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Education or Emigration: The Schism Within the African Colonization Movement, 1865–1875
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
Historically, the status of the Negro has presented our nation with complex and challenging problems. Alexis de Tocqueville observed:
The Negroes may long remain slaves without complaining; but if they are once raised to the level of free men, they will soon revolt at being deprived of almost all their civil rights; and as they cannot become the equals of the whites, they will speedily show themselves as enemies.
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- The Negro and Education III
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- Copyright © 1967 History of Education Quarterly
References
Notes
1. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, ed. Phillips Bradley, (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1945), I, 394.Google Scholar
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5. Fleming, op. cit.; Sherwood, op. cit. Another valuable source that deals, at least in part, with early Negro deportation proposals is Brainerd Dyer, “The Persistence of the Idea of Negro Colonization,” The Pacific Historical Review, XII (March 1943), 53-65.Google Scholar
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26. Included among the founders of the American Colonization Society were distinguished congressmen, senators, clergymen, and prominent citizens of the District of Columbia. Bushrod Washington, Supreme Court Justice and Squire of Mount Vernon, was elected President of the Society. The thirteen Vice Presidents included William H. Crawford of Georgia; Henry Clay of Kentucky; William Phillips of Massachusetts; Col. Henry Rutgers of New York; John E. Howard, Samuel Smith, and John C. Herbert of Maryland; John Taylor of Virginia; Gen. Andrew Jackson of Tennessee; Robert Ralston and Richard Rush of Pennsylvania; Gen. John Mason of the District of Columbia; and Rev. Robert Finley of New Jersey. W. G. D. Worthington was elected Recording Secretary and David English, Treasurer. The real responsibilities went to the Board of Managers and the Executive Secretary. Elected as “managers” were Francis Scott Key, Walter Jones, John Laird, Rev. Dr. James Laurie, Edmund J. Lee, Rev. Stephen B. Balch, James H. Blake, John Peter, Rev. Obadiah B. Brown, William Thornton, Jacob Hoffman, and Henry Carroll. Elias B. Caldwell, Finley's brother-in-law and Clerk of the United States Supreme Court, was elected Secretary. Staudenraus, op. cit., p. 30.Google Scholar
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38. Ibid., p. 1.Google Scholar
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45. Ibid., p. 2.Google Scholar
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57. The New-York State Colonization Society, Twenty-Third Annual Report of the New-York State Colonization Society, May, 1855 (New York: John A. Gray, 1855), p. 19.Google Scholar
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67. The New-York State Colonization Society, Statement of the New-York State Colonization Society as to Its Differences with the American Colonization Society, op. cit. Google Scholar
68. The New-York State Colonization Society, Synopsis of the Effort Made in Behalf of the American Colonization Society, to Get Control of the Field of the New-York State Colonization Society, in Violation of the Pledge of Non-interference, op. cit. Google Scholar
69. The New-York State Colonization Society, Statement of the New-York State Colonization Society as to Its Differences with the American Colonization Society, op. cit., pp. 1-2. Google Scholar
70. The New York Colonization Society, Exposition of the Errors of the New-York State Colonization Society in Its Late Attacks on the American Colonization Society, op. cit., p. 35.Google Scholar
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73. The African Repository, op. cit., LV (April 1879), 54-55.Google Scholar
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75. The American Colonization Society, Eighty-Seventh Annual Report of the American Colonization Society, with the Minutes of the Annual Meeting and of the Board of Directors (January 1905) p. 11.Google Scholar
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78. Ibid., MS Joshua Evans, Jr., Secretary-Treasurer [of the American Colonization Society], Washington, to Joshua Evans, Jr., Washington, January 3, 1962. [The signature is not that of Evans, and is most likely that of his secretary.]; ibid., MS Dayton M. Harrington, to Philip A. Kolrood, Essex Junction, Vermont, January 16, 1962.Google Scholar
79. The New-York State Colonization Society, Proceedings at the Fortieth Annual Meeting of the New-York State Colonization Society, Held May, 1872 (New York: Baker & Godwin, 1872), pp. 1-12; The New-York State Colonization Society, Proceedings of the Forty-First Annual Meeting of the New-York State Colonization Society, Held May, 1873 (New York: Baker & Godwin, 1873), pp. 1-4; The New-York State Colonization Society, Proceedings at the Forty-Third Annual Meeting of the New-York State Colonization Society, Held May 21st, 1875 (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1875), pp. 1-7; The New-York State Colonization Society, Annual Report of the New-York State Colonization Society for the Year Ending May 1, 1886 (New York: Edward O. Jenkins’ Sons, 1886), pp. 1-12. In order to avoid confusion in citations relating to the New-York State Colonization Society's official publications after 1891, the following explanatory remark is presented: In 1891, the hyphen in “New-York” was omitted from the official title of the state Society. The New York State Colonization Society, Charter, Constitution and By-Laws of the New York State Colonization Society, also Funds Held in Trust and Financial Report, May 1, 1891 (New York: The New York State Colonization Society, 1891), Article 2 of the Constitution, p. 6.Google Scholar
80. The New-York State Colonization Society Papers, “Minutes of the Annual Meeting of the New York State Colonization Society, December 17, 1940,” pp. 8-9 (mimeographed).Google Scholar
81. Ibid., “Constitution of the New York State Colonization Society, December 18, 1931,” p. 1 (mimeographed).Google Scholar
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