and British, occupation,
the conquest of Virginia, territorial condition and subsequent
events.

Delany, M. R. The Condition, Elevation, Emigration and
Destiny of the Colored People of the United States: politically
considered
. (Philadelphia, 1852.)

Dubois, W. E. B. The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study.
Together with a special report on domestic service by
Isabel Eaton
. (Philadelphia, 1899.)

—Atlanta University Publications. The Negro Common
School
. (Atlanta, 1901.)

The Negro Church. (Atlanta, 1903.)

—and Dill, A. G. The College-Bred Negro American.
(Atlanta, 1910.)

The Negro American Artisan. (Atlanta, 1912.)

de Toqueville, Alexis Charles Henri Maurice Clerel de.
Democracy in America. Translated by Henry Reeve.
Four volumes. (London, 1835, 1840.)

Eaton, John. Grant, Lincoln and the Freedmen: reminiscences
of the Civil War with special reference to the work
for the Contrabands, and the Freedmen of the Mississippi
Valley
. (New York, 1907.)

Epstein. The Negro Migrant in Pittsburgh. (Pittsburgh,
1917.)

Exposition of the Object and Plan of the American Union for
the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race
. (Boston,
1835.)

Fee, John G. Anti-Slavery Manual. (Maysville, 1848.)

Fertig, James Walter. The Secession and Reconstruction of
Tennessee
. (Chicago, 1898.)

Frost, W. G. "Appalachian America." (In vol. i of The
Americana
.) (New York, 1912.)


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Garnett, H. H. The Past and Present Condition and the Destiny
of the Colored Race
. (Troy, 1848.)

Greely, Horace. The American Conflict. A history of the
great rebellion in the United States of America, 1860–64,
its causes, incidents and results: intended to exhibit especially
its moral and political phases, with the drift of
progress of American opinion respecting human slavery
from 1776 to the close of the war for its union. (Chicago,
1864.)

Hammond, M. B. The Cotton Industry: an Essay in American
Economic History
. It deals with the cotton culture and
the cotton Trade. (New York, 1897.)

Hart, A. B. The Southern South. (New York, 1906.)

Henson, Josiah. The Life of Josiah Henson. (Boston,
1849.)

Hershaw, L. M. Peonage in the United States. This is one
of the American Negro Academy Papers. (Washington,
1912.)

Hickok, Charles Thomas. The Negro in Ohio, 1802–1870.
(Cleveland, 1896.)

Hodgkin, Thomas A. Inquiry into the Merits of the American
Colonization Society and Reply to the Charges brought
against it with an Account of the British African Colonization
Society
. (London, 1833.)

Howe, Samuel G. The Refugees from Slavery in Canada
West. Report to the Freedmen's Inquiry Committee
.
(Boston, 1864.)

Hutchins, Thomas. An Historical Narrative and Topographical
Description of Louisiana and West Florida, comprehending
the river Mississippi with its principal Branches
and Settlements and the Rivers Pearl and Pescagoula
.
(Philadelphia, 1784.)

Illinois, Laws of, passed by the General Assembly of.

Indiana, Laws passed by the State of.

Jay, John. The Correspondence and Public Papers of John
Jay. First Chief Justice of the United States and President
of the Continental Congress, Member of the Commission
to negotiate the Treaty of Independence, Envoy
to Great Britain, Governor of New York, etc., 1782–1793
.
(New York and London, 1891.) Edited by Henry P.


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Johnson, Professor of History in the College of the City
of New York.

Jay, William. An Inquiry into the Character and Tendencies
of the American Colonization and American Anti-Slavery
Societies
. Second edition. (New York, 1835.)

Jefferson, Thomas. The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Memorial
Edition. Autobiography, Notes on Virginia, Parliamentary
Mannual, Official Papers, Messages and Addresses,
and other writings Official and Private, etc
.
(Washington, 1903.)

Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political
Science
. H. B. Adams, Editor. (Baltimore, Johns Hopkins
Press.) Among the useful volumes of this series are:
J. R. Ficklen's History of Reconstruction in Louisiana,
1910.
H. J. Eckenrode's The Political History of Virginia
during Reconstruction
, 1904.

Langston, John M. From the Virginia Plantation to the
National Capital; or, The First and Only Negro Representative
in Congress from The Old Dominion
. (Hartford,
1894.)

Locke, M. S. Anti-Slavery in America from the Introduction
of African Slaves to the Prohibition of the Slave Trade,
1619–1808
. Radcliffe College Monographs, No. ii. (Boston,
1901.) A valuable work.

Lynch, John R. The Facts of Reconstruction. (New York,
1913.)

Madison, James. Letters and Other Writings of James Madison
Published by Order of Congress
. Four volumes.
(Philadelphia, 1865.)

May, S. J. Some Recollections of our Anti-Slavery Conflict.

Monroe, James. The Writings of James Monroe, including
a Collection of his public and private Papers and Correspondence
now for the first time printed
. Edited by S.
M. Hamilton. (Boston, 1900.)

Moore, George H. Notes on the History of Slavery in Massachusetts.
(New York, 1866.)

Needles, Edward. Ten Years' Progress or a Comparison of
the State and Condition of the Colored People in the City
of and County of Philadelphia from 1837 to 1847
. (Philadelphia,
1849.)


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New Jersey, Acts of the General Assembly of.

Ohio, Laws of the General Assembly of.

Ovington, M. W. Half-a-Man. (New York, 1911.) Treats
of the Negro in the State of New York. A few pages are
devoted to the progress of the colored people.

Parrish, John. Remarks on the Slavery of the Black People;
Addressed to the Citizens of the United States, particularly
to those who are in legislative or executive Stations,
particularly in the General or State Governments; and also
to such Individuals as hold them in Bondage
. (Philadelphia,
1806.)

Pearson, E. W. Letters from Port Royal, written at the Time
of the Civil War
. (Boston, 1916.)

Pearson, C. C. The Readjuster Movement in Virginia. (New
Haven, 1917.)

Pennsylvania, Laws of the General Assembly of the State of.

Pierce, E. L. The Freedmen of Port Royal, South Carolina,
Official Reports
. (New York, 1863.)

Pike, James S. The Prostrate State: South Carolina under
Negro Government
. (New York, 1874.)

Pittman, Philip. The Present State of European Settlements
on the Mississippi with a geographic description of that
river
. (London, 1770.)

Quillen, Frank U. The Color Line in Ohio. A History of
Race Prejudice in a typical northern State. (Ann. Arbor,
Mich., 1913.)

Reynolds, J. S. Reconstruction in South Carolina. (Columbia,
1905.)

Rhode Island, Acts and Resolves of.

Rice, David. Slavery inconsistent with Justice and Good
Policy: proved by a Speech delivered in the Convention
held at Danville, Kentucky
. (Philadelphia, 1792, and
London, 1793.)

Scherer, J. A. B. Cotton as a World Power. (New York,
1916.) This is a study in the economic interpretation of
History. The contents of this book are a revision of a
series of lectures at Oxford and Cambridge universities in
the Spring of 1914 with the caption on Economic Causes
in the American Civil War.

Siebert, Wilbur H. The Underground Railroad from Slavery


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to Freedom, by W. H. Siebert, Associate Professor of
History in the Ohio State University, with an Introduction
by A. B. Hart. (New York, 1898.)

Starr, Frederick. What shall be done with the people of
color in the United States?
(Albany, 1862.) A discourse
delivered in the First Presbyterian Church of Penn Yan,
New York, November 2, 1862.

Still, William. The Underground Railroad. (Philadelphia,
1872.) This is a record of facts, authentic narratives,
letters and the like, giving the hardships, hair-breadth
escapes and death struggles of the slaves in their efforts
for freedom as related by themselves and others or witnessed
by the author.

The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents, Travels and Explorations
of the Jesuit Missionaries in New France, 1619–
1791. The Original French, Latin, and Italian Texts with
English Translations and Notes illustrated by Portraits,
Maps, and Facsimiles
. Edited by Reuben Gold Thwaites,
Secretary of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.
(Cleveland, 1896.)

Thompson, George. Speech at the Meeting for the Extension
of Negro Apprenticeship
. (London, 1838.)

The Free Church Alliance with Manstealers, Send back
the Money. Great Anti-Slavery Meeting in the City Hall,
Glasgow, containing the Speeches delivered by Messrs.
Wright, Douglass, and Buffum from America, and by
George Thompson of London, with a Summary Account of
a Series of Meetings held in Edinburgh by the above
named Gentlemen
. (Glasgow, 1846.)

Torrey, Jesse, Jr. A Portraiture of Domestic Slavery in the
United States with Reflections on the Practicability of restoring
the Moral Rights of the Slave, without impairing
the legal Privileges of the Possessor, and a Project of a
Colonial Asylum for Free Persons of Color, including
Memoirs of Facts on the Interior Traffic in Slaves and on
Kidnapping, Illustrated with Engravings by Jesse Torrey,
Jr., Physician, Author of a Series of Essays on Morals
and the Diffusion of Knowledge
. (Philadelphia, 1817.)

American Internal Slave Trade; with Reflections on the
project for forming a Colony of Blacks in Africa
. (London,
1822.)


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Turner, E. R. The Negro in Pennsylvania. (Washington,
1911.)

Tyrannical Libertymen: a Discourse upon Negro Slavery in the
United. States, composed at—in New Hampshire: on
the Late Federal Thanksgiving Day
. (Hanover, N. H.,
1795.)

Walker, David. Walker's Appeal in Four Articles, together
with a Preamble to the Colored Citizens of the World, but
in particular and very expressly to those of the United
States of America, Written in Boston, State of Massachusetts,
September 28, 1829
. Second edition. (Boston,
1830.) Walker was a Negro who hoped to arouse his race
to self-assertion.

Ward, Charles. Contrabands. (Salem, 1866.) This suggests
an apprenticeship, under the auspices of the government,
to build the Pacific Railroad.

Washington, B. T. The Story of the Negro. Two volumes.
(New York, 1909.)

Washington, George. The Writings of George Washington,
being his Correspondence, Addresses, Messages, and other
papers, official and private, selected and published from
the original Manuscripts with the Life of the Author,
Notes and Illustrations, by Jared Sparks
. (Boston, 1835.)

Weeks, Stephen B. Southern Quakers and Slavery. A Study
in Institutional History
. (Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins
Press, 1896.)

The Anti-Slavery Sentiment in the South; with Unpublished
Letters from John Stuart Mill and Mrs. Stowe
.
(Southern History Association Publications, Volume ii,
No. 2, Washington, D. C., April, 1898.)

Williams, G. W. A History of the Negro Troops in the War
of the Rebellion, 1861–1865, preceded by a Review of the
military Services of Negroes in ancient and modern Times
.
(New York, 1888.)

History of the Negro Race in the United States from
1619–1880. Negroes as Slaves, as Soldiers, and as Citizens:
together with a preliminary Consideration of the
Unity of the Human Family, an historical Sketch of
Africa and an Account of the Negro Governments of
Sierra Leone and Liberia
. (New York, 1883.)


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Woodson, C. G. The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861.
(New York and London, 1915.) This is a history of the
Education of the Colored People of the United States from
the beginning of slavery to the Civil War.

Woolman, John. The Works of John Woolman. In two
Parts, Part I: A Journal of the Life, Gospel-Labors, and
Christian Experiences of that faithful Minister of Christ,
John Woolman, late of Mount Holly in the Province of
New Jersey
. (London, 1775.)

Same, Part Second. Containing his last Epistle and
other Writings
. (London, 1775.)

Some Considerations on the Keeping of Negroes. Recommended
to the Professors of Christianity of every Denomination
.
(Philadelphia, 1754.)

Considerations on Keeping Negroes; Recommended to the
Professors of Christianity of every Denomination. Part
the Second
. (Philadelphia, 1762.)

Wright, R. R., Jr. The Negro in Pennsylvania. (Philadelphia,
1912.)

MAGAZINES

The African Methodist Episcopal Church Review. The following
articles:
The Negro as an Inventor. By R. R. Wright, vol. ii,
p. 397.
Negro Poets, vol. iv, p. 236.
The Negro in Journalism, vols. vi, p. 309, and xx, p. 137.
p. 137.

The African—Repository; Published by the American Colonization
Society from 1826 to 1832. A very good source for
Negro history both in this country and Liberia. Some of
its most valuable articles are:
Learn Trades or Starve, by Frederick Douglass, vol. xxix,
p. 137. Taken from Frederick Douglass's Paper.
Education of the Colored People, by a highly respectable
gentleman of the South, vol. xxx, pp. 194, 195 and 196.
Elevation of the Colored Race, a memorial circulated in
North Carolina, vol. xxxi, pp. 117 and 118.
A lawyer for Liberia, a sketch of Garrison Draper, vol.
xxxiv, pp. 26 and 27.


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The American Economic Review.
The American Journal of Social Science.
The American Journal of Political Economy.
The American Law Review.
The American Journal of Sociology.
The Atlantic Monthly.
The Colonizationist and Journal of Freedom. The author has
been able to find only the volume which contains the numbers
for the year 1834.
The Christian Examiner.
The Cosmopolitan.
The Crisis. A record of the darker races published by the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Dublin Review.
The Forum.
The Independent.
The Journal of Negro History.
The Maryland Journal of Colonization. Published as the official
organ of the Maryland Colonization Society. Among
its important articles are: The Capacities of the Negro
Race
, vol. iii, p. 367; and The Educational Facilities of
Liberia
, vol. vii, p. 223.
The Nation.
The Non-Slaveholder. Two volumes of this publication are
now found in the Library of Congress.
The Outlook.
Public Opinion.
The Southern Workman. Volume xxxvii contains Dr. R. R.
Wright's valuable dissertation on Negro Rural Communities
in India
.
The Spectator.
The Survey.
The World's Work.

NEWSPAPERS

District of Columbia.
The Daily National Intelligencer.

Louisiana.
The New Orleans Commercial Bulletin.
The New Orleans Times-Picayune.


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Maryland.
The Maryland Journal and Baltimore Advertiser.
The Maryland Gazette.
Dunlop's Maryland Gazette or The Baltimore Advertiser.

Massachusetts.
The Liberator.

Mississippi.
The Vicksburg Daily Commercial.

New York.
The New York Daily Advertiser.
The New York Tribune.
The New York Times.