File:White supremacy and Negro subordination; or, Negroes a subordinate race, and (so-called) slavery its normal condition, with an appendix, showing the past and present condition of the countries south (14760547361).jpg

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Identifier: whitesupremacyne00vane (find matches)
Title: White supremacy and Negro subordination; or, Negroes a subordinate race, and (so-called) slavery its normal condition, with an appendix, showing the past and present condition of the countries south of us
Year: 1868 (1860s)
Authors: Van Evrie, John H., b. 1816
Subjects: Slavery -- Justification African Americans Slavery -- United States Controversial literature 1868 Latin America
Publisher: New York, Van Evrie, Horton & Co.
Contributing Library: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

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o negroes in theirnormal condition and natural relation to the superior race.It may be well enough at the North, as long as they havemongrels and free negroes, to provide schools for them, asthey have no other guide or protector but the State itself, butthough they thus acquire a certain kind of mental activity, asobserved, it is at the expense of the vital forces, and anotherof those incidental causes that tend to the final extinction ofthis abnormal element. It is, however, a disgrace, and, to acertain extent, a crime in any State to educate negroes ormongrels, so long as they have one single uneducated whiteman within their limits. The proof of this is seen every dayin the fact, that however educated, or whatever the seemingmental superiority of the colored man, the uneducatedAvhite man tolerates no equality. Thus nature vindicates herrights, and whatever the ignorance, delusion, or crimes ofsociety, the eternal order fixed by the hand of God is inevi-table and everlasting. TCi«^.
Text Appearing After Image:
AMERICAN INDIAN. UNSVEFfb CHAPTER XVIII. THE DOMESTIC AFFECTIONS. The instinct of paternity—the love and care of offspring—iscommon to all creatures, animal and human, and is indeednecessary to the preservation of their existence. The animalfrequently exhibits it more decidedly than the human creature,and however unseemly it may be, we, even our own supremelyendowed race, may take a lesson from it. The animal instinct,however, is limited to the mere preservation of the life of itsoffspring, and the latter, when a certain development isreached, no longer needs it, for its own instinct then guides itto preserve itself. The love, and care, and guidance of the Caucasian motherfor her child is both a profound instinct and a lofty sentiment,and indeed calls into action the highest capabilities of hernature, her profoundest intelligence as well as the most exaltedand self-sacrificing affection. It begins with the birth andends only with the death, for though it is constantly modifiedby t

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  • bookid:whitesupremacyne00vane
  • bookyear:1868
  • bookdecade:1860
  • bookcentury:1800
  • bookauthor:Van_Evrie__John_H___b__1816
  • booksubject:Slavery____Justification
  • booksubject:African_Americans
  • booksubject:Slavery____United_States_Controversial_literature_1868
  • booksubject:Latin_America
  • bookpublisher:New_York__Van_Evrie__Horton___Co_
  • bookcontributor:University_of_Illinois_Urbana_Champaign
  • booksponsor:University_of_Illinois_Urbana_Champaign
  • bookleafnumber:234
  • bookcollection:americana
Flickr posted date
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28 July 2014


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