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Black Reconstruction in America: Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880: Bibliography

Black Reconstruction in America: Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880
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table of contents
  1. To the Reader
  2. I. The Black Worker
  3. II. The White Worker
  4. III. The Planter
  5. IV. The General Strike
  6. V. The Coming of the Lord
  7. VI. Looking Backward
  8. VII. Looking Forward
  9. VIII. Transubstantiation of a Poor White
  10. IX. The Price of Disaster
  11. X. The Black Proletariat in South Carolina
  12. XI. The Black Proletariat in Mississippi and Louisiana
  13. XII. The White Proletariat in Alabama, Georgia, and Florida
  14. XIII. The Duel for Labor Control on Border and Frontier
  15. XIV. Counter-Revolution of Property
  16. XV. Founding the Public School
  17. XVI. Back Toward Slavery
  18. XVII. The Propaganda of History
  19. Bibliography (sorted by Du Bois)
    1. Propaganda
    2. Historians (fair to indifferent)
    3. Historians (sympathetic)
    4. Monographs
    5. Answers
    6. Lives
    7. Negro Historians
    8. Unpublished Theses
    9. Government Reports
    10. Other Reports

Bibliography

Standard—Anti-Negro

(These authors believe the Negro to be sub-human and congenitally unfitted for citizenship and the suffrage.)

Burgess, John W., Reconstruction and the Constitution, 1866-1876.

Coulter, E. Merton, Civil War and Reconstruction in Kentucky.

Davis, William W., The Civil War and Reconstruction in Florida.

Dunning, William A., Reconstruction, Political and Economic.

Eckenrode, F. Hamilton, Political History of Virginia During Reconstruction.

Fertig, James Walter, The Secession and Reconstruction of Tennessee.

Ficklen, John R., History of Reconstruction in Louisiana.

Fleming, Walter F., Civil War and Reconstruction in Alabama.

Fleming, Walter F., Documentary History of Reconstruction, 1906, 1907.

Hamilton, Joseph G. de R., Reconstruction in North Carolina.

Hollis, John Porter, The Early Period of Reconstruction in South Carolina.

Lonn, Ella, Reconstruction in Louisiana after 1868.

Ramsdell, Charles W., Reconstruction in Texas.

Rhodes, James F., History of United States from the Compromise of 1850.

Scott, Eben G., Reconstruction During the Civil War.

Staples, Thomas S., Reconstruction in Arkansas.

Studies in Southern History and Politics. Inscribed to William Archibald

Dunning.

Carpet-Baggers in the United States Senate. By C. Mildred Thompson.

The Literary Movement for Secession. By Ulrich B. Phillips.

Negro Suffrage in the South. By W. Roy Smith.

Some Phases of Educational History in the South Since 1865. By William K. Boyd.

Southern Legislation in Respect to Freedmen, 1865-1866. By J. G. de Roulhac Hamilton.

The Federal Enforcement Acts. By William Watson Davis.

The New South, Economic and Social. By Holland Thompson.

Grant’s Southern Policy. By Edwin C. Woolley.

Taylor, Richard, Destruction and Reconstruction.

Thompson, Clara M., Reconstruction in Georgia, Economic, Social, Political, 1805-1872.

Wooley, Edwin C., The Reconstruction of Georgia.

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