You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages are not blackened with the account of an unmentionable crime committed by a negro brute, and this crime, I want to impress upon you, is but the manifestation of the negroes' aspiration for social equality,... Annual Report - Page 8by New York State Library - 1906Full view - About this book
| 1904 - 654 pages
...is in the black belt. in the South, Mississippi particularly, l know he is growing worse every year. You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages are...unmentionable crime committed by a Negro brute and this crime, l want to impress upon you, is but the manifestation of the Negroes' aspiration for social equality,... | |
| 1906 - 676 pages
...than he was in 1880. In the south, Mississippi particularly, I know he is growing worse every year. You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages are not blackened with an account of an unmentionable crime committed by a negro brute and this crime I want to impress upon... | |
| William Passmore Pickett - 1909 - 608 pages
...the black belt. In the South — Mississippi particularly — I know he is growing worse every year. You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages are...impress upon you, is but the manifestation of the negroes' aspiration for social equality, encouraged largely by the character of free education in vogue... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1911 - 472 pages
...be made, and which man cannot accomplish." He asserts that the most serious negro crime is due to " The manifestation of the negro's aspiration for social...levying tribute upon the white people to maintain." In Cordova, SC, in 1907, a business man who had visited a colored school and spoken encouragingly to... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1910 - 470 pages
...aspiration for ,"^®~~*a social equality, encouraged largely by the character of free \t-\ feducation in vogue, which the State is levying tribute upon the white people to maintain." In Cordova, SC, in 1907, a business man who had visited a colored school and spoken encouragingly to... | |
| Robert Wilson Shufeldt - 1915 - 442 pages
...is in the black belt. In the South, Mississippi particularly, I know he is growing worse every year. You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages are not blackened with an account of an unmentionable crime committed by a negro brute, and this crime, I want to impress... | |
| 1921 - 464 pages
...should be made, and which man cannot accomplish." He asserts that the most serious Negro crime is due to "The manifestation of the Negro's aspiration for social...levying tribute upon the white people to maintain." A superintendent of schools in a Southern city holds that even grammar school education unsteadies... | |
| Joel Williamson - 1984 - 586 pages
...criminal in 1890 than he was in 1880." Neatly, he encapsulated the matured Radical view of race relations: "You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages...encouraged largely by the character of free education in vogue."61 In every Southern state there were greater or lesser reflections of that thinking among eminent... | |
| Joel Williamson - 1995 - 539 pages
...than he was in 1880," the governor declared. Black male assault on white women was especially high. "You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages...largely by the character of free education in vogue." Shortly after taking office the governor closed down completely the state's normal school for blacks... | |
| Donald M. Kartiganer, Ann J. Abadie - 1999 - 268 pages
...Governor James K. Vardaman's administration, this radical journalistturned-politician would assert, "You can scarcely pick up a newspaper whose pages...encouraged largely by the character of free education in vogue."6 Nine years later (and now a Senator) he elaborated: "I unhesitatingly assert that political... | |
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