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The next annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History will convene in Washington, D. C., next November. All institutions interested in the teaching of Negro life and history will be invited to send representatives to this meeting to confer as to the best methods of prosecuting studies in this neglected field. The session will cover two days to be devoted to addresses by the best thinkers of the country. The official program will appear within a few weeks.

The illustrated textbook in Negro history by Dr. C. G. Woodson has been further delayed by disturbances among the printers. It is hoped that it will appear before the end of the year.

A. B. Caldwell, of Atlanta, has published Volume III (South Carolina edition) of what he calls the History of the American Negro.

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IV. Lower Canada

V. Upper Canada, Early Period

VI. The Fugitive Slave in Upper Canada
VII. Slavery in the Maritime Provinces

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Wiener's Africa and the Discovery of America; Johnston's A compara-
tive Study of the Bantu and the Semi-Bantu Languages; Rhodes 's
History of the United States from Hayes to McKinley; Work's The
Negro Year Book, 1918-1919.

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THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF NEGRO LIFE AND HISTORY, INCORPORATED

41 NORTH QUEEN STREET, Lancaster, Pa. 1216 YOU STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C.

$2.00 A YEAR

60 CENTS A COPY

FOREIGN SUBSCRIPTIONS, 25 CENTS EXTRA

BOUND VOLUMES, $3.00 by Mail

COPYRIGHT 1920 BY THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF NEGRO LIFE AND HISTORY Entered as second-class matter January 1, 1916, at the Post Office at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861

The History of the Education of the Colored People of the United States from the Beginning of Slavery to the Civil War

BY

CARTER GODWIN WOODSON, Ph. D.

(HARVARD)

460 pp. $2.00; by mail $2.15

"This book is neither a controversial treatise on Negro education nor a study of recent problems. Dr. Woodson has given us something new. He has by scientific treatment amassed numerous facts to show the persistent strivings of ante-bellum Negroes anxious to be enlightened. What they accomplished is all but marvelous."

The author aims to put the student of history in touch with the great movements which effected the uplift of the Negroes, 'and to determine the causes which finally reduced many of them to heathenism.

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The titles of the chapters are: "Introduction," "Religion with Letters," "Education as a Right of Man,' "Actual Education,' "Better Beginnings," "Educating the Urban Negro," "The Reaction," "Religion without Letters,' Learning in Spite of Opposition," "Educating Negroes Transplanted to Free Soil," "Higher Education," Vocational Training," Education at Public Expense." In the appendix are found a number of valuable documents. The volume contains also a critical bibliography and a helpful index.

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OPINIONS

"I like it very much. You seem to have loosened up on your style a bit and you have done an excellent piece of research. I hope that your book will have a good sale."—Edward Channing, McLean Professor of Ancient and Modern History Harvard University.

"It seems clear to me that you have made a substantial contribution to the subject and I know I shall profit by it."-Frederick J. Turner, Professor of History, Harvard University.

"I thought at first it would be out of my line, but on turning its pages, I discovered that it may well hold the attention of everybody with an intelligent interest in the colored people. You write easily and flexibly and have certainly compiled important material in the true spirit of scholarship. I congratulate you sincerely."-Ferdinand Schevill, Professor of History in the University of Chicago.

"It seems to me that you have taken a field of which little has been known and developed in It a most interesting and valuable book. I am glad to have it in my library and rejoice that I have had the privilege of some personal acquaintance with the author."-Francis W. Shepardson, Professor of History in the University of Chicago.

"I am delighted with the thoroughly scholarly way in which it has been put together and I know enough about the subject to appreciate what it has cost you in time and effort to perform this work."Dr. Robert E. Park.

"It is the story of the effort on the part of certain agencies to educate the Negro. It is above all the story of the strivings of the Negro himself under tremendous difficulties and opposition, to learn things, to know more, to be more. Apart from the fund of information on the subject which Dr. Woodson has here offered, the supreme point of this study is the unconquerable will of the Negro. The book, as a whole, is an illumination of the recent development of education among the colored people."-The Washington Star.

THIS BOOK MAY BE OBTAINED FROM

THE JOURNAL OF NEGRO HISTORY

1216 You Street, Northwest

Washington, D. C.

Agents Wanted

THE JOURNAL

OF

NEGRO HISTORY

VOL. V-JULY, 1920-No. 3

THE SLAVE IN CANADA

PREFACE

When engaged in a certain historical inquiry, I found occasion to examine the magnificent collection of the Canadian Archives at Ottawa, a collection which ought not to be left unexamined by anyone writing on Canada. In that inquiry I discovered the proceedings in the case of Chloe Cooley set out in Chapter V of the text. This induced me to make further researches on the subject of slavery in Upper Canada. The result was incorporated in a paper, The Slave in Upper Canada, read before the Royal Society of Canada in May 1919, and subsequently published in the JOURNAL OF NEGRO HISTORY for October, 1919. Some of the Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada and the editor of the JOURNAL OF NEGRO HISTORY have asked me to expand the paper. The present work is the result.

I have spent many happy hours in the Canadian Archives and have read all and copied most of the documents referred to in this book; but I cannot omit to thank the officers at Ottawa for their courtesy in forwarding my labor of love, in furnishing me with copies, photographic and otherwise, and in unearthing interesting facts. It will not be considered invidious if I mention William Smith, Esq., I.S.O. and Miss Smillie, M.A., as specially helpful. My thanks are also due to Messrs. Herrington, K.C., of Na

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