LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

FACING
PAGE
Whites and Negroes Leaving Twenty-ninth Street Beach[iii]
Crowds Armed with Bricks Searching for a Negro[12]
Whites Stoning Negro to Death[12]
The Arrival of the Police[12]
Scenes from Fire in Immigrant Neighborhood[16], [22], [28]
Negroes Leaving Wrecked House in Riot Zone[16]
Wrecked House of a Negro Family in Riot Zone[28]
Negroes and Whites Leaving the Stock Yards[28]
Negroes Being Escorted to Safety Zone[34]
Searching Negroes for Arms in Police Station[34]
Negroes Buying Provisions Brought into Their Neighborhood[40]
The Militia and Negroes on Friendly Terms[40]
Negro Stock Yards Workers Receiving Wages[44]
Buying Ice from Freight Car[44]
Milk Was Distributed for the Babies[48]
Provisions Supplied by the Red Cross[48]
Propaganda Literature Used by "Abyssinians"[60]
After the "Abyssinian Murders"[64]
Typical Plantation Homes in the South[80]
Negro Family Just Arrived in Chicago[92]
Negro Church in the South[92]
Racial Contacts among Children[108]
A Savings Bank in the Negro Residence Area[112]
Children at Work in a Community Garden[112]
Damage Done by a Bomb[128]
A Negro Choral Society[136]
Olivet Baptist Church[140]
St. Mark's M.E. Church[140]
Trinity M.E. Church and Community House[146]
South Park M.E. Church[146]
Pilgrim Baptist Church[146]
The Chicago Urban League Building[150]
The South Side Community Service Building[150]
Homes Owned by Negroes on South Park Avenue[188]
An Abandoned Residence in the Prairie Avenue Block[188]
Homes Occupied and in Part Owned by Negroes[194]
Homes Occupied by Negroes on Forest Avenue[202]
Rear View of Houses Occupied by Negroes on Federal Street[202]
Moseley School[242]
Farren School[248]
Wendell Phillips High School[252]
A Typical School Yard Playground in a White Neighborhood[276]
Beutner Playground[280]
Field House Equipment at Beutner Playground[280]
Negro Athletic Team in City-Wide Meet[280]
Friendly Rivalry[280]
Armour Square Recreation Center[286]
Beutner Playground[286]
A Negro Amateur Baseball Team[292]
Negro Women and Girls Employed in a Lamp-Shade Factory[378]
Negro Women Employed on Power Machines[380]
Negro Women and Girls in a Large Hat-making Concern[384]
Officers of the Railway Men's Benevolent Industrial Association[410]