Contents |
Abolition is national death; or the attempt to equalize races. The destruction of society. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No. 1, 1866) -- Free negroism; or results of emancipation in the north, and the west India Islands. With statistics of the decay of commerce--idleness of the negro--his return to savageism, and the effect of emancipation upon the farming, mechanical and laboring classes. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No. 2, 1866) -- The abolition conspiracy to destroy the Union; or, a ten years' record of the "republican" party. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No.3, 1863) -- The negro's place in nature: a paper read before the London Anthropological Society, by Dr. James Hunt, F.R.S. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No.4, 1868) -- The six species of men, with cuts representing the types of the caucasian, mongol, malay, indian, esquimaux and negro. With their general physical and mental qualities, laws of organization, relations to civilization, &c. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No. 5. 1866) -- Soliloquies of the bondholder, the poor farmer, the soldier's widow, the political preacher, the poor mechanic, the freed negro, the "radical" congressman, the returned soldier, the southerner, and other political articles. (Anti-Abolition Tracts No. 6, 1866) / "Brick" Pomeroy [Marcus M.] -- Types of the sunny south. (n.d.) -- Minstrel gags and end men's hand-book. Being a collection of Ethiopian dialogues, plantation scenes, eccentric doings, humorous lectures, laughable interludes, end men's jokes, burlesque speeches, witticisms, conundrums, yarns, plantation songs, and dances, etc. (n.d.) -- New coon jokes. (n.d.). |