
Then late in the nineteeth century "Negro" began to gain greater acceptance. The movement to replace "Colored" with "Negro" was led by such influential Black leaders as Booker T. Washington and W. E. …
“Negro” has its own definition and designation which can be found in eCFR Title 36 sec. 906.2 defined as; Negro — is an individual of the Negro Race of African origin. This definition is currently updated …
For example, “colored” became “black,” with “Negro” and “African American” added later. The term “Negro” was dropped for the 2020 census. Through 1950, census-takers commonly determined the …
Locke explores how artistic works are characterized as peculiarly Negro African because of their theme, author, or idiom. Negro art, as a social medium for Locke, is continually engaged in a search for what …
The Negro element, which constitutes only 12 per cent of the population, commits 30 per cent of the crimes. Before concluding that this preponderance of crime is due to “race traits,” let us examine …
A Negro newspaper carrying news material in English, French and Spanish, gathered from all quarters of America, the West Indies and Africa has maintained itself in Harlem for over five years.
The problem of Negro leadership during the twenty years between 1895 and 1915 will be covered in this unit of Afro-American History. The issues raised by the celebrated debate between Booker T. …