CollectionsMasterpieces of Negro eloquence; the best speeches delivered by the Negro from the days of slavery to the present time; edited by Alice Moore Dunbar.
Masterpieces of Negro eloquence; the best speeches delivered by the Negro from the days of slavery to the present time; edited by Alice Moore Dunbar.
Content: Contents (cont.): --James E. Shepard: Is the game worth the candle?--Robert Russa Moton: Some elements necessary to race development.--George William Cook: The two seals.--J. Milton Waldron: A solution of the race problem.--J. Francis Gregory: The social bearings of the fifth commandment.--William C. Jason: Life's morn.--William H. Lewis: Abraham Lincoln.--Alice M. Dunbar: David Livingstone.--Kelly Miller: Education for manhood.--Robert T. Jones: On making a life.--Ernest Lyon: Emancipation and racial advancement.--John C. Dancy: The future of the Negro church.--W. Ashbie Hawkins: The Negro lawyer.--W.E.B. Dubois: The training of Negroes for social reform.
Content: Contents: Prince Saunders: The people of Hayti and a plan of emigration.-- James McCune Smith: Touissaint L'Ouverture and the Haytian revolution.--Hilary Teague: Liberia.--Frederick Douglass: What to the slave is the Fourth of July; On the unveiling of the Lincoln Monument.--Charles H. Langston: Should colored men be subject to the pains and penalties of the Fugitive slave law?--Richard T. Greener: Young men to the front.--Robert Browne Elliot: The Civil rights bill.--John R. Lynch: Civil rights and social equality.-- Alexander Dumas, fils: On the occasion of taking his seat in the French Academy.--John M. Langston: Centennial anniversary of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society.--Henry Highland Garnet: A memorial discourse.--George L. Ruffin: Crispus Attucks.--P.B.S. Pinchback: Address during presidential campaign of 1880.--Alexander Crummell: The black woman of the South.--Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin: An open letter to the Educational League of Georgia.--James Madison Vance: In the wake of the coming ages.--Booker T. Washsington: At the opening of the Cotton States and International Exposition, Atlanta: Robert Gould Shaw.