The Journal of Negro History, Volume 5, 1920. Various
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6
Sadler,
7
Du Bois,
8
Weatherford,
9
Brawley,
10
11
Du Bois,
12
Brawley,
13
14
Weatherford,
15
Work,
16
Brawley,
17
18
19
20
Du Bois,
21
Du Bois,
22
Washington,
23
Stephenson,
24
25
Du Bois,
26
27
Hart,
28
Weatherford,
29
Weatherford,
30
31
Work,
32
Baily,
33
Hart,
34
Weatherford,
35
Hart,
36
Washington,
37
38
39
Du Bois,
40
Work,
41
Du Bois,
42
DuBois,
43
Brawley,
44
Washington,
45
46
Brawley,
47
48
Brawley,
49
Du Bois,
50
51
Du Bois,
52
53
54
Work,
55
Work,
56
Washington,
57
Brawley,
58
59
Du Bois,
60
Washington,
61
62
Weatherford,
63
Bailey,
64
Hart,
65
66
67
Bailey,
68
Hart,
69
Work,
70
71
Hart,
72
73
Washington in the
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75
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77
Weatherford,
78
Washington and Du Bois,
79
80
Washington,
81
Washington and Du Bois,
82
"One of the most assailable laws ever passed by the Congress of the United States … Under this act … the Negro had no chance; the meshes of the law were artfully contrived to aid the master and entrap the slave." Rhodes,
83
"A large proportion of the colored persons who have fled from the free states have sought refuge in Canada where they have been received with remarkable kindness and have testified the grateful sense of their reception by their exemplary conduct." American Anti-slavery Society, annual report for 1851, p. 31.
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