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Open letter to President McKinley

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Open letter to President McKinley

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Summary

A letter from prominent African American citizens of Boston to President McKinley protesting presidential inaction and toleration of racial prejudice, discrimination, and recent violence against blacks in the South. They plead for a guarantee of all civil rights for US blacks as set forth in the Constitution, especially in the South, to enable African Americans to rise out of poverty, ignorance, and social degradation. The letter is signed by several prominent Boston African Americans.
Cover title.
Read at a mass meeting, held in the Charles Street Church, October 3rd, 1899, by Archibald H. Grimké, chairman of the committee. Cf. p. [1].
Signed: I.D. Barnett, president. Edward E. Brown, vice-president ... [et al.]
"Not as suppliants do we present our claims but as American citizens" -- Cover.
Also available in digital form on the Library of Congress Web site.

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Date

01/01/1899
place

Location

boston
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Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

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