Access to the full content is only available to members of institutions that have purchased access. If you belong to such an institution, please log in or find out more about how to order.


Feminist Black Nationalism


Volume Contents

  • content locked
    Front Matter
  • Emigration and Colonization
    • content locked
      104
      “Fugitive Slaves in Canada,” The Provincial Freeman 25 March 1854. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      105
      “The Humbug of Reform.” The Provincial Freeman 27 May 1854. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      106
      “Dear Freeman,” The Provincial Freeman 20 January 1855. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      107
      “A Voice of Thanks,” The Liberator 29 November 1861. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      108
      “To Zillah” and “Reply to Woodby,” The Liberator 18 August 1832. By Sarah Mapps (“Zillah”) Douglass
    • content locked
      109
      “A General View of Hayti [Letter from J. Theodore Holly],” The Liberator 19 June 1863. By Sarah Mapps (“Zillah”) Douglass
    • content locked
      110
      “Mrs. Frances E. Watkins Harper on the War and the President’s Colonization Scheme,” Christian Recorder 27 September 1862. By Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    • content locked
      111
      “Thoughts on Colonization,” Pacific Appeal 29 November 1862. By Elizabeth J. Jennings
    • content locked
      112
      “We Will Not Go,” Pacific Appeal 13 December 1862. By Elizabeth J. Jennings
    • content locked
      113
      “American Slavery and African Coloni- sation,” The Anti-Slavery Advocate 35(2)  (1  November  1859): pp. 282–283. By Sarah Parker Remond
    • content locked
      114
      “Difficulties of Colonization,” Woman’s Era 1(1) (March 1894): p. 9. By Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin
    • content locked
      115
      “Lecture by Sojourner Truth,” National Anti- Slavery Standard 10 December 1853. By Sojourner Truth
    • content locked
      116
      “Iola’s Southern Field,” The New York Age 19 Novem- ber 1892. By Ida B. Wells-Barnett
    • content locked
      117
      “Afro-Americans and Africa,” A.M.E. Church Review July 1892: pp. 40–45. By Ida B. Wells-Barnett
  • Education
    • content locked
      118
      “Female Education,” The Liberator 7 July 1832. By Beatrice
    • content locked
      119
      “The Christian Teacher the Hope of Negro America,“ The United Negro: His Problems and His Progress. Containing the Addresses and Proceedings of the Negro Young Peo- ple’s Christian and Educational Congress, Held August 6–11, 1902, eds I. Garland Penn and J.W.E. Bowen, Atlanta: D.E. Luther, 1902, pp. 428–429. By Mrs. Charlotte Hawkins Brown
    • content locked
      120
      “What Has Education Done for Colored Women,” Our Woman’s Number. The Voice of the Negro 1(7) (July 1904): pp. 294–298. By Mrs Josephine B. Bruce
    • content locked
      121
      “Industrial Education – Will it Solve the Negro Problem,” Colored American Magazine 7(4) (March 1904): pp. 188–190. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      122
      “National Training School for Women and Girls,” Solicitation for support, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      123
      “Letter to Emmett J. Scott re National Training School for Women and Girls,” 14 May 1908, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      124
      “Letter to Booker T. Washington re National Training School for Women and Girls,” 14 May 1908, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      125
      “Letter to Booker T. Washington re National Training School for Women and Girls,” 30 May 1908, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      126
      “Letter to Booker T. Washington re National Training School for Women and Girls,” 2 September 1912, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      127
      “Our Educational Interest,” New National Era 12 June 1873. By Katie S. Campbell
    • content locked
      128
      Fourth Annual Report of the Colored Woman’s League of Washington, D.C., For the Year Ending January 1, 1897, Washington, D.C.: F.D. Smith Co, 1897. By Colored Woman’s League
    • content locked
      129
      “The Higher Education of Women,” The South- land 2(2) (April 1891): pp. 186–202. By Anna Julia Cooper
    • content locked
      130
      “Sympathy for Miss Crandall,” Emancipator 20 July 1833. By Sarah Mapps (“Zillah”) Douglass
    • content locked
      131
      “Life on the Sea Islands. Part I,” The Atlantic Monthly (May 1864): pp. 587–596. By Charlotte Forten
    • content locked
      132
      “Life on the Sea Islands. Part II,” The Atlantic Monthly (June 1864): pp. 666–676. By Charlotte Forten
    • content locked
      133
      “Letter from Miss Watkins,” Anti- Slavery Bugle 21 May 1859. By Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    • content locked
      134
      “Letter from Ellen Watkins,” Anti-Slavery Bugle 9 July 1859. By Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    • content locked
      135
      “The American Colored Woman,” The Voice of the Negro 2(10) (October 1905): pp. 692–694. By Anna H. Jones
    • content locked
      136
      “Notes to Girls No. 2,” The People’s Advocate 27 November 1880. By Joyce
    • content locked
      137
      “What Are the Causes of the Great Mortality Among the Negroes in the Cities of the South, and How is That Mortality to be Lessened?” Twentieth Century Ne- gro Literature, or a Cyclopedia of Thought on the Vital Topics Relat- ing to the American Negro by One Hundred of America’s Greatest Negroes, ed. D.W. Culp, J.L. Nichols, 1902, pp. 198–202. By Adella Hunt Logan
    • content locked
      138
      “Our Woman’s Department. Educa- tion and Marriage,” The New York Freeman 30 October 1836. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      139
      “Reply”  and  “Correspondence,”  The  Liberator 13 August 1836. By Susan Paul
    • content locked
      140
      “Miss  Paul’s  Juvenile  Concert,”  The  Colored  American 4 March 1837. By Susan Paul
    • content locked
      141
      Report of the Association for the Promotion of Child Training in the South. September 1899–May 1 1900, 7pp.
    • content locked
      142
      “Afro-American  Women  as  Educa- tors,” Women of Distinction: Remarkable Works and Invincible Characters, ed. Lawson A. Scruggs, Raleigh, N.C.: L.A. Scruggs, 1893, pp. 309–319. By Josephine Silone-Yates
    • content locked
      143
      “What Role is the Educated Negro Woman to Play in the Uplifting of her Race?” symposium, Twentieth Century Negro Literature, or a Cyclopedia of Thought on the Vital Topics Re- lating to the American Negro by One Hundred of America’s Greatest Negroes, ed. D.W. Culp, J.L. Nichols, 1902 pp. 166–185. By Sprague; Rosetta Douglass; Mary Church Terrell; Rosa Bowser; Sarah Dudley Pettey
    • content locked
      144
      “Mrs. Steward’s Essays,” The Liberator 7 January 1832. By Maria Stewart
    • content locked
      145
      “Note forwarding Nannie Helen Burroughs Letter of 14 May 1908 to Margaret Murray Washington. re National Training School for Women and Girls,” 28 May 1908, Booker T. Washington Papers, Library of Congress. By Booker T. Washington
    • content locked
      146
      “Higher Education for Women,” The People’s Advocate 12 April 1884. By Josephine Turpin Washington
    • content locked
      147
      “Industrial Education – Will it Solve the Negro Problem,” Colored American Magazine 7(7) (July 1904): pp. 491–495. By Fannie Barrier Williams
  • Labor and Employment
    • content locked
      148
      “The Colored Woman and Her Relation to the Domestic Problem,” The United Negro: His Problems and His Progress. Containing the Addresses and Proceedings of the Negro Young People’s Christian and Educational Congress, Held August 6–11, 1902, eds. I. Garland Penn and J.W.E. Bowen. Atlanta: D.E. Luther, 1902, pp. 324–329. By Miss Nannie H. Burroughs
    • content locked
      149
      “Report on Woman’s Labor,” Proceedings of the Colored National Labor Convention, Held In Washington, D.C. December 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th, 1869, Washington, D.C.: Printed at the Office of The New Era, 1870, pp. 21–22. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      150
      “Letters to the People – No. 1. Trade for Our Boys,” New National Era 21 March 1872. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      151
      “Letters to the People – No. 2. Trade for Our Boys,” New National Era 11 April 1872. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      152
      “Colored Women as Wage-Earners,” The South- ern Workman 28 August 1899: pp. 295–298. By Anna Julia Cooper
    • content locked
      153
      “Two Million Negro Women at Work,” The Southern Workman 51(2) (February 1922): pp. 64–72. By Elizabeth Boss Haynes
    • content locked
      154
      “Employment of Colored Women in Chicago,” The Crisis 1(3) (January 1911): pp. 24–25. By Addie Hunton
    • content locked
      155
      “The Colored Woman in Industry,” The Crisis 17(1) (November 1918): pp. 12–17. By Mary E. Jackson
    • content locked
      156
      “Woman’s Development in Business,” The Colored American Magazine (March 1902): pp. 323–326. By Alberta Moore-Smith
    • content locked
      157
      “Our Woman’s Department…Employment for Women,” New York Freeman 16 October 1886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      158
      “Our Woman’s Department…Self-supporting Women. Op- portunities of Self-supporting Open to Women of Color,” The New York Freeman 6 February p886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      159
      “More Slavery at the South.” The Independent 25 January 1912: pp. 196–220. By A Negro Nurse
    • content locked
      160
      “Mrs. Parson’s Lecture [I am an anarchist…],” The Kansas City Journal 21 December 1886. By Mrs Lucy Parsons
    • content locked
      161
      “Mrs. Lucy Parsons,” Omaha Republican 22 December 1886. By Mrs Lucy Parsons
    • content locked
      162
      “Lucy Parson’s Screed,” The New York Herald 29 August 1887. By Mrs Lucy Parsons
    • content locked
      163
      “Lecture. Delivered at the Franklin Hall, Boston, September 21st, 1832. By Mrs. Maria W. Stewart,” The Liberator 17 November 1832. By Maria Stewart
    • content locked
      164
      “What it Means to Be Colored in the Capital of the United States,” The Independent 24 January 1907: pp. 181– 186. By Mary Church Terrell
    • content locked
      165
      “Afro-American Women and Their Work,” AME Church Review April 1895: pp. 477–499. By Katherine D. Tillman
    • content locked
      166
      “Paying Professions for Colored Girls,” The Voice of the Negro 4(1–2) (January–February 1907): pp. 54–56. By Katherine D. Tillman
    • content locked
      167
      “The Problem of Employment for Negro Women,” Hampton Negro Conference 7 (1903): pp. 40–47. By Fannie Barrier Williams
    • content locked
      168
      —— “A Northern Negro’s Autobiography,” The Independent 14 July 1904: pp. 91–96. By Fannie Barrier Williams
    • content locked
      169
      “The Woman’s Part in a Man’s Business,” The Voice of the Negro 1(11) (November 1904): pp. 543–547. By Fannie Barrier Williams
    • content locked
      170
      “Colored  Women  of  Chicago,”  The  Southern  Workman (October 1914): pp. 564–566. By Fannie Barrier Williams
    • content locked
      171
      “The Ways of the World. Woman’s Work and Woman’s Wages,” The New York Age 9 March 1889. By Florence Williams
  • Journalism
    • content locked
      172
      “Number Two,” The Provincial Freeman 25 March 1854. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      173
      “Saturday, July 15. I did not send to you the first part of this ‘missive…,” The Provincial Freeman 22 July 1854. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      174
      “Dear ‘C’,” The Provincial Freeman 21 October 1854. By Mary Ann Shadd Cary
    • content locked
      175
      “Prospectus to Our Woman’s Department,” The Southland 1(3) (May 1890): pp. 159–162. By Anna Julia Cooper
    • content locked
      176
      “Women in Journalism,” The Atchison Blade 1(9) (10 September 1892): p. 1. By Carrie Langston
    • content locked
      177
      “Our   Woman’s   Depart- ment…Women and Journalism,” New York Freeman 8 May 1886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      178
      “Our Woman’s Department…Women as Journalists,” New York Freeman 5 June 1886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      179
      “Our Woman’s Department…Women’s National Press Asso- ciation,” New York Freeman 25 December 1886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      180
      “Editorial,” Woman’s Era 2(1) (April 1895): pp. 8–9. By Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin
  • Migration
    • content locked
      181
      “Children of the Circle,” Charities 15(1) (7 October 1905): pp. 81–83. By Helen Titus Emerson
    • content locked
      182
      “A Social Settlement in South Washing- ton,” Charities 15(1) (7 October 1905): pp. 64–66. By Sarah Collins Fernandis
    • content locked
      183
      “The Colored Young Women’s Christian Associ- ation,” The Colored American Magazine (February 1906): pp. 126– 129. By Betty G. Francis
    • content locked
      184
      “The Negro Church and Its Social Work – St. Mark’s,” Charities 15(1) (7 October 1905): pp. 75–76. By Maude K. Griffin
    • content locked
      185
      “Women’s Clubs: Caring for Young Women,” The Crisis 2(3) (July 1911): pp. 121–122. By Mrs W. A. Hunton
    • content locked
      186
      “Southern Girls in the North: The Problem of Their Protection,” Charities 13(25) (18 March 1905): p. 2. By Frances A. Kellor
    • content locked
      187
      —— “Assisted Emigration  From  the  South,”  Charities  15(1) (7 October 1905): pp. 1–14. By Frances A. Kellor
    • content locked
      188
      “Associations for Protection of Colored Women,” The Colored American Magazine (December 1905): pp. 695–699. By Frances A. Kellor
    • content locked
      189
      “Some of the Dangers Confronting South- ern Girls in the North,” Hampton Negro Conference 2 (July 1898): pp. 62–69. By Mrs V. E. Matthews
    • content locked
      190
      “Our Woman’s Department…A Word of Counsel,” New York Freeman 13 February 1886. By N. F. Mossell
    • content locked
      191
      “The Negro Home in New York,” Charities 15(1) (7 October 1905): pp. 25–30. By Mary White Ovington
    • content locked
      192
      “A New Opportunity for Women,” The Colored Amer- ican Magazine (January 1906): pp. 26–29. By E. M. Rhodes
    • content locked
      193
      “The Protection of Girls Who Travel: A National Movement,” The Colored American Magazine (August 1907): pp. 114–115. By E. M. Rhodes
    • content locked
      194
      “The Need of Social Settlement Work for the City Negro,” The Southern Workman 33 (September 1904): pp. 501–506. By Fannie Barrier Williams