Читать книгу Half a Man: The Status of the Negro in New York - Mary White Ovington - Страница 8
Footnote
Оглавление[1] Daniel Horsmanden, "New York Conspiracy, or a History of the Negro Plot."
[2] James Grant Wilson, "History of New York," Vol. II, p. 314.
Population of New York from 1800 to 1900: Total and Negro. | |||
BOROUGH OF MANHATTAN | |||
Total | Negro | Percentage of Negroes | |
1800 | 60,515 | 6,382 | 10.5 |
1810 | 96,373 | 9,823 | 10.2 |
1820 | 123,706 | 10,886 | 8.8 |
1830 | 202,589 | 13,976 | 6.9 |
1840 | 312,710 | 16,358 | 5.2 |
1850 | 515,547 | 13,815 | 2.7 |
1860 | 805,658 | 12,574 | 1.6 |
1870 | 942,292 | 13,072 | 1.5 |
BOROUGHS OF MANHATTAN AND BRONX | |||
1880 | 1,206,299 | 19,663 | 1.6 |
1890 | 1,515,301 | 23,601 | 1.6 |
1900 | 2,050,600 | 38,616 | 1.9 |
GREATER NEW YORK | |||
1900 | 3,437,202 | 60,666 | 1.8 |
[4] For a full account of the Negro's political status in New York consult Charles Z. Lincoln's "Constitutional History of New York."
[5] Thomas Boese's "Public Education in the City of New York," p. 227.
[6] King v. Gallagher, 1882.
[7] A. Emerson Palmer, "The New York Public School."
[8] Laws of New York, Chapter 492.
[9] B. F. Wheeler, D.D., "The Varick Family."
[10] Geo. H. Hansell, "Reminiscences of New York Baptists."
[11] New York Tribune, February 23, 1855.
[12] "The Story of an Old Wrong," in The American Woman's Journal, July, 1895.
[13] Life of the Reverend Charles B. Ray.
[14] Colored American Magazine, October, 1907.