CONTENTS OF VOLUME VIII


[No. 1. January, 1923]

L. P. Jackson: The Educational Efforts of the Freedmen's Bureau and Freedmen's Aid Societies in South Carolina, 1862-1872[1]
G. R. Wilson: The Religion of the American Negro Slave: His Attitude toward Life and Death[41]
G. Smith Wormley: Prudence Crandall[72]
Documents:[81]
Extracts from Newspapers and Magazines.
Anna Murray-Douglass—My Mother as I Recall Her.
Frederick Douglass in Ireland.
Book Reviews:[108]
Bragg's The History of the Afro-American Group of the Episcopal Church; Haynes's The Trend of the Races; Hammond's In the Vanguard of a Race; The Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago.
Notes:[115]
Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History[116]

[No. 2. April, 1923]

J. W. Bell: The Teaching of Negro History[123]
Paul W. L. Jones: Negro Biography[128]
George W. Brown: Haiti and the United States[134]
H. N. Sherwood: Paul Cuffe[153]
Documents:[230]
The Will of Paul Cuffe.
Book Reviews:[233]
Wiener's Africa and the Discovery of America; Detweiler's The Negro Press in the United States; McGregor's The Disruption of Virginia; Johnston's A Comparative Study of the Bantu and Semi-Bantu Languages.
Notes:[243]

[No. 3. July, 1923]

T. R. Davis: Negro Servitude in the United States[247]
Gordon B. Hancock: Three Elements of African Culture[284]
J. C. Hartzell: Methodism and the Negro in the United States[301]
William Renwick Riddell: Notes on the Slave in Nouvelle France[316]
Documents:[331]
Banishment of the Free People of Color from Cincinnati.
First Protest against Slavery in the United States.
A Negro Pioneer in the West.
Concerning the Origin of Wilberforce.
Communications:[338]

A Letter from Mr. J. W. Cromwell bearing on the Negro in West Virginia.

A Letter from Dr. James S. Russell giving Information about Peter George Morgan of Petersburg, Virginia.

A Letter from Captain A. B. Spingarn about early Education of the Negroes in New York.

Book Reviews:[346]
Jones's Piney Woods and its Story; Johnson's American Negro Poetry; Rhodes's The McKinley and Roosevelt Administrations; Gummere's Journal of John Woolman.
Notes:[351]
The Spring Conference[353]

[No. 4. October, 1923]

Albert Parry: Abram Hannibal, the Favorite of Peter the Great[359]
Alrutheus A. Taylor: The Movement of the Negroes from the East to the Gulf States from 1830 to 1850[367]
Elizabeth Ross Haynes: Negroes in Domestic Service in the United States[384]
Documents:[443]
Documents and Comments on Benefit of Clergy as applied to Slaves, by Wm. K. Boyd.
Communications:[448]

A Letter from A. P. Vrede giving an Account of the Achievements of the Rev. Cornelius Winst Blyd of Dutch Guiana.

A Letter from Captain T. G. Steward throwing Light on various Phases of Negro History.

Book Reviews:[455]
Frobenius's Das Unbekannte Africa; Oberholtzer's History of the United States since the Civil War; Lucas's Partition of Africa; Jackson's Boy's Life of Booker T. Washington.
Notes:[465]
Annual Report of the Director for the Year 1922-23[466]

THE JOURNAL
OF
NEGRO HISTORY


Vol. VIII., No. 1 January, 1923.


THE EDUCATIONAL EFFORTS OF THE FREEDMEN'S BUREAU AND FREEDMEN'S AID SOCIETIES IN SOUTH CAROLINA, 1862-1872[1]