Reports of Committees of Senate of the United States for the First and Second Sessions of the Forty-Sixth Congress, 1879-80, VII, pp. iii-xiii.
74
Report of the Committee of the Senate of the United States for the First and Second Sessions of the Forty-Sixth Congress, 1879-80, VII, pp. viii-xxv.
75
Semmes, John H. B. Latrobe, pp. 140-142.
76
The African Repository, X, 104, and XII, 18.
77
Coffin, Reminiscences, pp. 139-144.
78
This personal narrative was secured from B.F. Grant, of Washington, D. C., by Miss Mary L. Mason.
79
This address was delivered before the American Sociological Society convened in annual session at Richmond in 1918.
80
"The City: Suggestions for the Investigation of Human Behavior in the City Environment," American Journal of Sociology, V, 44, March, 1915, p. 589.
81
Rivers, "Ethnological Analysis of Cultures," Nature, Vol. I, 87, 1911.
82
W. J. McGee, Piratical Acculturation.
83
There is or was a few years ago near Mobile a colony of Africans who were brought to the United States as late as 1860. It is true, also, that Major R. R. Moton, who has succeeded Booker T. Washington as head of Tuskegee Institute, still preserves the story that was told him by his grandmother of the way in which his great-grandfather was brought from Africa in a slave ship.
84
Domestic Manners and Social Condition of the White, Coloured and Negro Population of the West Indies, by Mrs. Carmichael, Vol. I. (London, Wittaker, Treacher and Co.), p. 251.
"Native Africans do not at all like it to be supposed that they retain the customs of their country and consider themselves wonderfully civilized by being transplanted from Africa to the West Indies. Creole Negroes invariably consider themselves superior people, and lord it over the native Africans."
85
The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts was founded in 1701 and the efforts to Christianize the Negro were carried on with a great deal of zeal and with some success.
86
Journal of Negro History, Vol. I, 1916, p. 70.
87
Afro-American Folksongs: A Study in Racial and National Music, by Henry Edward Krehbiel. (New York and London, G. Schirmer), p. 37. From a letter of Lafcadio Hearne.
88
Army Life in a Black Regiment, by Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Boston, Fields, Osgood and Co., 1870.
89
Krehbiel, Afro-American Folksongs, p. 16.
90
Studies in History, Economics, and Public Law, edited by The Faculty of Political Science of Columbia University, Vol. 37, New York, 1910, No. 3—Social and Mental Traits of the Negro, by Howard W. Odum, Ph.D., p. 91.
91
Krehbiel, Afro-American Folksongs.
92
Jonge, Johan Karel Jakob de, De Oorsprong van Neerland's Bezittingen op de Kust van Guinea, p. 16.
93
Gramberg, J. S. G., Schetsen van Afrika's Westcust, p. 12.
94
Jonge, Oorsprong van Neerland's Bezittingen, pp. 18, 19, 20.
95
In return for this concession the Dutch evacuated Brazil. Dumont, J., Corps Universel Diplomatique du Droit des Gens, VI, part 2, p. 367.
96
De Gids, "Derde Serie," Zesde Jaargang, IV, 385.
97
Hakluyt, Richard, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, & Discourses of the English Nation, VI, 123, 124.