East, Edward M., on race inequalities, 376; on the mental capacity of the Negro, 391; on cross-breeding, 410, 412
Economic Status of the Negro, in the North, 17; in the South, 85; at close of the Civil War, 534, 535; as bear- ing upon his survival, 532; means of improving the, 577
Education of the Negro, in the North, 66; in the South, 149-177; as solu- ion of the Negro question, 498-501; plea for better, 553, 578, 579 Eliot, Charles W., on opportunities for the Negro, 19; on race segregation, 71; on the intermarriage of whites and blacks, 456
Environment, influence of, on races, 4, II; on the crime of the Negro, 116; on the distribution of culture, 425, 426
Equality of Races. See Race Equal- ity.
Evans, Maurice, on the sights of Har- lem, 29; on race segregation, III; on Negro education, 161, 174; on Negro religion, 185; comparing the Zulu and American Negro, 383; criticizing Finot, 387; on Negro traits, 403; on race segregation in Africa, 473, and in the United States, 475; on the radical school of Negro leaders, 519; on the protection of colored women, 583; on opportunities for the Negro in the South, 588
Faith, need of, in facing the race problem, 590
Family Life of the Negro, in Africa, 5; in the North, 37; in the South, 96-
Family Ties, among Negroes, 99 Fanatics, as inciters of race troubles, 588
Federal Council of Churches of Christ, as promoting interracial coöperation, 560
Fine Arts, Negroes distinguished in
the, 307-350; opportunity in the, for Negroes, 578
Finot, Jean, on race equality, 366, 387 Folk Songs. See Negro Songs. Franchise Laws, in the South, 105,
496-584. See Civil Rights.
French, the, in St. Domingue, 8, 9 Future of the Negro, views concerning the, 525-543
Galton, on race differences, 372 Garvey, Marcus, on the reclamation of Africa for the Negro, 465 Giddings, on consciousness of kind as the basis of social relations, 417 Gobineau, on race inequalities, 373; on Negro aptitude for art, 390 Goldenweiser, on race equality, 370 Gonzales, Ambrose, on Negro dialect stories, 284
Gordon, A. C, writer of Negro dialect, 295
Grant, Madison, on race differences, 379; views of, referred to, 395 Greenfield, Elizabeth, concert singer, 345
Greenough, Major, on Negro troops, 210, 237
Gregory, J. W., on a possible Free
Negro State in the South, 481 Grimké, Archibald H., as author, 327
Haiti, history of, 7; Negro coloniza- tion in, 7; desperate struggle of whites in, 8, 495; intervention of United States in, 10
Hammond, Mrs. L. H., book by, on the race problem, 303 Hampton Institute, 171
Harding, President, on the social sepa- rateness of white and colored races, 512
Harlem, the Negro capital, 24 Harris, Joel Chandler, on the Negro, 283
Hart, A. B., on the inferiority of the
Negro, 382; on race segregation, 473 Hawkins, W. E., poetry of, 314
Hearn, Lafcadio, on Negro dances, 341, 347
Henry, O., novel of, relating to the Negro, 301
High Schools, for Negroes, 158 Hoffman, F., on Negro sex morals, 116; on the intermarriage of whites and blacks, 446-447, 450; on bad Negro leadership, 521; on the hope- lessness of the Negro problem, 525; on the mortality of the Negro as unfavorable to his survival, 528; on the probable extinction of the Negro, 528, 533; on the economic inefficiency of the Negro, 532; as author, 270 Holmes, Samuel J., on race inequality, 380; on race-crossing, 415 Holtzclaw, William, as author, 333 Housing Problem, of the Negro, in the Northern states, 24, 31; in the Southern states, 87, 96; suggestions for improving, 581. See Negro Quarters.
Humphrey, Seth K., on the superiority of the mulatto to the Negro, 386; on the flowering of culture, 436
Hunt, James, on race mixture, 453 Huntington, on the origin of the Negro, 3; on the influence of climate on the Negro, 6; on race differences, 374; on brain-size and intelligence, 390
Industrial Education, of the Negro, 171-174
Industrial Efficiency, of the Negro,
532; at close of Civil War, 534; essentials of, 536; of the Negro, in- creased after 1896, 536; means of in- creasing the, 577
Industrial Life, of the Negro, in Africa, 4; in the Northern states, 17; in the Southern states, 85-95 Ingalls, John J., on race intermixture, 454 Intermarriage of whites and blacks, ex- tent of, 43, 484; character of the parties to, 43, 447; consequences of, 449; contrast of Northern and South-
ern mulattoes in reference to, 453, 503, 570
Irving, Washington, the Negro in works of, 263
Jamison, Roscoe C., poem by, 321 Jefferson, Thomas, on the inferiority of the Negro, 382; on the coloniza- tion of the Negro, 458-459 Jim Crow laws, 110 Johnson, Charles Bertram, poem by,
Johnson, Charles S., editor, 352 Johnson, Fenton, poetry of, 317 Johnson, Mrs. G. D., poem by, 321 Johnson, James Weldon, poetry of, 311 Johnston, Sir Harry H., on the Negro
rural South, 87, 89, 91; on the in- feriority of the Negro, 381; on the preference of Negroes for marrying their own kind, 421; on opportunities for the Negro in America, 589 Johnston, Mary, novel of, relating to the Negro, 301
Jones, Charles C., writer of Negro dia- lect, 285
Jones, Joshua H., poem by, 320
Keane, on race differences, 372; on the inferiority of the Negro, 381; on the diminishing area of the Negro race, 526
Kennedy, R. Emmet, book of, relating to the Negro, 301
Krehbiel, Henry E., on Negro folk songs, 335, 341, 342, 343
Ku Klux Klan, of the present day, 129
Labor organizations and the Negro, 19,
Lane, Winthrop D., on the Negro in Harlem, 27, 29
Le Bon, Gustav, on race differences, 373 Leroy-Beaulieu, on the essence of edu- cation, 579
Lewis, Edmonia, sculptor, 350 Lewis, Ethyl, poem by, 319
Literature, in the North as influenced by the Negro, 263-282; in the South as influenced by the Negro, 283-306. See Negro Literature. Livingstone, W. P., on the amalgama- tion of whites and blacks, 455 Locke, Alain, as author, 333 Locke, John, on race equality, 365 Lombroso, on the inferiority of the Negro, 381
London, Jack, reference of, to the Negro, 268
Louverture, Toussaint, great Negro leader in Haiti, 9
Lowell, writings of, relating to the Negro, 264
Lowie, R. H., on race equality, 368 Lugard, Sir F. D., on the social sepa- rateness of white and colored races, 512
Lynching, in the South, 121-127; efforts
to repress, 552; evil of, 583
on brain-size and intelligence, 390; on the traits of tropical people, 406; on race temperaments, 408; on race- crossing, 411; on the aptitude of races for colonization, 467 McKay, Claude, poetry of, 310 McNeill, John Charles, poems of, re- lating to the Negro, 299
Means, Sterling M., poetry of, 314 Mecklin, J. M., book by, on the race problem, 303; on race differences, 380; on the psychology of the Negro, 401; on the reasoning power of the Negro, 405; on Negro imitativeness, 407; on race segregation, 474; on the probable extinction of the Negro, 542; on the Negro's feeling for the Mongolian, 490
Melting Pot, danger of the, 434-440 Mental Tests, comparing the Negro
and mulatto, 391; comparing Negroes and whites, 391-393
Merriam, George S., on the Negro problem, 273, 500
Mexican Immigration, possibility of, supplanting the Negro, 482, 483 Middle Class, lack of, among Negroes at end of Civil War, 535; as an aim of Booker Washington, 540; evidence of a Negro, 541
Migration, Negro and white contrasted,
247, 248, 251. See Negro Migration. Miles, P. L., observations of, on Negro troops in France, 208
Mill, John Stuart, on race equality, 365; on the impossibility of two races en- joying equal rights in the same gov- ernment, 491
Miller, Kelly, writings of, 333 Mims, Edwin, promoter of law and
order, 125, and of interracial co- operation, 557
Mitchell, P. C., on the future of amal- gamation, 440
Mobs, need of suppressing, 583. See Lynching, Race Riots. Moss, Colonel, comment of, on Negro soldiers, 236
Moton, R. R., as author, 333; as Negro leader, 504; views of, on the race question, 509; on the social question, 513; attitude of, toward Southern whites, 504
Mountain Region, of the South, as af-
fecting the slavery question, 13 Mulattoes, in the West Indies, 8; rea- son for increase of, in the United States, 97; problem of, reflected in prose, 275, and in poetry, 322; reason for the superiority of, 387; question of their superiority to the pure Negroes, 386; traits of, 408; number of, 450; percentage of, 450; in the North and South contrasted, 451, 503, 512; at close of Civil War, 534; of the North and South differ on the social question, 570
Murphey, E. G., books by, relating to the Negro, 302
Napoleon, attempt of, to restore French rule in St. Domingue, 9.
National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People, program of, 515
Natural Selection, a factor of race dif- ferentiation, 375
Negro, the, origin of, 3, 526; geograph- ical distribution of, 3; in business, 22, 94; in the professions, 22, 578; in politics, 46; in public service, 23, 48; in domestic service, 92 Negro Artisans, 17, 19 Negro Characteristics, physical, 397, 400; psychological, 401-409; influenc- ing the white man, 593 Negro Children, care of, 98
Negro Churches, in the North, 73; in the South, 101, 184
Negro Colleges and Universities, 69, 162
Negro Common Schools, 149; cost of, compared to white, 151
Negro Convicts, in the South, 143-148 Negro Crime, in the Northern states, 49; in the Southern states, 115;
cause of, 116; in the World War, 232, 233
Negro Domestic Servants, in the North- ern states, 17; in the Southern states,
Negro Domination, question of, 104 Negro Dramatists, 349. See Dramatic Art.
Negro Farmers, 86
Negro Folk Songs, 335-344 Negro Fraternal Orders, 101 Negro Free State, as a possible out- come of the Negro problem, 481 Negro Funeral Songs, 341
Negro Home Owners, in Chicago, 32; in the South, 86
Negro Inventors, 22
Negro Labor, in agriculture, 91; in the fishing industry, 92; in sundry indus- tries, 93, 94
Negro Leadership, in New York City, 28; examples of, 90, 328-334; in the North and South, contrasted, 503, 513, 570; shift of, from preachers and politicians to educators and busi- ness men, 541; need of, in future, 543 Negro Migration, 245-260; from coun- try to town, 247; to the West in 1879, 247; during and after the World War, 249; extent of, 250; North and South, 250; interstate, 251; causes of, 252; effects of, 258 Negro Music, 335, 345; in the World
War, 241; influence of, on the music of the whites, 346; possibilities of, 591
Negro Normal Schools, 162 Negro Novelists, 325-327 Negro Painters, 349 Negro Periodicals, 351, 352 Negro Poetry, cause of rancor in, 323 Negro Population, in the United States,
103; in the World, 547; distribution of the, in the South, 86, 103 Negro Preachers, in the Northern states, 72-75; in the Southern states, 181; need of better, 590
Negro Press, 351-354 Negro Problem, nature of, 358; as viewed by the Negroes, 502; varies
Negro Professional Schools, 167, 170 Negro Proprietors, in agriculture, 86, 89; in business, 22, 94; in manufac- turing, 94
Negro Quarters, in the Northern states, 24, 32, 36, 37; in the Southern states, 96, 99; need of improving, 581 Negro Radicalism, consequences of, 573, 578
Negro Religion. See Religious Life. Negro Rule, in the Southern states, 495
Negro Schools, elementary, 149; com- parative cost of, 151-153; of higher learning, 162-168, 169-175; general estimate of, 176-177 Negro Sculptors, 350
Negro Servants, number of, 92; char- acter of, 93, 94 Negro Slavery, 6, 12
Negro Soldiers, causing trouble in camps, 190-192; general estimate of, 231-240. See Negro Troops. Negro Teachers, pay of, 159 Negro Tenants, in the South, 90 Negro Theological Schools, need of im- proving, 170
Negro Troops, in the Civil War, 13; in the World War, 199-242 Negro Women, as wives and mothers, 97, 98; virtue of, 100 Neo-Amalgamationists, 395 Neo-Gobineaus, 395
Newbold, N. C., on Negro rural schools, 156
Nordic Race, question of superiority of the, 395; as bearer of American cul- ture, 439; jealousy of the, respecting property rights, 494
Oakesmith, John, on race equality, 368; on culture contact as the means of progress, 429
Occupations, of the Negro, in the North, 17; in the South, 86 Odum, H. W., on Negro family ties, 99; on Negro crime, 116; on Negro traits, 404
Olmsted, books of, relating to the Negro, 267
Opportunities for the Negro, 588 Osborn, Henry F., on the importance of race, 375; on the relation of race- crossing to progress, 426, 427
Page, Thomas Nelson, on the Negro, 285
Patterson, Raymond, on the Negro problem, 270; on race intermixture in the South, 452; on education as the solution of the Negro problem, 498
Pearl, Raymond, on the probable ex- tinction of the Negro, 530 Peonage, in the South, 132-136 Pershing, General, on the operation of American troops in France, 193-198; on the service of the 92nd Division, 230 Peterkin, Julia, novel of, relating to the Negro, 301
Pickens, William, books by, 333 Piedmont Region, in the South, as af-
fecting the slavery question, 12 Politics, the Negro in, in the North, 46, and in the South, 103-109, 182 Price, Charles, Negro leader, 183, 504 Proctor, H. H., on the color line, 566 Psychological Aspects, of amalgama- tion, 417
Psychological Characteristics, of the Negro, 401
Psychological Laws, applicable to race- crossing, 417
Public Opinion, organization of, needed in the South, 583
Quatrefages, on the diminishing area of the Negro race, 526
Quillin, Frank, on race friction in Ohio, 43; on the color line, 45
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