[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 VI
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33.] [Footnote 5: _Ibid._, p.

54.] [Footnote 6: _Ibid._, p.

37.] These conditions, however, were so favorable in 1835 that when Professor E.A.Andrews came to Baltimore to introduce the work of the American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored People,[1] he was informed that the education of the Negroes of that city was fairly well provided for.

Evidently the need was that the "systematic and sustained exertions" of the workers should spring from a more nearly perfect organization "to give efficiency to their philanthropic labors."[2] He was informed that as his society was of New England, it would on account of its origin in the wrong quarter, be productive of mischief.[3] The leading people of Baltimore thought that it would be better to accomplish this task through the Colonization Society, a southern organization carrying out the very policy which the American Union proposed to pursue.[4] [Footnote 1: On January 14, 1835, a convention of more than one hundred gentlemen from ten different States assembled in Boston and organized the "American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race." Among these workers were William Reed, Daniel Noyes, J.W.Chickering, J.W.Putnam, Baron Stow, B.B.Edwards, E.A.

Andrews, Charles Scudder, Joseph Tracy, Samuel Worcester, and Charles Tappan.
The gentlemen were neither antagonistic to the antislavery nor to the colonization societies.


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