[The New South by Holland Thompson]@TWC D-Link book
The New South

CHAPTER IX
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William B.Smith's _The Color Line_ (1905) takes the position that the negro is fundamentally different from the white.
Alfred Holt Stone, in _Studies in the American Race Problem_ (1908), has given a record of his experiences and reflections as a cotton planter in the delta region of Mississippi, while Patience Pennington (_pseud._) in _A Woman Rice-Planter_ (1913) gives in the form of a diary a naive but fascinating account of life in the lowlands of South Carolina.

Edgar Gardner Murphy, whose _Problems of the Present South_ has already been mentioned, discusses in _The Basis of Ascendancy_ (1909) the proper relations of black and white.

The title of Gilbert T.Stephenson's _Race Distinctions in American Law_ (1910) is self-explanatory.
EDUCATION No complete history of education in the South has been written.

The United States Bureau of Education published years ago several monographs upon the separate States.

Edgar W.Knight has written an excellent history of _Public School Education in North Carolina_ (1916).


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