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Blacks in the abolitionist movement / edited by John H. Bracey, Jr., August Meier [and] Elliott Rudwick.

Van Pelt Library E449 .B794
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Bracey, John H., Jr., 1941-2023, compiler.
Contributor:
Meier, August, 1923-2003, compiler.
Rudwick, Elliott M., 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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