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Blacks in the abolitionist movement / edited by John H. Bracey, Jr., August Meier [and] Elliott Rudwick.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Bracey, John H., Jr., 1941-2023, compiler.
- Series:
- Explorations in the Black experience
- A Wadsworth series: explorations in the Black experience.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Abolitionists.
- Antislavery movements--United States.
- Antislavery movements.
- United States.
- Physical Description:
- 168 pages ; 22 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Belmont, Calif. : Wadsworth Pub. Co., [1971]
- Contents:
- James Forten: forgotten abolitionist, by R. A. Billington.
- Abolition's different drummer: Frederick Douglass, by B. Quarles.
- John Mercer Langston: Black protest leader and abolitionist, by W. F. Cheek.
- William Still and the Underground Railroad, by L. Gara.
- The Negro in the organization of abolition, by C. H. Wesley.
- The emancipation of the Negro abolitionist, by L. F. Litwack.
- The Negro: innately inferior or equal? By J. McPherson.
- Anti-slavery ambivalence: immediatism, expediency, race, by W. H. Pease and J. H. Pease.
- The role of Blacks in the abolitionist movement, by A. Meier and E. Rudwick.
- National Negro conventions of the middle 1840's: moral suasion vs. political action, by H. H. Bell.
- The Black phalanx, by W. E. B. Du Bois.
- John Brown and the paradox of leadership among American Negroes, by D. Potter.
- Douglass and John Brown, by P. Foner.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references.
- ISBN:
- 0534000207
- OCLC:
- 148060
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