Footnote 184: [(return)]
Bacon: Statistics, 13.
Footnote 185: [(return)]
Delany.
Footnote 186: [(return)]
See "The F.M.C.'s of Louisiana," by P.F. de Gournay, Lippincott's Magazine, April, 1894; and "Black Masters," by Calvin Dill Wilson, North American Review, November, 1905.
Footnote 187: [(return)]
See Stone: "The Negro in the South," in The South in the Building of the Nation, X, 180.
Footnote 188: [(return)]
Note broadside (Charleston, 1861) accessible in Special Library of Boston Public Library as Document No. 9 in 20th Cab. 3. 7.
Footnote 189: [(return)]
W.E. Dodd: Expansion and Conflict, Volume 3 of "Riverside History of the United States," Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, 1915, p. 208.
Footnote 190: [(return)]
Turner: The Negro in Pennsylvania, 140.
Footnote 191: [(return)]
For interesting examples see C.G. Woodson: The Education of the Negro prior to 1861.
Footnote 192: [(return)]
The Condition, Elevation, Emigration, and Destiny of the Colored People of the United States, Politically Considered, Philadelphia, 1852, P. 45.
Footnote 193: [(return)]
Kelly Miller: "The Background of the Negro Physician," Journal of Negro History, April, 1916, quoting in part Woodson: The Education of the Negro prior to 1861.