- the term
negro (or
sometimes negress for a female) is a term
historically used to
refer to
people of
Black African heritage. The term
negro means the...
- htm
Archived 2010-09-20 at the
Wayback Machine BROWN, Col. T. Allson,
EarlyNegro Minstrelsy New York Times, July 7, 1862: "Mr.
HENRY WOOD, long
known and...
- The
Negro leagues were
United States professional baseball leagues comprising teams of
African Americans. The term may be used
broadly to
include professional...
-
Negros (English: /ˈneɪɡroʊs, ˈnɛɡ-/, UK: /ˈneɪɡrɒs/, Tagalog: [ˈ
negɾos]) is the
fourth largest and
third most
populous island in the Philippines, with...
-
Negros Occidental (Hili****non:
Nakatungdang Negros; Tagalog:
Kanlurang Negros),
officially the
Province of
Negros Occidental (Hili****non:
Kapuoran sang...
- the
American Colonization Society's
Early Effort to
Emigrate Free
Blacks to Liberia, 1816–36", The
Journal of
Negro History. doi:10.2307/2717564. JSTOR 2717564...
- The
Magical Negro is a
trope in
American cinema, television, and literature. In the
cinema of the
United States, the
Magical Negro is a
supporting stock...
-
Machine Prince Hall.
Retrieved July 16, 2012 Brawley,
Benjamin (1991).
Early Negro American writers:
selections with
biographical and
critical introductions...
- 1993. ISBN 0-19-507832-2. Nathan, Hans. Dan
Emmett and the Rise of
Early Negro Minstrelsy. Norman:
University of
Oklahoma Press, 1962
Robert Stevenson...
- 1920s and 1930s. At the time, it was
known as the "New
Negro Movement",
named after The New
Negro, a 1925
anthology edited by
Alain Locke. The movement...