[The Education Of The Negro Prior To 1861 by Carter Godwin Woodson]@TWC D-Link book
The Education Of The Negro Prior To 1861

CHAPTER V
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The abolitionists of Virginia, reporting for that city in 1798, said that considerable progress had been made in the education of the blacks, and that they contemplated the establishment of a school for the instruction of Negroes and other persons.

They were apprehensive, however, that their funds would be scarcely sufficient for this purpose.[2] In 1801, one year after Gabriel's Insurrection, the abolitionists of Richmond reported that the cause had been hindered by the "rapacious disposition which emboldened many tyrants" among them "to trample upon the rights of colored people even in the violation of the laws of the State." For this reason the complainants felt that, although they could not but unite in the opinion with the American Convention of Abolition Societies as to the importance of educating the slaves for living as freedmen, they were compelled on account of a "domineering spirit of power and usurpation"[3] to direct attention to the Negroes' bodily comfort.
[Footnote 1: _Ibid._, p.

393.] [Footnote 2: _Proceedings of the Am.

Conv._, etc., 1798, p.

16.] [Footnote 3: _Proceedings of the Am.Conv_., 1801, p.


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