The emergence of the African American community in Atlanta during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries reveals the constraints and opportunities that characterized the development of the leading city of the New South
Auburn Avenue and Atlanta black commerce, produced by Harlan Joy,Bernard West, and WRFG, is aprogram...
During the World War I years a mass exodus of African Americans from the South to the North occurred...
By 1970 African Americans constituted approximately 35 percent of New Haven’s population – nearly te...
Atlanta, Georgia is labeled as Black Mecca of the United States of America since the 1970s. The term...
One of the most striking developments in recent southern history has been the pace and scale of Afri...
Boston\u27s African Meeting House is one of the oldest and most significant African American churche...
In spite of increasing animosity between workers and elites, blacks and whites, through the turn of ...
The race riot that occurred in Atlanta, Georgia on September 22, 1906, is considered to be one of th...
This dissertation seeks to provide an intraracial narrative history of African American politics and...
A ground-breaking collaborative study merging perspectives from history, political science, and urba...
In the fifty years before the Great Migration thousands of African Americans moved from the southern...
This is a study of local black leadership in Alabama and Virginia in the 1880s. It is both an Intell...
By the late nineteenth century, white northern missionary societies established a variety of higher ...
Since the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, Atlanta has had a reputation in the African-American c...
The application of Duncans ' theory of residential succession is applied to the black populatio...
Auburn Avenue and Atlanta black commerce, produced by Harlan Joy,Bernard West, and WRFG, is aprogram...
During the World War I years a mass exodus of African Americans from the South to the North occurred...
By 1970 African Americans constituted approximately 35 percent of New Haven’s population – nearly te...
Atlanta, Georgia is labeled as Black Mecca of the United States of America since the 1970s. The term...
One of the most striking developments in recent southern history has been the pace and scale of Afri...
Boston\u27s African Meeting House is one of the oldest and most significant African American churche...
In spite of increasing animosity between workers and elites, blacks and whites, through the turn of ...
The race riot that occurred in Atlanta, Georgia on September 22, 1906, is considered to be one of th...
This dissertation seeks to provide an intraracial narrative history of African American politics and...
A ground-breaking collaborative study merging perspectives from history, political science, and urba...
In the fifty years before the Great Migration thousands of African Americans moved from the southern...
This is a study of local black leadership in Alabama and Virginia in the 1880s. It is both an Intell...
By the late nineteenth century, white northern missionary societies established a variety of higher ...
Since the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, Atlanta has had a reputation in the African-American c...
The application of Duncans ' theory of residential succession is applied to the black populatio...
Auburn Avenue and Atlanta black commerce, produced by Harlan Joy,Bernard West, and WRFG, is aprogram...
During the World War I years a mass exodus of African Americans from the South to the North occurred...
By 1970 African Americans constituted approximately 35 percent of New Haven’s population – nearly te...