INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION
INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION
Collection number: D-207
Department of Special CollectionsGeneral Library
University of California, Davis
Davis, California
- Department of Special Collections
- General Library
- University of California at Davis
- Davis, CA 95616-5292
- Phone: (530) 752-1621
- Fax: (530) 754-5758
- Email: speccoll@lib.ucdavis.edu
- Processed by:
- Victoria Yturralde
- Date Completed:
- September 1995
- Encoded by:
- Jim Sylva
Box 1
Allen, J.S.
American Negro.
New York: International Pamphlets, 1932.
Allen, James S.
Marshall Plan--recovery or war?
New York: New Century Publishers, 1948.
Allen, James S.
Negro liberation.
New York: International Publishers, 1938.
Allen, James S.
Smash the Scottsboro lynch verdict.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1933.
Allen, Robert L.
Dialectics of Black power.
Boston: New England Free Press, 1968.
AFL-CIO, Industrial Union Department.
Tent City..."Home of the Brave"
Washington, D.C.: Industrial Union Department, AFL-CIO, [196-?].
American Civil Liberties Union.
Testing whether that nation: 41st annual report.
New York: American Civil Liberties Union, 1961.
American Civil Liberties Union.
The stakes grow higher: 44th annual report.
New York: American Civil Liberties Union, 1964.
American National Red Cross.
The final report of the Colored Advisory Commission appointed to cooperate with the American National Red Cross and the President's
Committee on Relief Work in the Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927.
Washington, D.C.: American National Red Cross, 1929.
American Reform Tract and Book Society.
The law and the testimony concerning slavery.
Cincinnati: American Reform Tract and Book Society, [185-].
American Reform Tract and Book Society.
On slavery.
Cincinnati: American Reform Tract and Book Society, [185-].
American Society of African Culture.
The American Negro writer and his roots: selected papers from the First Conference of Negro Writers, March, 1959.
New York: American Society of African Culture, 1960.
American Tract Society.
Cain and Patsy: the Gospel preached to the poor, a story of slave life.
Boston: American Tract Society, 1860.
American Tract Society.
Speeches of Chief Justice Williams, Judge Parsons, and Ex-Governor Ellsworth: delivered in the Center Church, Hartford, Conn.
at the anniversary of the Hartford Branch of the American Tract Society, Jan. 9, 1859.
Hartford, Conn.: E. Geer, 1859.
American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race.
Exposition of the objects and plans of the American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race.
Boston: Light and Horton, 1835.
Ammoun, Charles D.
Study of discrimination in education.
New York: United Nations, 1957.
Aikman, William.
The future of the Colored race in America.
New York: A.D.F. Randolph, 1862.
Alpenfels, Ethel J.
Sense and nonsense about race.
New York: Friendship Press, 1946.
Ambroise, Fernand.
Le General Magloire Ambroise: a-t-il ete tue ou s'est-il suicide?
Port-Au-Prince, Haiti: Imprimerie Nemours Telhomme, 1937.
American Anti-Slavery Society.
Slavery and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1859.
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
Relation of the "American Board" to slavery.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [186-].
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.
Report of the Committee on Anti-Slavery Memorials.
Boston: T.R. Marvin, 1845.
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Down where the need is greatest: a record in the field of Negro education.
New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [193-?].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
The rebirth of an ancient race.
New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [193-?].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Report from May 1, 1938 to May 31, 1940.
New York: Church Missions House, [194-].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Annual report for 1929.
New York: Church Missions House, [1930?].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Report for 1933.
New York: Church Missions House, [1934?].
Alston, Christopher C.
Henry Ford and the Negro people.
Washington, D.C.: National Negro Congress, 1940.
Note
Abram, Morris B., and Alexander F. Miller.
How to stop violence! Intimidation! in your community.
Atlanta: Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1949.
African and Afro-American Cultural Exhibit Association.
Glimpse into blackness.
El Cerrito, Calif.: Artline Printing, [197-?].
African Institution.
Foreign slave trade. Abstract of the information recently laid on the table of the House of Commons on the subject of the
slave trade.
London: Ellerton and Henderson, 1821.
African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Junior manual of the Allen C.E. League of the African M.E. Church for the Officers and Committees.
Nashville: Allen C.E. League, 1925.
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.
Minutes of the 57th annual session of the New Jersey Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.
[Charlotte, N.C.]: A.M.E. Zion Publishing House, [1930].
Allen, George.
Report on slavery read to the Worcester Central Association, March 2, 1847.
Boston: Wm. Crosby & H.P. Nichols, 1847.
Leys, John K., et. al.
Along the darkies' narrow way.
[New Jersey]: [s.n.], [18--].
American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society.
The Fugitive Slave Bill: its history and unconstitutionality; with an account of the seizure and enslavement of James Hamlet,
and his subsequent restoration to liberty.
New York: W. Harned, 1850.
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Negro education in wartime.
New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [1942?].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Our Church Industrial High Schools for Negroes.
New York: Church Missions House, [1922?].
American Church Institute for Negroes.
Report from January 1, 1936 to May 1, 1938.
New York: Church Missions House, [1938?].
Ancient United Order of Sons and Daughters Brothers and Sisters of Moses.
Regulations for conducting business, and form of initiation of the first or white degree of the A.U.O. of S. and D.B. and
S. of Moses.
Baltimore: Guide Printing Co., 1910.
Anderson, Charles.
The cause of the war: who brought it on, and for what purpose?
New York: Wm. Bryant & Co., 1863.
Andrew, John A.
Speeches of John A. Andrew at Hingham and Boston, together with his testimony before the Harper's Ferry Committee of the Senate,
in relation to John Brown.
[Boston?]: Republican State Committee, [1860?].
Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society.
Slavery in Europe: a letter to neutral governments from the Anti-Slavery Society.
London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1917.
Note
[May, Samuel].
The Fugitive Slave Law, and its victims.
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1861.
Whipple, Charles K.
Relations of anti-slavery to religion.
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, [185-?].
Bowditch, William I.
The United States Constitution.
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, [1855].
Antoine, Yves.
La Veillee.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti: Impremerie Serge L. Gaston, [1964?].
Appleton, Nathan, and John G. Palfrey.
Correspondence between Nathan Appleton and John G. Palfrey intended as a supplement to Mr. Palfrey's pamphlet on the slave
power.
Boston: Eastburn's Press, 1846.
Appleton, Nathan.
Letter to the Hon. Wm. C. Rives, of Virginia, on slavery and the Union.
Boston: Eastburn's Press, 1860.
Aptheker, Herbert.
The Negro in the abolitionist movement.
New York: International Publishers, 1941.
Aptheker, Herbert.
The Negro in the American Revolution.
New York: International Publishers, 1940.
Aptheker, Herbert.
America's racist laws.
New York: Masses & Mainstream, 1952.
Aptheker, Herbert.
The labor movement in the South during slavery.
New York: International Publishers, [1954?].
Aptheker, Herbert.
"Literacy, the Negro and World War II." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro Education.[Fall 1946].
Aptheker, Herbert.
The Negro in the Civil War.
New York: International Publishers, 1938.
Payne, Buckner H. [Ariel].
The Negro: what is his ethnological status?
2d ed.
Cincinnati: Published for the Proprietor, 1867.
Note
Armstrong, Samuel Chapman.
Armstrong's ideas on education for life.
Hampton, Va.: Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, 1926.
Aptheker, Herbert.
The Negro today.
New York: Marzani & Munsell, 1962.
Aptheker, Herbert.
"The Negro in the Union Navy." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro History 32:2.[April 1947].
Arnett, Benjamin William.
The Black laws: speech of Hon. B. W. Arnett, of Greene County, in the Ohio House of Representatives, March 10, 1886.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [1886].
Ashland Place Y.M.C.A.
Fortieth Anniversary Celebration.
Brooklyn: Brooklyn Academy of Music, 1943.
Montagu, Ashley.
Race and other kindred delusions.
New York: Equality Magazine, [19--].
Associated Charities of Savannah.
Fourth Annual Report of the Associated Charities of Savannah, Georgia.
Savannah: Office City Hall, [1914].
Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Inc.
Bibliographical suggestions for the study of Negro history.
Washington, D.C.: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Inc., [19--].
Fulchon, Celestine T.
Negro in sports.
Philadelphia: Association for Study of Negro Life and History, [1941].
Augustus, Earl, et al.
Gambage.
Trinidad, West Indies: University of the West Indies, 1966.
Baird, Robert.
Progress and prospects of Christianity in the United States of America, with remarks on the subject of slavery in America,
and on the intercourse between British and American churches.
London: Partridge & Oakey, 1851.
Baker, James Loring.
Slavery.
Philadelphia: John A. Norton, 1860.
Baker, Thomas Nelson.
"The Negro woman." Reprinted from
Christian Recorder.[18--].
Baker, J.N.
"Alabama's health program for the Negro." Reprinted from
The Journal of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama.[July 1940].
[Baldwin, John Denison].
Mr. Baldwin of Massachusetts, in reply to Hon. James Brooks, of New York, on the Negro race.
Washington, D.C.: Union Republican Congressional Committee, [1868?].
Balfour, Errol, et al.
Racism and Black power.
Port-of-Spain: Workers Educational Association, [19--].
Regional Council of Ministers.
Draft federal scheme as amended at ninth meeting.
Barbados: Government Printing Office, 1964.
Barstow, Benjamin.
Speech of Benjamin Barstow, of Salem, on the abolition propensities of Caleb Cushing.
Boston: Office of the National Democrat, 1853.
Bassett, Theodore R.
Why the Negro people should vote Communist.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, [1940?].
Bauman, Arthur.
Artie cuts out.
New York: Jaguar Press, 1953.
Baxter, Daniel Minort.
Richard Allen from a slave boy to the First Bishop of African Methodist Episcopal Church, a drama in four acts.
Philadelphia: A.M.E. Book Concern, 1934.
Baxter, Daniel Minort.
Has the Negro's freedom paid?
Philadelphia: A.M.E. Book Concern, 1925.
Note
Bayard, James A.
Speech of Hon. James A. Bayard, of Delaware, in the Senate of the U.S., March 22, 1858, on the bill for the admission of Kansas
into the Federal Union under the Lecompton Constitution.
[S.l.]: [Polkinhorn's Steam Printing], [1858].
Carmichael, Stokely, et al.
Black power dokumentation: Stokely Carmichael, Rap Brown, Malcolm X.
Berlin: Oberbaumpresse, [196-?].
Behind the Harlem riots. New York: Spartacist, [1964].
Bemis, George.
Hasty recognition of rebel belligerency and our right to complain of it.
Boston: A. Williams & Co., 1865.
Benedict, Joseph.
Speech of Hon. J. Benedict, delivered in the assembly, February 19, 1851, on the Compromise Resolutions, offered by Mr. Varnum
of New York.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [1851].
Bennett, Lerone.
"Tea and sympathy: liberals and other white hopes." In
The Negro mood.New York: Ballantine, 1964.
Berrien, John MacPherson.
Speech of Mr. Berrien, of Georgia, on the Regiment Bill.
Washington: J.T. Towers, 1848.
Berry, Henry.
The speech of Henry Berry (of Jefferson) in the House of Delegates of Virginia, on the abolition of slavery.
[Richmond]: [s.n.], [1832].
Newman, Louis C. [Biblicus].
The Bible view of slavery reconsidered: a letter to the Right Rev. Bishop Hopkins.
2d ed.
Philadelphia: H.B. Ashmead, 1863.
Berry, A.W., et al.
The road to liberation for the Negro people.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1937.
Bethune, Mary McLeod.
Address delivered by Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune at a Stop Hitler Rally in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, Oct. 27.
[New York]: [s.n.], [194-].
Bettelheim, Bruno.
Overcoming prejudice.
Chicago: Science Research Associates, 1953.
Bigler, William.
Speech of Hon. Wm. Bigler, of Pennsylvania, on Kansas affairs: delivered in the Senate, December 21, 1857.
[Washington]: [s.n.], [1857?].
Bishop Tuttle School.
Bulletin, 1939-1940.
Raleigh, N.C.: Bishop Tuttle School, [1940].
Analavage, Robert.
Black and white divided: Laurel strike is broken.
Boston: New England Free Press, [196-].
Blair, Montgomery.
Speeches of Hon. Montgomery Blair.
[S.l.]: H. Polkinhorn & Son, [1865].
Ashmun, George.
Speech of Mr. Ashmun, of Massachusetts, upon the President's message upon the Texas boundary and the bill for its settlement,
in the House of Representatives, August 14, 1850.
Washington: Gideon & Co., 1850.
Black fire 3. San Francisco: San Francisco State College, Black Student Union, 1970.
Blake, Harrison G.
Equality of rights in the territories: speech of Harrison G. Blake, of Ohio.
[Washington?]: Scammell & Co., 1860.
Blind Tom: The great Negro pianist. [S.l.]: [s.n.], [186-].
Blose, David T.
Statistics of the Negro race, 1927-1928.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1931.
Blose, David T., and Ambrose Caliver.
Statistics of the education of Negroes 1929-30 and 1931-32.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1936.
Blose, David T., and Ambrose Caliver.
Statistics of the education of Negroes 1933-34 and 1935-36.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1939.
Boardman, Helen, and Martha Gruening.
Who is the N.A.A.C.P.?
New York: Academy Press, 1935.
Bohannan, William E.
A letter to American Negroes.
New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1948.
Bolsover, Phil.
No colour bar for Britain.
London: Communist Party, 1955.
Bolte, Charles G., and Louis Harris.
Our Negro veterans.
[New York]: Public Affairs Committee, 1947.
Boone, Theodore S.
Some Negro Baptist remarkables of Georgia.
Atlanta: National Baptist Convestion, [1946].
Borneman, Ernest.
A critic looks at jazz.
London: Jazz Music Books, 1946.
Bousfield, M.O.
"The Negro home and the health education program." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro Education.[July 1937].
Boutelle, Paul, et al.
The Black uprisings.
New York: Socialist Workers Party, 1967.
Boutelle, Paul.
The case for a Black Party.
New York: Socialist Workers Party, 1968.
Note
Boutelle, Paul, et al.
Murder in Memphis: Martin Luther King and the future of the Black liberation struggle.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
Boutwell, George S.
Emancipation: its justice, expediency and necessity, as the means of securing a speedy and permanent peace.
Boston: Wright & Potter, [1861].
Boutwell, George S., et al.
Remarks of Hons. G.S. Boutwell, B.F. Butler, and Thomas Williams on the President's veto of the Reconstruction Bill; delivered
in the House of Representatives, July 19, 1867.
Washington, [D.C.]: Congressional Globe Office, 1867.
Boutwell, George S.
Reconstruction, its true basis: speech of Hon. George S. Boutwell at Weymouth, Mass., July 4, 1865.
Boston: Wright & Potter, 1865.
Black Panther Party.
Hands off Aaron Dixon.
Seattle: Aaron Dixon Defense Fund, 1968.
Box 2
Boyer, Richard Owen.
Hold high the torch!
New York: New Century Publishers, 1951.
Boyer, Richard Owen.
Pettis Perry: the story of a working class leader.
New York: Self Defense Committee of the 17 Smith Act Victims, 1952.
Braden, Anne.
House Un-American Activities Committee: bulwark of segregation.
Los Angeles: National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee, [1964?].
Bradley, Hugh.
Next steps in the struggle for Negro freedom.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1953.
Bragg, George Freeman.
Virginians and church work among the colored race.
Baltimore: G.F. Bragg, 1937.
Breitman, George, and Herman Porter.
The assassination of Malcolm X.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1969.
Breitman, George.
Jim Crow murder of Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. Moore.
New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1952.
Breitman, George.
How a minority can change society: the real potential of the Afro-American struggle.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
Breitman, George.
Black nationalism and socialism.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1969.
Brenner, Anita, and S.S. Winthrop.
Tampa's reign of terror.
New York: International Labor Defense, [193-].
British Guiana. London: L.R.D. Publications, Ltd., 1953.
Not just peanuts: the story of Britain's great agriculture experiment in East Africa. New York: British Information Services, 1948.
Bronx Conference for Racial and Religious Unity.
The Bronx speaks out for racial and religious unity.
Bronx, N.Y.: Bronx Conference for Racial and Religious Unity, [194-].
Brooks, Viola M.
Freedom schools.
Los Angeles: Operation Education, Operation Bootstrap, 1968.
Browder, Earl.
The Communist Party and the emancipation of the Negro people.
New York: Communist Party, 1934.
Brower, Leon.
"Negroes during the depression in Kanawha County, West Virginia." Reprinted from
The Social Service Review 10:4.[December 1936].
Brown, Earl Louis, and George R. Leighton.
The Negro and the war.
New York: Public Affairs Committee, Inc., 1942.
Brown, Earl Louis.
Why race riots? Lessons from Detroit.
New York: Public Affairs Committee, Inc., 1944.
Brown, Jean Collier.
The Negro woman worker.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1938.
Note
John Brown Memorial Association.
John Brown in bronze.
Lake Placid, N.Y.: John Brown Memorial Association, 1935.
Brown, Lloyd L.
Stand up for freedom! The Negro people vs. the Smith Act.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1952.
Browne, Robert S., and Robert Vernon.
Should the U.S. be partitioned into two separate and independent nations--one a homeland for white Americans and the other
a homeland for black Americans?
New York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
Miss Martha Browlow; or, the heroine of Tennessee. [S.l.]: [s.n.], [18--].
Bryant, Joseph G.
Stepping back.
Philadelphia: A.M.E. Book Concern, [19--].
Burma, John H.
How to understand the Negro problem.
Girard, Kans.: Haldeman-Julius Publications, 1943.
Burnham, Louis.
Behind the lynching of Emmet Louis Till.
New York: Freedom Associates, Inc., 1955.
Bush, Olivia Ward.
Memories of Calvary.
Boston: A.M.E. Book Concern, [18--?].
Bushnell, Horace.
A discourse on the slavery question.
Hartford: Case, Tiffany & Co., 1839.
Busia, K.A.
The African consciousness.
New York: American-African Affairs Association, 1968.
Butler, D.E.
Pulpit, pew, public.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], 1919.
Butler, Frank.
Randolph Turpin, Sugar Ray Robinson: their story in pictures.
England: Jarrold & Sons, Ltd., [195-].
Cadbury, Henry J.
"Negro membership in the Society of Friends." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro History 21:2.[April 1936].
Caliver, Ambrose.
Sources of instructional materials on Negroes.
Washington, D.C.: National Education Association of the United States, 1946.
Caliver, Ambrose.
Fifty years of progress in public education.
Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Courier, 1950.
Caliver, Ambrose.
Bibliography on education of the Negro: comprising publications from January, 1928 to December, 1930.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1931.
Callender, David M.
Anti-I.S.A. Struggle.
Port-of-Spain: Workers Publications, [1969?].
Carmichael, Stokely, and Charles V. Hamilton.
"America's racial crisis." Excerpts from
Black power: the politics of liberation in America.New York: Random House, 1967.
Carmichael, Stokely.
"What we want." In
New York Review of Books.[196-?].
Carter, Elmer A.
"Practical considerations of anti-discrimination legislation: experience under the New York law against discrimination." Reprinted from
Cornell Law Quarterly 40:1.[Fall 1954].
Carter, Elmer A.
"The New York Commission succeeds." Reprinted from
Interracial Review.[November 1947].
Carver, George W.
The Farmer's Almanac.
2d ed., revised.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Institute, 1940.
Carver, George W.
Can live stock be raised profitably in Alabama?
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, 1936.
Carver, George W.
The pickling and curing of meat in hot weather.
2d ed.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, 1925.
Carver, George W.
The raising of hogs.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, 1935.
Latham, R.O.
Paints or peanuts?
London: Edinburgh House Press, 1949.
Carver, George W.
How to grow the peanut and 105 ways of preparing it for human consumption.
8th ed.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Institute, 1942.
Carver, George W.
Some ornamental plants of Macon County, Alabama.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, 1909.
Casimir, J.R. Ralph.
Dominica.
Roseau, Dominica, British West Indies: J.R.R. Casimir, 1968.
Casimir, J.R. Ralph.
The Negro speaks.
Roseau, Dominica, British West Indies: J.R.R. Casimir, 1969.
Casimir, J.R. Ralph.
A little kiss.
Roseau, Dominica, British West Indies: J.R.R. Casimir, 1968.
Casimir, J.R. Ralph.
Africa arise.
Roseau, Dominica, British West Indies: J.R.R. Casimir, 1967.
Cayton, Horace R.
"Negro housing in Chicago."
Social Action 6:4.
[April 1940].
Channing, William E.
The duty of the free states, or remarks suggested by the case of the Creole.
Boston: William Crosby & Co., 1842.
An Abolitionist.
Extracts from remarks on Dr. Channing's Slavery.
Boston: D.K. Hitchcock, 1836.
Charles, Bertram.
The end of the affair.
Georgetown, Guyana: Related Arts Group, [1968?].
Cheever, Henry T.
A tract for the times, on the question, is it right to withhold fellowship from churches or from individuals that tolerate
or practise slavery?
New York: John A. Gray, 1859.
Clark, Daniel.
Speech of Hon. Daniel Clark, of New Hampshire, on the proposed amendment of the Constitution, forever prohibiting slavery
in the United States, and all places under their jurisdiction.
[Washington]: [L. Towers & Co.], [1864?].
Clay, Henry.
Speech of the Hon. Henry Clay, of Kentucky, on presenting his resolutions on the subject of slavery.
New York: Stringer & Townsend, 1850.
Clay, Henry.
Speech of Mr. Clay, of Kentucky, in support of his propositions to compromise on the slavery question.
[Washington]: Towers, 1850.
Claege, Albert, and George Breitman.
Myths about Malcolm X.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
The Coalition of the Democracy and the Abolitionists in opposition to the administration of Gen. Taylor. [S.l.]: [S.n.], [185-].
Cobb, W. Montague.
Medical care and the plight of the Negro.
New York: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1947.
Colfax, Schuyler.
The "laws" of Kansas: speech of Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana, in the House of Representatives, June 21, 1856.
Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, 1856.
Colman, Louis.
Night riders in Gallup.
New York: International Labor Defense, 1935.
Colvig, Richard.
Black music: a checklist of books.
Oakland, Calif.: Oakland Public Library, 1969.
Comas, Juan.
Les mythes raciaux.
Paris: Unesco, 1951.
Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor.
The woman next door: a story of unequal justice.
New York: Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, [193-?].
Committee for GI Rights.
Kangaroo court-martial.
New York: Committee for GI Rights, 1969.
Committee of Editors and Writers of the South.
Voting restrictions in the 13 southern states.
[Atlanta]: Committee of Editors and Writers of the South, [194-].
Communist Party. National Campaign Committee.
Communist election platform, adopted by the National Nominating Convention, Chicago, May 28-29, 1932.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1932.
Communist Party.
Race hatred on trial.
New York: [Workers Library Publishers], 1948.
Communist Party. National Education Department.
The struggle against white chauvinism.
New York: Communist Party, 1949.
Communist Party. National Committee.
Theoretical aspects of the Negro question in the United States.
New York: Communist Party., [1959].
Community Relations Service.
The people take the lead, a record of progress in civil rights, 1947 to 1951.
New York: Community Relations Service, [195-].
Conference on Education and Race Relations.
America's tenth man, a brief survey of the Negro's part in American history.
Atlanta: Conference on Education and Race Relations, 1937.
Note
Woodbey, George W.
Why the Negro should vote the Socialist ticket.
Chicago: National Office of the Socialist Party, [19--].
United States. District Court of Tennessee.
Report of Grand Jury in the matter of the racial disturbance at Colombia, Tennessee.
[Tennessee]: [s.n.], [1946].
Committee for the Defense of Civil Rights.
Tampa--tar and terror.
New York: Committee for the Defense of Civil Rights in Tampa, [193-].
CIO Committee to Abolish Racial Discrimination.
Working and fighting together.
Washington, D.C.: Congress of Industrial Organizations, 1943.
Conrad, Earl.
Harriet Tubman: Negro soldier and abolitionist.
New York: International Publishers, 1942.
Conrad, Earl, and Eugene Gordon.
Equal justice under law.
New York: Committee for Equal Justice for Mrs. Recy Taylor, [194-].
Cooper, Peter.
The death of slavery: letter from Peter Cooper to Governor Seymour.
New York: Loyal Publication Society, 1863.
Corwin, Thomas.
Speech of Hon. Thomas Corwin, of Ohio, in the House of Representatives, Jan. 23 and 24, 1860.
Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, 1860.
Council for Democracy.
The Negro in America: how we treat him and how we should.
New York: Council for Democracy, 1945.
Council for Social Action of the Congregational and Christian Churches.
Towards a new America.
New York: Council for Social Action of the Congregational and Christian Churches., [193-?].
Cowley, Charles.
The romance of history in "The Black County" and the romance of war in the career of Gen. Robert Smalls, "The hero of the
planter."
Lowell, Mass.: [s.n.], 1882.
Creger, Ralph, and Carl Creeger.
This is what we found.
New York: L. Stuart, 1960.
Crockett, George W.
Freedom is everybody's job!
New York: National Non-Partisan Committee to Defend the Rights of the 12 Communist Leaders, [1949?].
Crosswaith, Frank R.
The Negro and socialism.
Chicago: Socialist Party of America, [1929?].
Note
Crosswaith, Frank R., and Alfred Baker Lewis.
True freedon for Negro and white labor.
New York: Negro Labor News Service, [1936?].
Cruse, Harold, et al.
Marxism and the Negro struggle.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
Current, Gloster B.
"Martyr for a cause." Reprinted from
The Crisis.[February 1952].
Damon, Anna.
Victory: decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Angelo Herndon, April 1937.
New York: New York State International Labor Defense, [1937].
Darragh, John.
Colour and conscience: a study of race relations and colour prejudice in Birmingham.
Great Britain: [s.n.], 1957.
Davis, Benjamin J.
In defense of Negro rights.
New York: Communist Party, 1950.
Davis, Benjamin J.
Must Negro-Americans wait another hundred years for freedom?
New York: New Century Publishers, 1963.
Davis, Benjamin J.
The Negro people on the march.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1956.
Davis, Benjamin J.
The path of Negro liberation.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1947.
Davis, Benjamin J.
Upsurge in the south.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1960.
Davis, Benjamin J.
Why I am a communist.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1947.
Davis, Ben Jr.
James W. Ford: what he is and what he stands for.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1936.
Davis, Ben Jr.
The Negro people and the Communist Party.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1943.
Davis, Charles H., Jr.
Black nationalism and the Nation of Islam. Parts I-IV.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962.
Davis, John A.
How management can integrate Negroes in war industries.
[Albany?]: New York State War Council, 1942.
Note
Davis, Michael M.
"Problems of health service for Negroes." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro Education.[July 1937].
Davis, Mitchell.
One hundred choice quotations by prominent men and women of the Negro race.
Washington, D.C.: M. Davis, 1917.
Davis, Benjamin J.
On the struggle for peace and freedom.
New York: Jefferson School of Social Science, 1956.
Dean, Elwood.
The story of the Trenton Six.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1949.
Deane, Charles.
The connection of Massachusetts with slavery and the slave-trade.
Worchester, Mass.: Charles Hamilton, 1886.
Deginga.
What does it mean to be black?
Detroit: Committee for Political Development, [197-?].
Deginga.
What is freedom? Who is the enemy?
Detroit: Committee for Political Development, [197-?].
Deming, D.D.
Anti-spoonerism; or, the reactionary forces of the Negro.
New York: Ross & Tousey, 1860.
Council for Democracy.
The Negro and defense: a test of democracy.
New York: Council for Democracy, 1941.
Democratic Labour Party.
For a new Trinidad and Tobago: Democratic Labour Party Manifesto 3, "Agriculture."
[S.l.]: Rahaman Printers, Ltd., [196-?].
Democratic Labour Party.
For a new Trinidad and Tobago: Democratic Labour Party Manifesto 4, "Co-operatives."
[S.l.]: Rahaman Printers, Ltd., [196-?].
Democratic League.
The slaveholder's conspiracy.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [186-?].
Denton, Mrs. Oscar.
Mammy Crittie and Baby Suzon.
New York: E.S. Werner, 1896.
Donnell, E.J.
Slavery and "protection."
New York: E.J. Donnell, 1884.
Note
Douglass, Frederick.
The Negro people in a democratic war.
New York: Workers Bookshop, [19--].
Douglass, Frederick.
Negroes and the national war effort.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1942.
Douglass, Frederick.
Oration delivered by Frederick Douglass at the unveiling of the Freedmen's Monument in memory of Abraham Lincoln.
New York: Pathway Press, 1940.
Dryver, Edward R.
Should the Negro fight for America?
Buffalo, N.Y.: E.R. Dryver, [19--].
DuBois, W.E.B., and Gus Hall.
"On this first day of October..." Dr. W.E.B. DuBois' application to join the Communist Party and Gus Hall's reply.
New York: Communist Party, [196-].
DuBois, W.E.B.
I take my stand for peace.
New York: Masses & Mainstream, 1951.
DuBois, W.E.B.
Peace is dangerous.
New York: National Guardian, [1951].
Dunlop, John.
Organic sins: or, the iniquity of licensed injustice.
Edinburgh: William Oliphant & Sons, 1846.
Dewey, Donald.
Four studies of Negro employment in the upper South.
Washington, D.C.: National Planning Association, 1953.
Embree, Edwin R.
Julius Rosenwald Fund: review for the two-year period, 1938-1940.
Chicago: Julius Rosenwald Fund, 1940.
Box 3
Etheridge, Emerson.
Speech of Emerson Etheridge of Tennesee, on the revival of the Africa slave-trade, and the President's message, delivered
in the House of Representatives of the United States, Feb. 21, 1857.
Washington, D.C.: [s.n.], 1857.
Belisle, John, and George Novack.
Black slavery and capitalism; and, The rise and fall of the cotton kingdom, the ultimate stage of chattel slavery in the South.
New York: Socialist Workers Party, 1968.
Glenton, Mary V.
Story of a hospital.
Hartford: Church Missions Publishing Co., 1937.
Goldner, Sanford.
The Jewish people and the fight for Negro rights.
Los Angeles: Committee for Negro-Jewish Relations, 1953.
Hugh Gordon Book Store.
Black freedom is your responsibility!
Los Angeles: [s.n.], [196-?].
Govern, Rena Greenlee.
Democracy's task.
[S.l.]: R.G. Govern, 1945.
Granger, Lester B., and T. Arnold Hill.
Occupational opportunities for Negroes.
New York: National Urban League, 1937.
Green, James J.
Wendell Phillips.
New York: International Publishers, 1943.
Garrett, Henry E.
How classroom desegregation will work.
Richmond: Patrick Henry Press, [196-].
Georges, Guy D.
Poeme d'amour pour un amour inconnu.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti: S.L. Gaston, 1967.
Georges, Guy D.
L'immense profondeur.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti: S.L. Gaston, 1965.
Georgia Committee on Interracial Cooperation.
"An astounding situation." Reprinted from
The Southern Frontier.[January 1940].
Gilligan, Francis.
Negro workers in free America.
New York: Paulist Press, 1939.
Gilmer, John A.
State of the Union: speech of Hon. John A. Gilmer, of North Carolina, delivered in the House of Representatives, Jan. 26,
1861.
Washington, D.C.: H. Polkinhorn, 1861.
Giddings, Joshua Reed.
Speech of Mr. Giddings, of Ohio, on his motion to reconsider the vote taken upon the final passage of the "Bill for the relief
of the owners of slaves lost from on board the Comet and Encomium", House of Representatives, Feb. 13, 1843.
Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, 1843.
Ford, James W.
The Negro people and the new world situation.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1941.
Ford, James W.
Imperialism destroys the people of Africa.
New York: Communist Party., [193-].
Ford, James W.
The right to revolution for the Negro people.
New York: Communist Party, [193-].
Giddings, Joshua Reed.
Baltimore platforms--slavery question: speech of Hon. Joshua R. Giddings of Ohio, in the House of Representatives, June 23,
1852.
New York: Buell & Blanchard, [1852].
Filley, Jane, and Therese Mitchell.
Consider the laundry workers.
New York: League of Women Shoppers, Inc., 1937.
Ford, James W.
Hunger and terror in Harlem: the causes and the remedies for the March 19th outbreak in Harlem.
New York: Communist Party, [1935].
Ford, James W.
Economic struggle of Negro workers.
New York: Provisional International Trade Union, Committee of Negro Workers, 1930.
Ford, James W.
Anti-semitism and the struggle for democracy.
New York: National Council of Jewish Communists, [1938].
Fisher, Lloyd.
The problem of violence: observations on race conflict in Los Angeles.
[San Francisco]: National Council on Race Relations, [194-].
Finch, Amanda.
Back trail: a novella of love in the south.
New York: William-Frederick Press, 1951.
Friedel, L.M.
The Bible and Negro spirituals.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], 1947.
Ford, James W., et al.
Communists in the struggle for Negro rights.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1945.
Ford, James W.
The Communists and the struggle for Negro liberation.
New York: Communist Party, [193-].
Ford, James W.
Negro's struggle against imperialism.
New York: Provisional International Trade Union, Committee of Negro Workers, 1930.
Foster, William Z., and James W. Ford.
Foster and Ford for food and freedom.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1932.
Forman, James.
Control, conflict, and change: the underlying concepts of the Black Manifesto.
Detroit: Black Star, 1970.
Ford, James W.
Win progress for Harlem.
New York: Communist Party, [1939?].
Ford, James W.
The war and the Negro people.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1942.
Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America.
Practice brotherhood now!
New York: Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America., 1948.
National Negro Congress.
Fight for Negro rights! Official Program, Feb. 14, 15, 16, 17, 1936, Chicago.
[S.l.]: Stern Printing Co., 1936.
Felps, Jettie.
Our land and homes.
Burnet, Tex.: [S.n.], [194-?].
Negro Americans take the lead: a statement on the crisis in American civilization. Detroit: Facing Reality Publishing Committee, 1964.
Note
Hancock.
A letter to the Hon. Samuel A. Eliot, representative in Congress from the city of Boston, in reply to his apology for voting
for the Fugitive Slave Bill.
Boston: William Crosby & H.P. Nichols, 1851.
Harap, Louis, and L.D. Reddick.
Should Negroes and Jews unite?
[S.l.]: Negro Publication Society, 1943.
Harding, Philip M.
Harlem interior: three poems.
Teaneck, N.J.: Blockprint Press, [196-?].
Harlem Defense Council.
Police terror in Harlem.
New York: Harlem Defense Council, [196-].
Harewood, Leroy.
Black power lessness in Barbados.
Bridgetown, Barbados: Black Star, 1968.
Operation Education, Operation Bootstrap, Inc.
What's wrong with the world?
Los Angeles: John Henry and Mary Louisa Dunn Bryant Foundation., 1967.
Harrington, Michael.
The politics of poverty.
New York: League for Industrial Democracy, 1965.
Harris, Eugene.
Two sermons on the race problem, addressed to young colored men, by one of them.
Nashville: [Fisk University?], 1895.
Ferguson, George Oscar.
"The psychology of the Negro: an experimental study." Reprinted from
Archives of Psychology 36.[April 1916].
Hall, Gus.
Racism: the nation's most dangerous pollutant.
New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1971.
Hall, Gus.
Marxism and Negro liberation.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1951.
Hall, Gus.
Negro freedom is in the interest of every American.
New York: New Currents, 1964.
Hall, Nathaniel.
Two sermons on slavery and its hero-victim.
Boston: John Wilson & Sons, 1859.
Hall, Rob Fowler.
A message to the south.
Birmingham: Alabama State Committee Communist Party, [1949?].
Hall, Rob Fowler.
FEPC: how it was betrayed, how it can be saved.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1950.
Haynes, George E.
The trend of the races.
New York: Council of Women for Home Missions, 1922.
Hathaway, C.A.
Who are the friends of the Negro people?
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1932.
Hertslet, Lewis E.
Curse of Ham.
Cape Town, South Africa: African Bookman, 1946.
Hayden, Tom.
Revolution in Mississippi.
New York: Students for Democratic Society, 1962.
Hollo, Anselm, ed.
Negro verse selected by Anselm Hollo.
London: Vista Books, 1964.
Hill, Herbert.
The racial practices of organized labor--in the age of Gompers and after.
New York: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1965.
Hill, Herbert.
"A record of Negro disfranchisement." Reprinted from
Midstream, a Quarterly Jewish Review.[1957].
Hirsch, Carl.
Terror at Trumbull.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1955.
Holland, Denys C.
Our freedom is not for them.
England: Union of Democratic Control, 1955.
Hill, Herbert.
"Recent effects of racial conflict on southern industrial development." Reprinted from
PHYLON, the Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture.[1959].
Haynes, Elizabeth Ross.
The black boy of Atlanta: a fullsize biography of one of the greatest men of this country, Major Richard Robert Wright.
Boston: House of Edinboro, [195-].
Haywood, Harry, and M. Howard.
Lynching.
New York: International Publishers, 1932.
Herndon, Angelo.
The Scottsboro boys.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1937.
Herrnstein, Richard.
"I.Q." Reprinted from
Atlantic Monthly.[1971].
Henningsen, C.F.
Letter from Gen. C.F. Henningsen, in reply to the letter of Victor Hugo on the Harper's Ferry Invasion.
New York: Davies & Kent, 1860.
Highlander Folk School.
A guide to community action for public school integration.
Monteagle, Tenn.: Highlander Folk School, [1955].
Haywood, Harry.
The south comes north in Detroit's own Scottsboro case.
New York: National Office League of Struggles for Negro Rights, [193-?].
Height, Dorothy I., ed.
The core of America's race problem.
New York: Woman's Press, 1945.
Herndon, Angelo.
You cannot kill the working class.
New York: International Labor Defense and League of Struggle for Negro Rights, [193-?].
Hightower, Estelle.
Race relations in the south.
New York: Columbia University, 1942.
Hill, Herbert.
"The Communist Party--enemy of Negro equality." Reprinted from
The Crisis.[1951].
Hill, Herbert.
"The ILGWU--fact and fiction, a reply to Gus Taylor." Reprinted from
New Politics.[Winter 1963].
Hill, Herbert.
"The ILGWU today--the decay of a labor union." Reprinted from
New Politics.[1962].
Hill, Herbert.
"Labor unions and the Negro." Reprinted from
Commentary.[December 1959].
Hill, Herbert.
"Racial inequality in employment: the patterns of discrimination." Reprinted from
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 357.[January 1965].
Horne, Frank.
Haverstraw.
London: Paul Breman, 1963.
Hyman, Herbert H., and Paul B. Sheatsley.
"Attitudes toward desegregation." Reprinted from
Scientific American 195:6.[December 1956].
Huff, William Henry.
From deep within.
Chicago: Dierkes Press, 1951.
Hood, Robin.
Industrial social security in the South.
Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1936.
Hubbard, H.J.M.
Venezuelan border issue and occupation of Ankoko; a sell-out by the coalition government.
[Georgetown, Guyuana]: [People's Progressive Party], [1967].
Hugo, Victor, et al.
Letters on American slavery from Victor Hugo, de Tocqueville, Emile de Girardin, Carnot, Passy, Mazzini, Humboldt, O. Lafayette,
&c.
Boston: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860.
Humphrey, John D.
Godliness, equality, freedom.
[Port-of-Spain, Trinidad]: J.D. Humphrey, [196-].
Humphrey, John D.
Trinityism (Revolution of Peace) and Trinidad and Tobago.
[Port-of-Spain, Trinidad]: [J.D. Humphrey], [1964].
Horton, James E.
The Scottsboro Case: the opinion of Judge James E. Horton.
New York: Scottsboro Defense Committee, 1936.
Hubbard, Elbert.
Little journeys to the homes of eminent orators, [Henry Ward] Beecher.
East Aurora, N.Y.: Roycrofters at the Shop, 1903.
Jacques, Truman M.
Black appreciation test.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [196-?].
North Carolina Historical Society.
The free Negro in North Carolina, and Some colonial history of Craven County.
Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina, 1920.
Inez M. Boddy, et al.
Index to selected Negro periodicals received in the Hallie Q. Brown Library.
Wilberforce, Ohio: College of Education and Industrial Arts, 1950.
Ivy, A.C., and Irwin Ross.
Religion and race: barriers to college?
New York: Public Affairs Committee., 1949.
International Labor Defense.
Mr. President : Free the Scottsboro boys!
New York: International Labor Defense, 1934.
Independent Service for Information on the Vienna Youth Festival.
A review of Negro segregation in the United States.
Cambridge: Independent Service for Information on the Vienna Youth Festival, 1959.
Carrere, Mentis.
It's all south. Part 2.
Los Angeles: John Henry and Mary Louise Dunn Bryant Foundation, 1966.
International Labor Defense and National Negro Congress.
It is against the law.
New York: International Labor Defense and National Negro Congress, 1945.
Nelson, Edward L.
Notes and data on the Negro people in the United States.
New York: International Workers Order, [1949].
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
The year of jubilee: NAACP report for 1959.
New York: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People., 1960.
Johnson, Grace Hays.
"Phases of cultural history of significance for Negro students." Reprinted from
The Journal of Negro History 22:1.[January 1937].
Jackson, Frances.
Letter from Frances Jackson.
Boston: Andrews, Prentiss & Studley, 1844.
Jackson, John G.
Christianity before Christ.
New York: Blyden Society, 1938.
Jesse, Charles.
Sketch for a life of H.H. Breen, F.S.A. (1805-1881).
Castries, St. Lucia, West Indies: St. Lucia Archaeological and Historical Society, 1968.
Jagan, Cheddi.
Border conspiracy exposed.
[Lacytown, Guyana]: People's Progressive Party, [1968].
Jagan, Cheddi.
Caribbean unity and Carifta.
[Lacytown], Guyana: People's Progressive Party, [1968].
Jagan, Cheddi.
Socialism for Guyana.
[Lacytown, Guyana]: People's Progressive Party, [1968].
U.C.A.P.A.W.A.-C.I.O., Local 313.
Down with starvation wages in South-East Missouri.
[Lilbourn, Missouri?]: U.C.A.P.A.W.A.-C.I.O., Local 313, [194-].
Native Son.
"My friends": a fireside chat on the war.
New York: Workers Party, 1940.
Charles Spurgeon Johnson: a bibliography. Nashville: Fisk University Library, 1947.
Johnson, Charles S.
The economic status of Negroes.
[Nashville]: Fisk University Press, 1933.
Jackson, E.J.
The A.M.E. layman.
[West Palm Beach, Fla.]: [s.n.], [19--?].
Johnson, Howard.
"The Negro veteran fights for freedom!" Reprinted from
Political Affairs.[May 1947].
Kupferberg, Tuli.
The Mississippi (A study of the white race).
New York: Birth Press, 1962.
Johnson, J.R.
Why Negroes should oppose the war.
New York: Pioneer Publishers, [194-].
Jacobs, Jim.
Black workers set the pace.
Boston: New England Free Press, 1969.
Jackson, Esther Cooper.
This is my husband: fighter for his people, political refugee.
New York: National Committee to Defend Negro Leadership, 1953.
Jones, Eugene Kinckle.
Twenty years after: a record of accomplishments of the National Urban League during 1929.
New York: National Urban League, 1930.
Johnson, Tom.
The Reds in Dixie.
New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1935.
Joint Committee to Aid the Herndon Defense.
Wisdom, justice and moderation: the case of Angelo Herndon.
[New York]: Joint Committee to Aid the Herndon Defense, 1935.
Box 4
United States. Public Health Service.
National Negro Health Week. 26th observance, March 31-April 7, 1940.
[Washington, D.C.]: [U.S. Government Printing Office], 1940.
National Negro Congress.
Resolutions of the National Negro Congress held in Chicago, Ill., February 14, 15, 16, 1936.
[Chicago?]: National Negro Congress, [1936?].
National Negro Congress.
Official proceedings of the National Negro Congress, February, 14, 15, 16, 1936, Chicago.
Washington, D.C.: National Negro Congress, [1936?].
National Negro Congress.
Proceedings of the Conference on Postwar Employment.
New York: National Negro Congress, 1945.
National Negro Congress.
A petition...to the United Nations on behalf of 13 million oppressed Negro citizens of the United States of America.
[New York]: [National Negro Congress], [1946?].
National Negro Congress.
Negro workers after the war.
New York: National Negro Congress, 1945.
McNeilly, James H.
Religion and slavery: a vindication of the Southern churches.
Nashville: Publishing House of the M.E. Church, South, 1911.
National Urban League.
The National Urban League's work in 1940.
New York: National Urban League, [1941].
National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes.
Bulletin, vol. 2, no. 3, March, 1913.
New York: National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes, 1913.
Note
National Political Action Committee, C.I.O.
The Negro in 1944.
New York: National Political Action Committee, C.I.O., [1944?].
National Negro Congress.
Negro people will defend America.
New York: National Negro Congress, [1941?].
National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes.
A challenge to democracy. Bulletin, vol. 7, no. 1, November, 1917.
New York: National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes, 1917.
National Urban League.
The forgotten tenth: an analysis of unemployment among Negroes in the United States and its social costs: 1932-1933.
New York: National Urban League, 1933.
National Labor Service.
Discrimination costs you money.
New York: National Labor Service, [19--].
National CIO Committee to Abolish Discrimination.
Report of the National CIO Committee to Abolish Discrimination.
Washington, D.C.: National CIO Committee to Abolish Discrimination, 1946.
National Committee for Justice in Columbia, Tennessee.
Terror in Tennessee.
New York: National Committee for Justice in Columbia, Tennessee, [194-].
National Conference on Fundamental Problems in the Education of Negroes, Committee on Finance.
School money in black and white.
Chicago: Julius Rosenwald Fund, [1934?].
Socialist Workers Party.
A transitional program for black liberation.
New York: Merit Publishers, 1969.
National Federation for Constitutional Liberties.
Everybody's business: a summary of New York State anti-discrimination laws and how to use them.
New York: National Federation for Constitutional Liberties, 1946.
United States. National Youth Administration.
The tenth youth.
Washington, D.C.: National Youth Administration, 1938.
National Negro Business Leagues.
Annual convention in Detroit, souvenir program of convention and exhibition, Aug. 27-30 and Aug. 25, Sept. 1, 1940.
[Detroit?]: National Negro Business League, 1940.
United States. Commission on Civil Rights. Mississippi Advisory Committee.
Administration of justice in Mississippi.
[Washington, D.C.]: Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 1963.
Mississippi State Junior Chamber of Commerce.
Oxford: a warning for Americans.
Jackson, Miss.: Mississippi State Junior Chamber of Commerce., 1962.
Merriam, Eve.
Montgomery, Alabama, Money, Mississippi and other places.
New York: Cameron Associates, 1956.
Minor, Robert.
Tell the people how Ben Davis was elected.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1946.
Minnesota. Governor's Interracial Commission.
The Negro worker in Minnesota.
[Minnesota?]: Governor's Interracial Commission, 1945.
Montagu, Ashley.
"Problems and methods relating to the study of race." Reprinted from
Psychiatry: Journal of the Biology and Pathology of Interpersonal Relations 3:4.[November 1940].
[Miller, Charles].
Gerrit Smith and the vigilant association of the city of New York.
New York: John A. Gray, Printer, 1860.
Milholland, John E.
The Negro and the Nation: an address to the National Negro Business League in convention assembled at New York, Aug. 16,17,18,
1905.
New York: Moore Printing Co., 1906.
Morton, O.P.
Reconstruction: speech of Hon. O.P. Morton, in the U.S. Senate, January 24, 1868, on the constitutionality of the reconstruction
acts.
[Washington, D.C.]: [Chronicle], [1868].
Giddings, Joshua Reed.
Speech of Mr. Giddings, of Ohio, upon the bill to supply the deficience of appropriations for the year ending June 30, 1848.
Washington, D.C.: J. & G.S. Gideon, 1848.
Reade, Thaddeus Constantine.
Sketch of the life of Samuel Morris.
[Upland, Ind.]: [s.n.], [1896].
Miller, Samuel.
A sermon preached at Newark, Oct. 22, 1823, before the synod of New Jersey, for the benefit of the African school, under the
care of the synod.
Trenton, N.J.: George Sherman, 1823.
Morgan, Edwin, V.
Slavery in New York.
New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1898.
Murray, Pauli, and Murray Kempton.
"All for Mr. Davis": the story of sharecropper Odell Waller.
New York: Workers Defense League, [194-].
Morant, G.M.
The significance of racial differences.
Paris: UNESCO, 1952.
Montagu, Ashley.
What we know about "race": teacher's supplement.
New York: One Nation Library, [195-?].
Morris Joe Alex.
"The truth about the Florida race troubles." Reprinted from
The Saturday Evening Post.1952.
United States. Senate.
Memorial of the trustees of the Peabody Educational Fund with a report of their committee on the subject of the education
of the colored population of the southern states.
Washington, D.C.: [s.n.], [1880].
Kharusi, Ahmed Seif.
The agony of Zanzibar: a victim of the new colonialism.
Surrey, England: Foreign Affairs Publishing Co., 1969.
Committee to Defend the Panthers.
Lonnie McLucas, a true revolutionary!
New York: Committee to Defend the Panthers, [197-].
McWilliams, Carey.
"Race discrimination--and the law." Reprinted from
Science and Society 9:1.1945.
MacDonald Dwight.
The war's greatest scandal! The story of Jim Crow in uniform.
New York: March on Washington Movement, [1943].
Note
Giddings, Joshua Reed.
The conflict between religious truths and American infidelity: speech of Mr. Giddings, of Ohio, upon the issues pending before
the American people in regard to freedom and slavery.
Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, [1856].
Mayhew, Howard.
Racial terror at Trumbull Park, Chicago.
New York: Pioneer Publishers, 1954.
Mann, Charles P.
Stalin's thought illuminates problems of Negro freedom struggle.
New York: Communist Party, 1953.
Marsh, Leonard.
A bake-pan for the doughfaces.
Burlington, Vt.: C. Goodrich, 1854.
Mayer, Thomas F.
"The position and progress of black America: some pertinent statistics." Reprinted from
Bulletin of the Ann Arbor Citizens for New Politics.[November 1967].
McAfee, Kathy.
"Black brothers have a better idea." Reprinted from
The Movement.[August 1969].
Mayer, Edith H.
Our Negro brother.
New York: Shady Hill Press, 1945.
Mayer, Milton Sanford.
These few.
Chicago: Human Events Associates, 1947.
L'abbé Maury aux Enfers.
Les Delassemens comiques ou sa deuxieme lettre au clerge.
[S.l.]: [s.n.], [18--?].
Mann, Horace.
Speech of Horace Mann of Massachusetts, on the subject of slavery in the territories, and the consequences of a dissolution
of the Union, delivered in the U.S. House of Representatives, Feb. 15, 1850.
Boston: Redding & Co., 1850.
Marshall, Horace.
Police brutality: lynching in the Northern style.
New York: Office of Councilman Benjamin J. Davis, [1947?].
Marshall, Thurgood.
Report on Korea: the shameful story of the courts martial of Negro GI's.
New York: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1951.
McFarland, H.S.
To my country.
[S.l.]: H.S. McFarland, 1953.
Mann, Horace.
Speech of Mr. Horace Mann, of Mass., on the right of Congress to legislate for the territories of the U.S. and its duty to
exclude slavery therefrom, delivered in the House of Representatives, in committee of the whole, June 30, 1848.
Washington, D.C.: J. & G.S. Gideon, 1848.
McCulloch, Margaret Callender.
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Equal opportunity.
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Winston, Henry, et al.
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"Not guilty!"
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Equality, land and freedom: a program for Negro liberation.
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An American looks at Russia.
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Race riots aren't necessary.
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The angry children of Malcolm X.
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Lightfoot, Claude M.
The Civil War and Black liberation today.
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League of Struggle for Negro Rights.
They shall not die!
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The Negro in sports.
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Twenty years on the chain gang?
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The impendin crisis uv the dimocracy, bein a breef and concise statement uv the past experience, present condishun and fucher
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Labour Party.
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The jobless Negro.
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Four free, five in prison - on the same evidence.
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Scottsboro: the shame of America.
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To the religious newspaper reviewers of my recent discourse.
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Smith, Gerrit.
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"There are things to do." Reprinted from
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Smith, Lillian E.
The white Christian and his conscience.
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The truth about Colombia, Tennessee cases.
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Socialist Workers Party.
Freedom now.
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Box 5
Taylor, John V.
Black and white.
London: SCM Press, Ltd., 1958.
Travis, M.E.
Now is the time.
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Thayer, M. Russell.
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A book of Negro songs.
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Trade Union Youth Committee for the Freedon of Lieut. Gilbert.
Jim Crow "justice" in Korea.
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It can be done!
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Can the states stop lynching?
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Stop this murder!
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...that they shall not have died in vain.
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Washington, Booker T.
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Washington, Booker T.
Team work.
Tuskegee, Ala.: Tuskegee Institute, 1941.
Washington, Booker T.
"Industrial education and the public schools." Reprinted from
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Washington, Booker T.
How to build up a good school in the South.
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Washington, Booker T.
Education of the Negro.
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Waite, Edward F.
"The Negro in the Supreme Court." Reprinted from
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Washington, Booker T.
"The Negro in business." Reprinted from
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Washington, Booker T.
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Washington, Booker T.
Progress of the American Negro.
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Washington, Booker T.
The rights and duties of the Negro.
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Washington, Booker T.
The fruits of industrial training.
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Washington, Booker T.
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Watson, Willie Mae.
We honor them. Vol. 1.
Syracuse, N.Y.: New Readers Press, 1964.
Walters, Robert J.
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Washington, Booker T.
Education not exclusive: extracts from an address to Tuskegee students.
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Sobel, Irwin, et al.
The Negro in the St. Louis economy, 1954.
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Washington, Booker T.
Keeping in repair.
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Wesson, William H.
Negro employment practices in the Chattanooga area.
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Westerman, George W.
Toward a better understanding.
[Panama?]: [s.n.], 1946.
Waxman, Julia.
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Wedlock, Lunabelle.
"The reaction of Negro publications and organizations to German anti-semitism."
Howard University Studies in the Social Sciences 3:2.
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Labor Department.
The Negro wage earner and apprenticeship training programs.
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National Urban League.
Racial aspects of reconversion.
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[Addicts Rehabilitation Center].
A report on drug addiction in Central Harlem.
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Box 6
United States. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census.
1950 United States census of population, non-white population by race.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1953.
Weaver, Robert C.
"The Negro comes of age in industry." Reprinted from
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Africa Today 16:1. [February/March 1969].
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
Black power: S.N.C.C. speaks for itself.
Boston: New England Free Press, [196-].
Brewer, Curtis.
Public school segregation and the Supreme Court decision.
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Brown, G. Gordon.
Recreational facilities and Negro-white relations in Philadelphia.
Philadelphia: Bureau of Municipal Research, 1947.
Brown, Ina Corinne.
Socio-economic approach to educational problems.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1942.
Caliver, Ambrose.
Education of Negro leaders: influences affecting graduate and professional studies.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, 1949.
United States. Federal Works Agency.
Jobs for American workers: the Negro in the government's work program.
[Washington, D.C.]: Federal Works Agency, [1940?].
Gillard, John T.
The Negro American: a mission investigation.
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Campus Mirror 16:8. [Atlanta]: [Spelman College], [June 1940].
Detroit (Mich.). Mayor's Interracial Committee.
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Grunsfeld, Mary-Jane.
Negroes in Chicago.
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Henderson, Elmer W.
"Negroes in government employment." Reprinted from
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Hill, Herbert.
No harvest for the reaper: the story of the migratory agricultural worker in the United States.
New York: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, [1959?].
Melchor, Beulah H.
Presenting, The land possesions of Howard University.
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Yergan, Max.
Negro America and the war for survival.
[Los Angeles]: People's World, [1942].
Giddings, Joshua Reed.
Payment for slaves: speech of Mr. J.R. Giddings, of Ohio, on the bill to pay the heirs of Antonio Pacheco for a slave sent
west of the Mississippi with the Seminole Indians in 1838.
Washington, D.C.: Buell & Blanchard, 1849.
X, Marvin.
The black bird: a parable for black children.
Fresno, Calif.: Al Kitab Sudan, 1968.
Yeates, Mary.
Discrimination against colored people.
London: W.F.T.U. Publications Ltd., [1950?].
Woofter, Thomas Jackson, and A.E. Fisher.
The plantation South today.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1940.
Winston, Henry.
Fight racism--for unity and progress!
New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1971.
Winston, Henry.
Black Americans and the Middle East conflict.
New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1970.
Winston, Henry.
Character building and education in the spirit of socialism.
New York: New Age Publishers, 1939.
Winston, Henry.
Life begins with freedom.
New York: New Age Publishers, 1937.
Yergan, Max.
Africa in the war.
New York: Council on African Affairs, [194-?].
Yergan, Max, and Paul Robeson.
The Negro and justice: a plea for Earl Browder.
New York: Citizens' Committee to Free Earl Browder, 1941.
Winston, Henry.
What it means to be a Communist.
New York: New Century Publishers, 1951.
Winston, Henry, et al.
Negro freedom: a goal for all Americans.
New York: New Currents Publishers, 1964.
Winston, Henry.
Negro-white unity: key to full equality, Negro representation, economic advance of labor, black and white.
New York: New Outlook Publishers, 1967.
Yergan, Max.
Democracy and the Negro people today.
[Washington, D.C.]: National Negro Congress, [1940].
Wright, R.R.
The Negro problem.
Philadelphia: A.M.E. Book Concern, 1911.
Wyer, Samuel S.
Digest of Myrdal's "An American Dilemma"
Columbus, Ohio: Columbus Council for Democracy, 1944.
Williams, Henry Llewellyn.
The Moko Marionettes.
New York: De Witt, 1880.
Williams, Henry Llewellyn.
Bobolino, the black bandit.
New York: De Witt, 1880.
Gondor, Emery I.
Ten little colored boys.
New York: Howell, Soskin Publishers, 1942.
Wilkerson, Doxey A.
The Negro people and the Communists.
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Burn, baby, burn! Is your city next?
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Perlo, Victor.
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Perry, Pettis.
Pettis Perry speaks to the Court.
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Perry, Pettis.
Negro representation--a step towards Negro freedom.
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Perry, Pettis.
The November elections and the struggle for jobs, peace, equal rights and democracy.
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Perry, Pettis.
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Six cylinder Olympus.
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Forge Negro-labor unity for peace and jobs.
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What do the people of Africa want?
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One hundred amazing facts about the Negro with complete proof.
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The five Negro Presidents, according to what people said they were.
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Note
Nkrumah, Kwame.
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We demand freedom!
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The march on Washington one year after.
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Parker, Albert.
Negroes in the post-war world.
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Note
Jones, Claudia.
Lift every voice--for victory!
New York: New Age Publishers, Inc., 1942.
[Jones, Thomas H.].
The experience of Thomas H. Jones, who was a slave for forty-three years.
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Jones, Claudia.
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What became of race prejudice?
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Eleazer, Robert B.
Singers in the dawn: a brief anthology of American Negro poetry.
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Spirer, Jess.
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Stow, Horatio J.
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Sugar, Maurice.
A Negro on trial for his life: the frame-up of James Victory exposed!
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All you could wish for a quarter.
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Sumner, Charles.
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Newton, Huey P.
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Phillips, Wendell.
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Randolph, A. Phillip, and Norman Thomas.
Victory's victims? The Negro's future.
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Raushenbush, Winifred.
How to prevent a race riot in your home town.
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Raymond, Harry.
Dixie comes to New York: story of the Freeport GI slayings.
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Raymond, Harry.
The Ingrams shall not die! Story of Georgia's new terror.
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Raymond, Harry.
Save Willie McGee.
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King, Martin Luther, Jr.
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Ovington, Mary White.
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Richardson, Beulah.
A black woman speaks...of white womanhood, of white supremacy, of peace.
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Peck, James.
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Holden, Anna.
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Peck, James.
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On clipped wings: the story of Jim Crow in the Army Air Corps.
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How about a decent school for me?
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Jim Crow must go!
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Williams, Robert F.
Listen, brother!
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Rorty, James.
Brother Jim Crow.
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Robeson, Paul.
For freedom and peace: address by Paul Robeson at Welcome Home Rally, New York, June 19, 1949.
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24th annual report.
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Extinction of slavery: resolutions of the Legislature of New Hampshire, relative to slavery in the District of Columbia and
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Revolutionary Workers League.
The Negro under capitalism.
Detroit: Demos Press, [1933].
Paton, Alan.
"The Negro in America today." Reprinted from
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Selsam, Howard.
The Negro people in the United States: facts for all Americans.
New York: Jefferson School of Social Science, 1953.
Wright, Harry L.
A survey of veterans services for Negroes in Arkansas.
Atlanta: Southern Regional Council, 1946.
Wright, Elizur.
The sin of slavery, and its remedy; containing some reflections on the moral influence of African colonization.
New York: E. Wright, Jr., 1833.
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The disinherited speak: letters from sharecroppers.
New York: Workers Defense League for the Southern Tenant Farmers Union, [1936?].
Woodson, Carter G.
"Ten years of collecting and publishing the records of the Negro." Reprinted from
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Are white liberals obsolete in the black struggle?
Philadelphia: Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, 1968.