Contents |
Introduction - "We Should Do More, and Talk Less" -- Life and Context -- Reading Shadd Cary's Radicalism -- Two-Faced Archive -- Chapters and Sources -- Letter to Frederick Douglass, North Star, March 23, 1849 -- Letter to George Whipple, November 27, 1851 -- "The Colored People in Canada - Do They Need Help?" Liberator, March 4, 1853 -- A Good Boarding House Greatly Needed by the Colored Citizens of Canada," Provincial Freeman, December 6, 1856 -- "For the attention of all Temperance reformers, Legislators, Ministers of religion &c," Provincial Freeman, March 25, 1857 -- "Meetings at Philadelphia," Provincial Freeman, April 18, 1857 -- "School for ALL!!" Provincial Freeman, June 13, 1857 -- "An Unmitigated Falsehood," Weekly Anglo-African, February 15, 1862 -- "Editorial- by M. A. S. Cary (Editor)," Provincial Freeman, Spring Edition 1866 -- "Letter from Baltimore," New National Era, August 10, 1871 -- "Letter from Wilmington, DE," New National Era, August 31, 1871 -- "Letters to the People - No. 1 Trade for Our Boys!" New National Era, March 21, 1872 -- "Letters to the People - No. 2 Trade for Our Boys!" New National Era, April 11, 1872 -- "Should We Economise?", n.d. -- *"Diversified Industries a National Necessity," n.d.* -- "Our Leaders Do Not Take the Women into Consideration": Empowering Black Women -- "Woman's Rights," Provincial Freeman, May 6, 1854 -- "To our Readers West," Provincial Freeman, June 9, 1855 -- Adieu," Provincial Freeman, June 30, 1855 -- "Editorial Cor. for the Provincial Freeman," Provincial Freeman, April 26, 1856 -- Sermon, April 6, 1858 -- "Report on Woman's Labor," Proceedings of the Colored National Labor Convention, 1870 -- "A First Vote, Almost," 1871 -- "Would Woman Suffrage Have a Tendency to Elevate the Moral Tone of Politics," n.d. -- "Speech to the Judiciary Committee Re: The Rights of Women to Vote," January 21, 1874 -- "The Last Day of the 43 Congress," circa March 1875 -- "Petition of Mary Shadd Cary, a citizen of Washington, District of Columbia, praying for the removal of her political disabilities," Petitions and Memorials, 45th Congress, circa 1878 -- Colored Women's Progressive Franchise Association Minutes, February 9, 1880 -- Colored Women's Progressive Franchise Association Statement of Purpose, circa February 1880 -- "Advancement of Women," New York Age, November 11, 1887 -- "The Men Who Love Liberty Too Well to Remain in the States": Enabling Emigration -- Letter to Isaac Shadd, September 16, 1851 -- Plea for Emigration; or, Notes of Canada West, in its Moral, Social, and Political Aspect: with Suggestions Respecting Mexico, West Indies, and Vancouver's Island, for the Information of Colored Emigrants -- Introductory Remarks -- A Plea for Emigration -- British America -- The Canadas - Climate, etc. -- Soil,-Timber,-Clearing Lands. -- Grains, Potatoes, Turnips, &C. -- Garden Vegetables, &C. -- Fruits-Vines-Berries. -- Domestic Animals-Fowls-Game. -- Prices of Land in The Country-City Property, &C. -- Labor-Trades. -- Churches-Schools. -- Settlements,-Dawn,-Elgin,-Institution,-Fugitive Home. -- By-laws. -- Political Rights-Election Law-Oath-Currency. -- Articles Exempt from Duty. -- Currency of Canada. -- Abstract of Law of Succession in Upper Canada -- The Thirty Thousand Colored Freemen of Canada. -- The French and Foreign Population. -- Recapitulation. -- The British West Indies-Mexico-South America-Africa. -- Mexico. -- Vancouver's Island-Concluding Remarks. -- "Our Free Colored Emigrants," Provincial Freeman, May 20, 1854 -- "The Emigration Convention," Provincial Freeman, July 5, 1856 -- "The Things Most Needed," Provincial Freeman, April 25, 1857 -- "Haytian Emigration," Weekly Anglo-African, September 28, 1861 -- Contextualizing Shadd Cary -- "Miss Shadd's Pamphlet," North Star, June 8, 1849 - Excerpt of "Hints to the Colored People of the North" -- "Schools in Canada," Voice of the Fugitive, July 15, 1852 -- "For Frederick Douglass' Paper," Frederick Douglass' Paper, January 4, 1855 -- "From Our Philadelphia Correspondent," Provincial Freeman, December 1, 1855 -- "For the Provincial Freeman," Provincial Freeman, December 22, 1855 -- "Anti-Slavery Lectures," Provincial Freeman, March 29, 1856 -- "Meeting of Colored Canadians," Pine and Palm, April 3, 1862 -- Letter from Martin Delany, February 24, 1864 -- Letter from Frederick Douglass, July 4, 1871 -- "Mrs. Mary A. S. Cary," New National Era, July 13, 1871 -- "Teachers Assignment. 'One by One the Roses Fall.'", September 20, 1884 -- Attorney General Endorsement, Washington Bee, September 27, 1884 -- "Mrs. Carey in Mississippi," New York Freeman, April 11, 1885 -- "Locals," Washington Bee, June 10, 1893 -- Conclusion - "Why Not Go Farther?" |