|
Page |
THE NEGRO QUESTION, |
1 |
The Question— |
|
I. Have Colored Americans in the South the same
Rights as Americans of Foreign Birth, |
1 |
II. Color Discrimination, |
7 |
III. Inconsistencies, |
16 |
The Answer— |
|
I. The Social Basis of Slavery still Exists, |
24 |
II. Enfranchisement a Cause of Apprehension, |
32 |
III. The Freedmen Loyal to Government, |
39 |
IV. Distinction Between Civil and Social Equality, |
43 |
V. Responsibility of Southern White Men, |
47 |
VI. Material Development in the South, |
51 |
NATIONAL AID TO SOUTHERN SCHOOLS, |
59 |
WHAT SHALL THE NEGRO DO? |
66 |
A SIMPLER SOUTHERN QUESTION, |
88 |
WHAT MAKES THE COLOR LINE? |
110 |
THE SOUTHERN STRUGGLE FOR PURE GOVERNMENT, |
116 |
I. A First Necessity, |
116 |
II. Does the Negro Want Pure Government? |
123 |
III. Supposing the Negro Unsuppressed, |
128 |
IV. The Policy of Pure Government First, |
133 |
V. The Industrial New South, |
139 |
VI. The Reign of the One-Party Idea, |
146 |
VII. The Inventions of Despair, |
154 |
VIII. A more Excellent Way, |
162 |