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  • Collection: Postwar North Carolina

Albion Tourgée on evolution of Christianity which ultimately led to accepting and endorsing U.S. slavery in An Appeal to Caesar, 1884

The relations of Christianity to Slavery are among the most curious facts of history. It is unquestionable that until the discovery of America the Christian religion had been one that tended to liberty and equality. Among the early Christians it had…

Albion Tourgée on race relations and white dominance over blacks in An Appeal to Caesar, 1884

First there was wholesale slaughter in the open day, like the massacre at New Orleans, when negroes and white men first met in a public capacity to organize a party of which the negro should be a constituent element. Then we had the Ku Klux Klan,…

Albion Tourgée on downfalls of Emancipation Proclamation in that it didn't grant for freedmen in Bricks Without Straw, 1880

The first step in the progress from the prison-house of bondage to the citadel of liberty was a strange one. The war was over. The struggle for autonomy and the inviolability of slavery, on the part of the South, was ended, and fate had decided…

Albion Tourgée on Christianity as a northern motivation for abolition in Bricks Without Straw, 1880

“ Perhaps there has been no grander thing in our history than the eager generosity with which the Christian men and women of the North gave and wrought, to bring the boon of knowledge to the recently-enslaved. As the North gave, willingly and…

Albion Tourgée on the southern mindset of innate superiority in Bricks Without Straw, 1880

“The time he had dreaded had come! The smouldering passion of the South had burst forth at last! For years--ever since the war--prejudice and passion, the sense of insult and oppression had been growing thicker and blacker all over the South.…

Albion Tourgée on African Americans not being able to testify in court in A Fool's Errand, 1879

”It was for the discussion of questions thus arising that the meeting we have now in hand was called. The great subject of contention between the opposing factions was as to whether the recently freed people ought to be allowed to testify in…

Albion Tourgée on African Americans not being granted even the most minimal rights in A Fool's Errand, 1879

So it must havebeen well understood by the wise men who devised this short-sighted plan ofelecting a President beyond a peradventure of defeat, that they were giving thepower of the re-organized, subordinate republics, into the hands of a…

Albion Tourgée on restricted voting for African Americans in A Fool's Errand, 1879

ANTE BELLUM. NORTHERN IDEA OF SLAVERY: Slavery is wrong morally, politically, and economically. It is tolerated only for the sake of peace and quiet. The negro is a man, and has equal inherent rights with the white race SOUTHERN IDEA OF SLAVERY: The…

Albion Tourgée on privileges of rights depended on how African Americans used them in A Fool's Errand, 1879

“MY DEARCOLONEL,--Your letter of recent date is received, and I have duly consideredits contents. The state of affairs which you picture is undoubtedly mostdistressing and discouraging; but I can not see how it can be improved by anyaction of…

Albion Tourgée on the subserviance of African Americans and their lack of influence in A Fool's Errand, 1879

THE Fool's neighbors having read his letter to the Wise Man, as published in thegreat journal in which it appeared, were greatly incensed thereat, andimmediately convened a public meeting for the purpose of taking action inregard to the same. At this…