Home Feedback Contents Search

Carter G. Woodson
Home Chapter XVIII, Pages 306-307 Chapter XVIII, Pages 308-309 Chapter XVIII, Pages 310-311 Chapter XVIII, Pages 312-313 Chapter XVIII, Pages 314-315 Chapter XVIII, Pages 316-317

 

Mary L.Brady, Ph. D

Home
Annie Jia
Anthony Santoro
Anthony Walton
B.D. Mayberry
Carl Fish
Carter G. Woodson
Casper Weinberger
Clarence McCartney
Debra Jackson
Ellen Gibson Wilson
Fanny Coppin Reminiscenses
James Seaton
John Weston
Kwame Ansah
Nancy R. Heisey
New & Old Books
New & Old News
Paul Salopek
Samuel P. Bates
Sandra Seaton
Thomas Jefferson
University Links
Who We Are
Donors Wanted

Links below to our relative sites for you:

Arts and Youth Generations

African Enterprise R&D

African Enterprise Matters

African Heritage Bible Supplement

Jeffersonian Notes, Nouns & Verbs

Jeffersonian Research

Mary Matters Now

Updated From Slavery

 

The Negro in Our History

Prior to the emergence of post-World War II revisions of African-American experiences in their own lives, ... men like Carter G. Woodson, a Harvard Ph.D were the foundation scholars upon which all predominantly Black institutions of higher education used for a historical reference about them and their history.  His most important work, 32 scholarly well-research chapters with 606 pages published with appendixes and a searchable index, ... is a must for scholars professing to outline African-American history.  

An excerpt of one of his chapters is posted herein to inform readers of significant others, not likely available by major publishers and institutions apparently determined to keep African-American scholarship out of the public domain of schools, teachers and students. 

Home ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 306-307 ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 308-309 ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 310-311 ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 312-313 ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 314-315 ] Chapter XVIII, Pages 316-317 ]

Send mail to editor@bradyresearch.com with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2008 Scholars and Writers
Last modified: 08/02/08