Race Relations in Virginia, 1870-1902University of Virginia Press, 1961 - 164 páginas The work which follows is an acceptance of the invitation to explore the Woodward thesis further, and to test its validity in the case of one specific Southern state. A final critical evaluation of it appears in the conclusion. The main body of the following study is also more generally a history of race relations in Virginia, 1870-1902. Thus, it is intended to be useful as more than just a selection of evidence relative to a particular thesis. -- Preface. |
Contenido
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
Political Revolution 18791883 | 16 |
Reaction and the Triumph of OneParty Rule 1884 | 39 |
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amendment Annual Reports Barringer Blair century civil rights Conservatives court Danville debt declared Delegates Democratic party disfranchisement Disfranchisement in Virginia Duke University Eckenrode economic election fraud Funder ginia Governor Hampton Institute Harrisonburg History of Appalachian History of Virginia Howard University Howard University Studies Ibid John Journal of Negro jury legislation legislature Lynchburg M. A. Thesis Howard McDanel mixed schools Morton Negro Disfranchisement Negro History Negro in Virginia Negro rule Negro schools Negro teachers Negro vote November Papers percent Petersburg poll tax population Populist public education race racial railroads Readjuster Movement Readjuster party Reconstruction of Virginia Republican party Richmond Daily Dispatch Ruffner School Report segregation Senate separate schools social equality Southern suffrage Superintendent Taylor Thesis Howard University tion University of Virginia Virginia Constitutional Convention Virginia Negro Virginia Politics Virginia Since 1865 voters Walton Act Whig white and black white supremacy white teachers white Virginians William Mahone Woodward