American Socialism and Black Americans: From the Age of Jackson to World War IIBloomsbury Academic, 1977 M11 18 - 462 pages |
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Page 132
... stand up and be counted . Did the Socialist party stand for universal equality , or was it simply a political movement that said one thing in its platform and did the opposite in practice , just like all the other parties on the ...
... stand up and be counted . Did the Socialist party stand for universal equality , or was it simply a political movement that said one thing in its platform and did the opposite in practice , just like all the other parties on the ...
Page 445
... stand against draft riots , 31-32 ; take stand against John- son's Reconstruction policies , 36-37 , 373 ; take stand against slaveowners in period after secession , 30 ; terror campaign among , 27 German - American workers , in ...
... stand against draft riots , 31-32 ; take stand against John- son's Reconstruction policies , 36-37 , 373 ; take stand against slaveowners in period after secession , 30 ; terror campaign among , 27 German - American workers , in ...
Page 457
... stand on Negro question at founding convention , 94- 100 ; advanced stand on Negro ques- tion at 1937 convention , 365 ; appeal to Negro , 93 ; as inheritors of Abolition- ist tradition , 169 ; battle in oversegre- gated locals , 131-38 ...
... stand on Negro question at founding convention , 94- 100 ; advanced stand on Negro ques- tion at 1937 convention , 365 ; appeal to Negro , 93 ; as inheritors of Abolition- ist tradition , 169 ; battle in oversegre- gated locals , 131-38 ...
Contents
Antebellum Socialism and Negro Slavery | 3 |
The Election of 1860 the Civil War | 25 |
Battle Front and Home Front 31 Marx | 42 |
Copyright | |
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August black Americans black and white black socialist black workers Bobst Library Booker campaign capitalism capitalist Chicago Daily Socialist cialist Cincinnati Civil Club colored Communist comrades convention criticism Crosswaith Debs December declared delegates Democratic disfranchisement Douai economic editor election emancipation February Foner Garvey German Grandfather Clause Harlem Harrison Herbert Aptheker History Ibid industrial insisted International Socialist Review issue January join July Knights of Labor leaders Library lynching Marx Mary White Ovington Messenger National Negro Problem Negro question Negro workers Norman Thomas November October Oklahoma organization Ovington Papers party's Philip Randolph platform political published race racial racism radical Randolph and Owen Republican Reverend riots segregation September slavery slaves social equality Socialist Labor party socialist movement Socialist party socialist press socialist ticket society South Southern socialists speech struggle Texas tion United University vote W.E.B. Du Bois wage wage slavery Washington white workers Woodbey wrote York Call