1904-1907: Voice of the Negro

Volume 1

Especially: “The Club Movement Among the Colored Women,” by Fannie Barrier Williams on pg. 99, “Not Color but Character,” by Nannie H. Burroughs on pg. 277, “Negro Womanhood Defended,” by Mrs. Addie Hunton, “The Progress of Colored Women,” by Mrs. Mary Church Terrell on pg. 294, “The National Association of Colored Women,” by Mrs. Josephine Silone-Yates on pg. 283, “Social Improvement of the Plantation Woman,” by Mrs. Booker T. Washington on pg. 288, “What Education has Done for Colored Women,” by Mrs. Josephine B. Bruce on pg. 294, “The Social Status of the Negro Woman,” by Sylvanie Francaz Williams on pg. 298, “An Extension of the Conference Spirit,” by Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams on pg. 300, and “Mrs. Ariel Serena Bowen,” on pg. 301, “The National Association of Colored Women,” on pg. 310, “The Woman’s Party in a Man’s Business,” by Fannie Barrier Williams on pg. 543,

Volume 2

Especially: “A Northern Man’s Message: Develop the Self-Respecting Element,” by William Hayes Ward on pg. 75, “Thought Power in Education,” by Josephine Silone Yates on pg. 242, “Colored Men’s Department of the Young Men’s Christian Association,” by W.A. Hunton on pg. 388, “The Colored Girl,” by Fannie Barrier Williams on pg. 400, “Opportunities for Southern Negro Women in Northern Cities,” by Frances A. Keller on pg. 470, “A Century’s Progress for the American Colored Woman,” by Anna H. Jones on pg. 631, “The American Colored Woman,” by Anna H. Jones on pg. 692, “The Negro Criminal Class – How Best Reached Part I,” by W.S. Scarborough on pg. 803, “The Southern Federation of Colored Women,” by Addie Waites Hunton on pg 850, “The Negro Criminal Class – How Best Reached, Part II,” by W.S. Scarborough on pg 867.

Volume 3

Especially: “The Ebonville Woman’s Club” by Henry Davis Middleton on pg. 350, Coca Cola Temperance Ad on pg. 458, “Shakespeare at Atlanta University,” by Adrienne E. Herndon on pg. 482, “A New Method of Dealing with the Race Problem,” by Fanny Barrier Williams on pg. 502, “Atlanta Beautiful,” by Aida Marion Johnson on pg. 506, “The Detroit Convention of the National Association of Colored Women,” by Mrs. A.W. Hunton on pg. 589, “Mrs. Mary Church Terrell at Cornell University,” by Hallie E. Queen, “Suggestions for Black Atlanta by W.B. Watson,” on pg 633, The Atlanta Tragedy by K. Max Barber on pg 456, “Why Mr. Barber Left Atlanta,” on pg. 471, “The Atlanta Tragedy,” by J. Max Barber on pg. 472, “Requiem Dirge for Atlanta’s Slain,” on pg. 479, “Jesse Max Barber” by William Pickens on pg 483, “Atlanta’s Shame,” on pg 497.

Volume 4

The Hull House: Its History and Mission,” by Lena Garret Lewis on pg. 36, “Paying Professions for Colored Girls,” by Katherine D. Tillman on pg. 54, “The Negro at Self-Help,” by John Henry Adams on pg. 122, “The Cosmopolitan Society of Greater New York by Addie W. Hunton on pg 185, “Ray Stannard Baker on the Atlanta Riots,” on pg. 222.