The Negro Family in the United StatesPublished in 1939, this was one of the first titles to study the family life of African Americans. It begins with colonial-era slavery, extending through emancipation, to the impact of migration to northern and southern cities in the early-20th century. |
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Page 117
... marry and work on their own . Of the same 122 women , mentioned above , who had had illegitimate children , 24 were married , and 14 of these were married to the father of their illegitimate offspring . One young couple who had been married ...
... marry and work on their own . Of the same 122 women , mentioned above , who had had illegitimate children , 24 were married , and 14 of these were married to the father of their illegitimate offspring . One young couple who had been married ...
Page 355
... married . It happens occasionally that an unmarried mother has lived over a period of years with the father of her illegitimate offspring . She may even represent herself to the community as well as to her children as a married woman ...
... married . It happens occasionally that an unmarried mother has lived over a period of years with the father of her illegitimate offspring . She may even represent herself to the community as well as to her children as a married woman ...
Page 546
... married long before he was of age . He was a shoemaker by trade . He married Ella DuBarry who was the daughter of a white man . There were three daughters from this marriage . The eldest never married . Her father lives with her now ...
... married long before he was of age . He was a shoemaker by trade . He married Ella DuBarry who was the daughter of a white man . There were three daughters from this marriage . The eldest never married . Her father lives with her now ...
Contents
Introduction to E Franklin Frazier The Negro Family in vii | vii |
Editors Preface ix | xliii |
Authors Preface xix | xliii |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
African African American Alabama American areas Atlanta became BIRTHS AMONG TOTAL Black Black-W born Boston boys brother brought census Charleston chil child church County culture daughter delinquency deserted died divorce dren economic emancipation fact fami farm father Franklin Frazier free Negroes Georgia girl Gouldtown grandfather grandmother Harlem Hertford County Ibid illegitimacy ILLEGITIMATE BIRTHS Indian Issaquena County Journal of Negro labor living Macon County male Manuscript document marriage married master middle class migrants mother mulatto families Mulatto-W Negro community Negro family Negro History Negro population never North Carolina northern NUMBER AND PERCENTAGE occupations Ohio Orleans PERCENTAGE OF NEGRO persons Philadelphia plantation proportion race racial relations rural sister slave slavery social South southern cities status TABLE THREE SOUTHERN tion told TOTAL BIRTHS traditions urban Virginia W. E. B. Du Bois Washington wife woman workers York City zone ΙΟ