An editorial on race relations written by Alexander L. Manly in August 1898, and published in his paper, The Daily Record. This editorial was one of the catalysts for the subsequent race riot in Wilmington, NC, in which Manly's offices were burned.
A political cartoon from The Freeman, an African-American newspaper in Indianapolis, depicting the burning of Alexander Manly's offices in Wilmington, NC, in 1898.
Page 2 of a scathing description of the social injustices that blacks often had to endure under white rule: specifically the creation of the "revolt" excuse in order to exact violence on people of color.
Page 1 of a scathing description of the social injustices that blacks often had to endure under white rule: specifically the creation of the "revolt" excuse in order to exact violence on people of color.
This letter to the editor by T.D. Adkins, pastor of the Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, praised the Tribune's coverage of the Philadelphia Race Riot of 1918. He preached for a more peaceful Philadelphia and society in general between the races.