ILLUSTRATIONS

An Old Black “Mammy” with White Child[Frontispiece]
FACING PAGE
Fac-similes of Certain Atlanta Newspapers of September 22, 1906[7]
James H. Wallace[10]
R. R. Wright[10]
H. O. Tanner[10]
Rev. H. H. Proctor[10]
Dr. W. F. Penn[10]
George W. Cable[10]
Showing how the Colour Line Was Drawn by the Saloons at Atlanta, Georgia[35]
Interior of a Negro Working-man’s Home, Atlanta, Georgia[46]
Interior of a Negro Home of the Poorest Sort in Indianapolis[46]
Map Showing the Black Belt[66]
Where White Mill Hands Live in Atlanta, Georgia[71]
Where some of the Poorer Negroes Live in Atlanta, Georgia[71]
A “Poor White” Family[74]
A Model Negro School[74]
Old and New Cabins for Negro Tenants on the Brown Plantation[85]
Cane Syrup Kettle[92]
Chain-gang Workers on the Roads[92]
A Type of the Country Chain-gang Negro[99]
A Negro Cabin with Evidences of Abundance[110]
Off for the Cotton Fields[110]
Ward in a Negro Hospital at Philadelphia[135]
Studio of a Negro Sculptress[135]
A Negro Magazine Editor’s Office in Philadelphia[138]
A “Broom Squad” of Negro Boys[138]
A Type of Negro Girl Typesetter in Atlanta[164]
Mulatto Girl Student[164]
Miss Cecelia Johnson[164]
Mrs. Booker T. Washington[173]
Mrs. Robert H. Terrell[173]
Negroes Lynched by Being Burned Alive at Statesboro, Georgia[179]
Negroes of the Criminal Type[179]
Court House and Bank in the Public Square at Huntsville, Alabama[190]
Charles W. Chesnutt[215]
Dr. Booker T. Washington[218]
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois[225]
Colonel James Lewis[240]
W. T. Vernon[240]
Ralph W. Tyler[240]
J. Pope Brown[252]
James K. Vardaman[252]
Senator Jeff Davis[252]
Governor Hoke Smith[252]
Senator B. R. Tillman[252]
Ex-Governor W. J. Northen[252]
James H. Dillard[275]
Edwin A. Alderman[275]
A. M. Soule[275]
D. F. Houston[275]
George Foster Peabody[275]
P. P. Claxton[275]
S. C. Mitchell[286]
Judge Emory Speer[286]
Edgar Gardner Murphy[286]
Dr. H. B. Frissell[286]
R. C. Ogden[286]
J. Y. Joyner[286]

PART ONE

THE NEGRO IN THE SOUTH

CHAPTER I