Lafayette M. Hershaw

Lafayette M. Hershaw (May 10, 1863 – September 2, 1945) was a journalist, lawyer, and a clerk and law examiner for the General Land Office of the United States Department of the Interior. He was a key intellectual figure among African Americans in Atlanta in the 1880s and in Washington, D.C., from 1890 until his death. He was a leader of the intellectual social groups in the capital such as Bethel Literary and Historical Society and the Pen and Pencil Club. He was a strong supporter of W. E. B. Du Bois and was one of the thirteen organizers of the Niagara Movement, the forerunner to the NAACP. He was an officer of the D.C. Branch of the NAACP from its inception until 1928. He was also a founder of the Robert H. Terrell Law School and served as the school's president.

Lafayette McKeene Hershaw
Niagara Movement leaders W. E. B. Du Bois (seated), and (left to right) J. R. Clifford, Lafayette M. Hershaw, and F. H. M. Murray at Harpers Ferry.
Born(1863-05-10)May 10, 1863
DiedSeptember 2, 1945(1945-09-02) (aged 82)
Alma materClark Atlanta University
Howard University
OccupationJournalist, Lawyer, Clerk
Spouse(s)Charlotte Monroe

Life

Lafayette McKeene Hershaw was born on May 10, 1863, in Clay County, North Carolina, to Abraham Hershaw and Anne McKeene. He had African, Native American, and French blood and learned to speak and read French,[1] Spanish, and German.[2] Among his first job was working for moonshiners in the mountain wilderness of the region.[1] Hershaw began his studies at Atlanta University in 1879 and received a bachelor of arts from the school in 1886. He also studied law at Howard University and received a bachelor of laws from that school in 1892.[1] Hershaw was described as sad-eyed and having a fuzzy mustache.[3]

Women at the 1906 Niagara Movement Conference at Harpers Ferry: Mrs. Gertrude Wright Morgan (seated) and (left to right) Mrs. O.M. Waller, Mrs. H.F.M. Murray, Mrs. Mollie Lewis Kelan, Mrs. Ida D. Bailey, Miss Sadie Shorter, and Mrs. Charlotte Hershaw.

On July 11, 1888 he married Charlotte Monroe.[4] He had three daughters, Rosa Cecile (who married Howard Alum and Harlem, New York Doctor James T. W. Granady), Alice May, and Fay M.[1] Charlotte died on October 26, 1930.[5]

Hershaw died September 2, 1945, in the Freedmen's Hospital in Washington D.C. His funeral was at the Plymouth Congregational Church and he was buried in Lincoln Memorial Cemetery.[6]

Atlanta public schools

Gate City School was first held in the basement of Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta

Hershaw's career in public service began in Atlanta where he worked as a teacher and principal of the Gate City School[4] in the Atlanta Public School District serving from 1886 to 1889. Atlanta University was, at that time, employing white and black teachers and included students of both races (many of the white students were children of white faculty). In 1889, Georgia Legislator W. C. Glenn introduced what would be passed as the Glenn Bill to mandate that all educational facilities be segregated by race, but to also create normal schools for African Americans. While this bill was supported by some black leaders, including AME bishop Henry McNeal Turner, Hershaw was very vocal against it.[7]

In July 1889, Hershaw told an audience of blacks that education was of higher quality in the North than in the South, spoke highly of the influence of northern ideas on the Chautaqua School in Lithia Springs, Georgia, and of the positive effect of Northern capital and engineering in the South. This speech offended Colonel W. S. Thompson and Judge William Roberson Hammond of the Board of Education in the City of Atlanta, and the pair had Hershaw fired. Thompson implied that he would like to exile or execute Hershaw, but his position forbade such an action, and that he would like Hershaw to leave Atlanta.[8]

Washington, D.C., and the Department of the Interior

Theodore Roosevelt

In 1890 he came to Washington, D.C., and began working for the United States Civil Service as a land examiner in the Department of the Interior, where he worked for forty-two years.[1] It was suggested Hershaw's appointment was in part a result of a pronouncement by Theodore Roosevelt while he was a Civil Service Commissioner that color could not be a barrier to appointment.[9] However, during Roosevelt's presidency, he was criticized by the paper, "The Colored American", for doing editorial work for anti-Roosevelt papers such as the Washington Bee.[10] He responded that he did support the president and the Republican Party, and believed Roosevelt stood for justice, civil equality, and fair play.[11] While not campaigning for Roosevelt, he did travel the country with fellow federal employee Judson Whitlocke Lyons to speak at republican events in October 1904.[12]

In 1907 Hershaw and others were rallying opposition to Booker T. Washington's Tuskegee Institute and T. Roosevelt in the black press. Washington sent his assistant, New York Customs Agent Charles W. Anderson to suggest action against the radicals to Roosevelt. Anderson opposed the idea of Niagara movement members holding federal jobs and suggested to the president that Hershaw was responsible for the problems in the press and that Hershaw should be demoted.[13] Roosevelt sent Anderson to the Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock, and requested the secretary reduce Hershaw's rank or transfer him to a disagreeable job.[14] Anderson's success in this case was repeated against Freeman H. M. Murray when Murray stoked the ire of Washington.[15]

In spite of the intrigue, Hershaw had a good relationship with many politicians in Washington, even white politicians with whose policies he disagreed. From 1893 to 1896, Hershaw served under Secretary of the Interior M. Hoke Smith, and the pair continued a relationship after Smith's term ended. Hershaw knew and became friends with Woodrow Wilson when Wilson was a struggling lawyer in Atlanta. Wilson opposed segregation of Hershaw from white members of the Civil Service during the implementation of that policy in 1913. In 1925, Hershaw was promoted to Assistant Law Examiner, the highest position held up to that time by a black man in the Land Office.[16]

Early support for Booker T. Washington

In 1895, Booker T. Washington presented a speech that came to be known as the Atlanta Exposition Speech or the Atlanta Compromise Speech. This outlined Washington's conservative approach and came to represent a compromise in the South of black education and due process in exchange for white political rule. In Washington, D.C., intellectual groups held a number of meetings where the speech was discussed and debated. At meetings of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society, the Shiloh Baptist Lyceum, and elsewhere, Hershaw supported Washington. While some claimed Washington spoke of blacks having a low menial position in the history of the nation, Hershaw claimed that the speech was "logical, instructive, and sensible" and focused on the portion of the speech which "advised harmony and friendly relations between the races".[17] Other government workers: A. E. Clark (society president and clerk at the Pension Office), Jesse Lawson (also a clerk at the Pension Office and editor of The Colored American, Washington, D.C., and John Wesley Cromwell also endorsed the speech while non-government workers condemned it; leading to criticism of supporters of Washington for apparent willingness to support compromise so that they do not put their jobs at risk.[18]

Kelly Miller

In 1898, Kelly Miller gave the address to the graduating class of Howard University. In that address, Miller spoke of the advancement of blacks. In an editorial reply, Charles Remond Douglass saw the argument as similar to those of Booker T. Washington that black people must show through their achievements that they deserve their position in civilization. This offended the son of the famous escaped slave and radical black rights activist Frederick Douglass.[19] In a series of articles in The Colored American, a Washington, D.C., black weekly, Hershaw defended Miller that the contribution of African Americans is indeed substantial and Miller expresses that fact well, but that there is much room for improvement.[20] After a few more editorials, Douglass recognized that the remainder of Miller's address clarified the issue and the real problem lay in the excerpt by the newspaper, The Washington Post, which only included the offensive paragraph which minimized the value of blacks.[21]

Increased radicalization

Near the end of the 1890s, he began to focus his interest on urban blacks. In 1897 he presented a study of excess mortality of urban blacks to various audiences.[22] Hershaw returned to Atlanta in 1898 to present his work at the Third Atlanta Conference, an important conference on the subject of civil rights and black life in America and run by W. E. B. DuBois. This was among the earliest intellectual interactions between Hershaw and the civil rights giant.[3] And in 1899, he concluded that black rights organizations were spreading themselves too thin and they should focus more on one single thing.[23]

The Bethel Literary and Historical Society

After arriving in Washington, D.C., Hershaw joined the intellectual elite of that town. In 1892 he spoke in front of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society, giving a talk on January 12 on, "Protection and its relation to the American Negro".[24] He became a regular attendee of meetings and, as mentioned above, played an important dissenting role in criticism of Booker T. Washington by the group in 1895.[18] In 1896, Hershaw offered a resolution calling for the school board, the District of Columbia Commissioners, and Congress to improved manual training for black students in Washington, D.C.,[25] and Hershaw was elected president of the society in 1897.[22] Hershaw also led the society to support calls for civil service reform made by Robert H. Terrell, who presented on the subject in June 1897.[26] During that period, Hershaw also spoke in support of anti-lynching activists such as Ida B. Wells and John Edward Bruce[27]

Pen and Pencil Club

In September 1899, a group of black journalists and writers sought to organize themselves into a club out of which the Pen and Pencil Club was born.[28] The club quickly became one of the most prominent literary clubs in Washington. Hershaw was the president of the club in 1901 with Daniel Murray and Richard W. Thompson first and second vice presidents.[29] Events that year included the feting of former Congressman George H. White, who was then included in the clubs membership.[30] Another major annual event was Frederick Douglass Day, when the club would gather annually to celebrate the anniversary of his birth.[31] In 1902, Hershaw stepped down as president in favor of Henry P. Slaughter who was followed by Arthur S. Gray but continued to be a prominent member and a prolific speaker at the clubs events. The club was a part of a fabric of literary and social clubs in the capital; for example, it convened a meeting in late 1902 with the Bethel Literary and Historical Society[32] and in early 1903 at the Second Baptist Lyceum[33] where members of the club gave talks on black history. At that speech at the Second Baptist Lyceum, Hershaw quotes with great admiration W. E. B. Du Bois famous line that "the problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line" before presenting an argument that hews closely to the ideas of Du Bois: the equality of blacks and whites, the importance of political and civil equality rather than simply industrial opportunity, the illegitimacy of "Jim Crow Cars", and against compromise. While this did not represent an irreparable split from Washington, it did signify an increased affinity between Hershaw and the Bethel Society and W. E. B. Du Bois.[34]

Association with W. E. B. Du Bois

Du Bois c. 1911

As a prominent member of D.C. literary and activist circles, Hershaw frequently presented papers and speeches regarding the sociology, economics, and history of blacks. In the late spring of 1905, he traveled to Atlanta to participate in the Tenth Atlanta Conference, a conference put on by W. E. B. Du Bois and one in which he had participated before.[3] Thus, on May 30, 1905, he was a presenter at the tenth anniversary meeting of what was called the Atlanta Conference to study the Negro problems at Atlanta University with the theme Methods and Results. The conference was presided by university president Horace Bumstead and W. E. B. Du Boise was corresponding secretary. Tougaloo College President Frank G Woodworth, and General Education Board of Hampton member W. T. B. Williams. Women's meetings were addressed by Frances Kellor, Mary Ovington, and Butler Wilson. Other speakers included Professor G. W. Henderson, T. J Jones, President of Talladega College Benjamin M. Nyce, and Cornell University Professor and United States Census agent Walter F. Wilcox and Mattie A. McAdoo sang for the conference.[35] On the last night of the conference, Hershaw delivered a speech written by Du Bois called, "Address to the Country", which was extremely well received.[3]

Niagara Movement

Founders of the Niagara Movement, 1905 silver gelatin print

This was followed less than two months later by another meeting, the July 11, 12, and 13 1905 first meeting of the Niagara Movement at Buffalo, New York called by Du Bois. The meeting saw Du Bois elected general secretary of the movement, George H. Jackson of Cincinnati as general treasurer and Dubois, William H. Richards, B. S. Smith, William Monroe Trotter, and William H. H. Hart signed the official statement of the movement and Hershaw was among the twenty nine African Americans who attended.[36] By December, Hershaw was working as secretary of the movement.[37]

The movement grew and the second meeting of the movement occurred at Harper's Ferry in honor of John Brown August 15–19. The meeting was welcomed by Storer College president Henry T. McDonald and was marked by reports by Niagara Movement state secretaries. Hershaw's speech, as well as that of C. E. Bently, George W. Mitchell, Byron Gunner, O. M. Waller, and C. G. Morgan were noted as especially strong. Hershaw also read an address to the country urging political action.[38]

While the Niagara movement was marked by its opposition to the attitude of compromise of Booker T. Washington, Washington was still an important scholar, and he was invited to give a talk about Frederick Douglass to a meeting of the Pen and Paper club, now led by Henry P. Slaughter with Hershaw still an officer.[39] However, Hershaw ultimately found himself on Du Bois' side in the dispute. He denied Du Bois or himself having any animosity towards Washington, but spoke against Washington's relationship with his "Masters and myrmidons ... sponsors and retainers". Washington's supporters saw Du Bois and Hershaw as elitists and sentimental in comparison to Washington's practicality and at least in part characterized the dispute in rural versus urban terms.[40] Ultimately, Hershaw's devotion to Du Bois put Hershaw on an "enemies list" in Washington's personal correspondence in the early 1900s which began with William M. Trotter, Archibald Grimké, George Forbes, and Clement G. Morgan, but eventually included Hershaw, Judson Lyons, Francis James Grimké, Napoleon Marshall, and William Calvin Chase, all Du Bois supporters,[41]

The Horizon

In order to publicize the views of the movement, Du Bois, Hershaw, and F. H. M. Murray began publication of the magazine, The Horizon.[4] The journal was published from 1907 to 1910; Murray was printer and Du Bois and Hershaw were co-editors[14] W. M. Sinclair and William Monroe Trotter were noted as other key players in the movement and involved in the magazine.[42] The Horizon's scope went beyond black rights, and here and elsewhere Hershaw was vocal about women's rights and a supporter of suffrage for black women.[4] Hershaw's most frequent contribution to Horizon was a column called "The Out-Look", a view of the black experience from the perspective of the white world, while Murray contributed "The In-Look" about the black experience from the view of black and the black press and Du Bois wrote "The Over-Look" about any issue in the black experience he felt necessary. Hershaw's "The Out-Look" has been called the "least coherent and least memorable of the three sections".[43] The paper was not always in perfect harmony, and Hershaw and Murray frequently fought over material to be included in the "Horizon".[4] In 1908, DuBois, Hershaw, Clement G. Morgan, W. H. Ferris, and Kelly Miller broke with Trotter;[44] and Trotter left the journal and the movement. Seeking greater radicalism, Trotter created the Negro American Political League. Going beyond black civil rights, in The Horizon Hershaw was vocal about women's rights and a supporter of suffrage for black women.[4]

NAACP

After the departure of Trotter, the Niagara movement declined. In 1909, Moorfield Storey, Mary White Ovington, and Du Bois called for the formation of a new body, leading to the formation of the National Negro Committee (the Committee of 40) on May 31, 1909, which included Hershaw.[3][45] Out of this was born the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Washington, D.C., contributed a number of early NAACP members, including Hershaw, W. P. Stafford, Mary Church Terrell, J. M. Waldroon, L. B. Moore, and Kelly Miller,[46] and the group would create a branch of the association in Washington, D.C., which was one of the largest and most powerful branches.

Hershaw played an important role in the local and national NAACP.[47] In 1911, a body of NAACP representatives including Hershaw and led by Dr. W. A. Sinclair were received by President Taft and delivered a request for presidential action against lynchings, a request which Taft refused saying it was a state matter.[48]

Washington, D.C., branch

In April 1912, Archibald Grimké led the organization of a D.C. branch of the NAACP, with Hershaw an officer. Federal government desegregation was one of its first goals. In 1913, racial segregation in the federal government was often not publicly well known. Hershaw and Thomas H. R. Clarke managed to collect data to publicize the extent of the segregation in the federal government.[49] However, segregation continued to worsen over the following two decades.[50] Also that year J. Milton Waldron, who was then president of the D.C. branch of the NAACP, was asked to resign by the central body of the NAACP for his affiliation with the Democratic Party and reports that he used his position to gain employment in the administration of Woodrow Wilson.[51] Hershaw played a key role in Waldron's removal[52] and the smooth transition of the branch to the presidency of Archibald Grimké, who held the position until 1925.[51]

In 1918 Hershaw was chairman of the D.C. Branch Executive Committee under president Archibald Grimké and worked in support of the cause of Sergeant Edgar Caldwell, who shot a white man in self-defense in Anniston, Alabama.[53] In 1919, NAACP head Walter Francis White asked James A. Cobb to work to prevent the execution of Caldwell. Cobb arranged a meeting with Assistant Attorney General Harry Steward and brought with him Emmett Jay Scott, Caldwell's lawyer Charles Kline, Hershaw, and William Houston. The effort was unsuccessful, and Caldwell was executed on July 30, 1920.[51]

1904 caricature of "White" and "Jim Crow" rail cars by John T. McCutcheon. Despite Jim Crow's legal pretense that the races be "separate but equal" under the law, non-whites were given inferior facilities and treatment.[54]

Also in 1919, Hershaw along with Henry Lassiter, Walter J. Singleton, Archibald Grimké, and Robert H. Terrell was a prime mover in the introduction by Congressman Martin B. Madden of a law to abolish the "Jim Crow" car.[55] The Madden Amendment to the Esch–Cummins Act failed.

In January 1928, Hershaw resigned as director of the D.C. branch because he refused to support the organization in a fight to abolish racial segregation in the Interior Department where Hershaw still worked. Hershaw noted that he and other clerks had made a statement that they were happy with conditions.[56]

Opposition to Hershaw in the black press

Booker T. Washington, 1903 portrait

In the 1910s he was repeatedly criticized by the pro-Booker pseudonymous columnist in the Washington Bee by the pen name of "the Sage of the Potomac". The Bee writer criticized Henshaw for taking such a large federal salary[57] and as a member of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society for being elitist.[58][59] In a letter to Booker T. Washington, journalist Ralph Waldo Tyler noted that fellow critic of Henshaw and the Bethel Society Richard W. Thompson believed the sage was he, Tyler, but that it was actually Roscoe Conkling Bruce.[60] This was not the first time Hershaw and Tyler were on opposite sides of an issue, Tyler opposed Hershaw's push to create a black daily paper in 1899.F>"The Negro Daily Again". The Colored American, Washington, D.C., February 4, 1899. Volume 6 Issue 44 Page 6</ref> Tyler's promotion of Hershaw's ability was credited by the Washington Bee for Hershaw's promotion in the Department of the Interior.[61][62] Thompson and Hershaw were frequently associated in the 1890s and early 1900s in Washington, D.C., Hershaw even served as toastmaster for a dinner in Thompson's honor by the National Colored Personal Liberty League in April 1900.[63] But by 1905, in the Indianapolis Freeman, Hershaw was a frequent target of Thompson in his humor column, Short Flights.[64]

Robert H. Terrell Law School

Hershaw passed the bar but did not work extensively as a lawyer. In 1931, the night school program at Howard Law School closed and George A. Parker, Philip W. Thomas, Louis R. Mehlinger, Benjamin Gaskins, Chester Jarvis, and Hershaw founded the Robert H. Terrell Law School named for their colleague who had died in 1925.[65] Hershaw taught at the school,[1] and served as president of the school in the mid 1930s.[66] The school closed in 1950.

Other memberships and activities

Hershaw belonged to the Oldest Inhabitants Association of the District of Columbia and was a trustee of Atlanta University. He was president of the Bethel Historical and Literary Association in 1897.[22] Along with frequently speaking at the Second Baptist Lyceum, the Congressional Lyceum, and an officer of the Bethel Literary and Historical Society; he was president of the Shiloh Baptist Lyceum in 1902.[67] In 1907 he was elected head of the newspaper bureau of the National Afro-American Council[68] which quickly disappeared as members joined the Niagara Movement. In 1909 he was selected president of the Crispus Attucks Association and presided over a celebration of the anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln.[69] He was a member of Sigma Pi Phi and Phi Beta Sigma.[4]

In the mid 1910s, Hershaw began to become more involved the American Negro Academy. By 1916, he was a member of the executive committee of that body along with Kelly Miller, J. E. Moorland, Francis J. Grimké (brother to 1917 Academy president Archibald Grimké), A. U. Craig, F. H. M. Murray, and John W. Cromwell.[70] In 1920 and 1921 he was elected treasurer under presidents Cromwell and then Arthur A. Schomberg[71]

In 1917 he served as first vice president along with second vice president R. W. Thompson under the presidency of Walter J. Singleton in the Mu-So-Lit club, representing D.C.'s musical, social, and literary professionals.[72]

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References

  1. "Lafayette McKeene Hershaw". The Journal of Negro History. Vol. 30, No. 4 (October 1945), pp. 462–464
  2. "At the National Capital". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). January 8, 1910. Volume XXIII Issue 2 Page 1
  3. David Levering Lewis. W. E. B. Du Bois, 1868–1919. MacMillan, December 15, 1994
  4. Jones, Angela. African American Civil Rights: Early Activism and the Niagara Movement: Early Activism and the Niagara Movement. ABC-CLIO, August 15, 2011
  5. "In Memorium". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). October 26, 1938. Page 12
  6. "L. M. Hershaw, 82, Law Examiner and Educator Dies". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). September 4, 1945. Page 12
  7. "A Bill to Establish Colored Normal Schools in Georgia Rouses Negro Wrath". July 21, 1889. Charleston News and Courier (Charleston, South Carolina). page 5
  8. "Out of a Job". Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago, Illinois). August 1, 1889. Volume XVIII Issue 130 Page 4
  9. "Information About 'Teddy' Roosevelt". The Colored American, Washington, D.C., June 8, 1901. volume 9. issue 10. Page 8
  10. "Literary Curiosities". The Colored American, Washington, D.C., February 13, 1904. Volume X Issue 31 Page 7
  11. "Not Against the Administration". The Colored American. February 20, 1904. Volume X Issue 32 Page 8
  12. "Lyons and Hershaw. They Open Campaign In Michigan A Large Crowd President". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). October 1, 1904. Volume 24 Issue 17 Page 1
  13. Jacqueline M. Moore, Leading the Race: The Transformation of the Black Elite in the Nation's Capital, 1880-1920 University of Virginia Press, 1999, p. 154
  14. Jacqueline M. Moore, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, and the Struggle for Racial Uplift. Rowman & Littlefield, January 1, 2003, page 81
  15. Moore 1999, p 154
  16. "Negro Promoted". Broad Ax (Chicago). September 26, 1925. page 2
  17. "Discussed Mr. Washington's Speech". November 5, 1895. Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). Page 13
  18. "Todyism". November 2, 1895. Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). Volume XIV Issue 19 Page 4
  19. "Miller's Castle Shelled. A Specious Argument Demolished by the Rapid Fire Guns of Major Charles R. Douglass". The Colored American, Washington, D.C., July 2, 1898. Volume 6 Issue 14 Page 1
  20. "Hershaw in Rebuttal. Exceptions Taken to Maj. Douglass' Strictures upon the Address of Prof. Kelly Miller". The Colored American, Washington, D.C., July 9, 1898
  21. Douglass did take offense to Hershaw's tone, but the dispute seemed to have died out afterwards, "Douglass in Judgment. Pays His Respects to Prof. Hershaw and Says the Vital Issue Has Been Evaded". The Colored American, Washington, D.C. July 30, 1898. Volume 6 Issue 18 Page 5.
  22. "The Microcosm of the Negro". January 22, 1897. Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). page 10
  23. "The Congressional Lyceum. an Interesting Address by Mr. Hershaw". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). May 6, 1899. Volume XVII. Issue 48. Page 8
  24. "Notes, Scraps And Comments. In Memory Of Slaves.--Plans Suggested By A Baptist Clergyman In Date:" Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). January 9, 1892. Page 1
  25. "Revieweing the Year". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). April 29, 1896. Page 7
  26. "Equality under the Merit. System-the Interest of the Negro-American in Civil Service". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). June 26, 1897. Volume 9 Issue 26 Page 3
  27. William Seraile. Bruce Grit: The Black Nationalist Writings of John Edward Bruce. Univ. of Tennessee Press, January 1, 2003, page 133
  28. Among those initially involved were Alphonso Stafford, W. Bruce Evans, W. T. Menard, Dorothy Webb, Williams, Hershaw, Paul H. Bray, J. H. Wills, James Thornton, S. E. Lacy, Thomas H. R. Clarke, Cyrus F. Adams, Haskins, Richard W. Thompson "Pen and Pencil Club-Paul Bray a Member". Plaindealer (Topeka, Kansas). September 8, 1899. Volume I Issue 36 Page 2
  29. Other officers included Menard, Robert Pelham Jr. H. P. Slaughter, Paul Lawrence Dunbar, Lace, W. L. Houston, A. L Manly, Bray, W. L. Pollard, Judson W. Lyons, Henry P. Cheatham, Robert H. Terrill, F. L. Cardoza, and J. W. Mays.
  30. R. W. Thompson, "White Gets in a Word. the Negro's Only Representative in Congress Injects a Bit Of "Ginger". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). January 26, 1901. Volume XIV. Issue 4. Page 1
  31. "Douglass Day Celebrated. The Pen and Pencil Club Commemorates the Eighty-Fifth Anniversary". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). February 22, 1902. Volume 20 Issue 38 Page 1
  32. "Pen and Pencil Chat. Enthusiastically Greeted by Patrons of Bethel Literary and Historical Association". The Colored American, Washington, D.C. December 13, 1902. Volume IX Issue 34 Page 10
  33. "The Pen and Pencil Club Interesting Exercises – Prof. L. M. Hershaws Sensible Speech". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). May 23, 1903. Volume 22 Issue 50 Page 1
  34. While ultimately, Hershaw was a supporter of Du Bois in the conflict between the pair, Hershaw continued to interact with Washington, for instance visiting the Tuskegee Institute in 1914 and praising Washington's work there: "Tuskegee Institute "Stupendous". So Says Prof. Hershaw, a Well-Known Statistician, Sociologist and Man of Affairs". June 20, 1914. Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). Page 3, and "No Headline". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). July 11, 1914. Page 1
  35. "Tenth Atlanta Conference" Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). June 17, 1905. Volume XXV Issue III Page 1
  36. "Negroes Address the Nation a New Movement Started". Springfield Republican (Springfield, Massachusetts). July 16, 1905 Issue 44 Page 5
  37. "Garrison the Liberator". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). December 16, 1905 Volume XXV Issue 29 Page 4
  38. "Second Annual Meeting of the Niagara Movement Noticeable. Dubois Re-Elected General Secretary". Savannah Tribune (Savannah, Georgia). September 1, 1906. Volume XXI Issue 48 Page 3
  39. "In Memory of Douglass". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.) February 24, 1906. Volume XXV Issue 39 Page 1
  40. "No Headline". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). October 26, 1906. Page 4
  41. Benjamin R Justesen, Broken Brotherhood: The Rise and Fall of the National Afro-American Council. SIU Press, April 3, 2008
  42. Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). June 29, 1907 Volume XX Issue 25 Page 3
  43. Tom Pendergast. Creating the Modern Man: American Magazines and Consumer Culture, 1900-1950. University of Missouri Press, 2000, page 93
  44. "Short Flights". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). February 1, 1908. Volume XXI Issue 5 Page 4
  45. Bernie Morris Evans. Garvey and DuBois – A Race to Nowhere: A Feud to change all time. AuthorHouse, June 13, 2014
  46. "Advancement of the Colored People". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). March 11, 1911. Volume XXXI Issue 41 Page 4
  47. In 1914 he gave a talk on "The Civil War and the Colored Man" in the sixth annual meeting in Baltimore on May 3, 4, and 5: "The Sixth Annual Meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People". Broad Ax (Chicago, Illinois). May 2, 1914. Page 1
  48. "Taft Not to Send Lynching Message. Request for Special Message Against Mobs is Turned by President". Savannah Tribune (Savannah, Georgia). July 1, 1911. Volume XXVI Issue 41 Page 7
  49. Moore 1999, p. 203
  50. Harold Ickes, The secret diary of Harold L. Ickes Vol. 2: The inside struggle, 1936–1939 (1954) p. 115. see for more David L. Chappell (2009). A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow. pp. 9–11.
  51. Mark Robert Schneide. We Return Fighting": The Civil Rights Movement in the Jazz Age. UPNE, 2002. pp. 288–289
  52. "Refuses to Resign and is Forced Out". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). June 21, 1913. Page 2
  53. "Local N. A. A. C. P. Memorializes the President in Behalf of Condemned Soldiers". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). February 23, 1918. Page 1
  54. John McCutheon. The Mysterious Stranger and Other Cartoons by John T. McCutcheon, New York, McClure, Phillips & Co. 1905.
  55. "Offers Bill To Abolish The 'Jim Crow' Car". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). March 8, 1919 Page 3
  56. "Quits Colored Post". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). January 19, 1928. Page 4
  57. "Public Men and Things". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). March 13, 1915. Volume XXXV Issue 42 Page 2
  58. "Public Men and Things". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). June 17, 1911. Volume XXXII Issue 3 Page 4
  59. It has been suggested that Booker T. Washington was directly behind attempts to get Hershaw fired, see: Jones, Angela. African American Civil Rights: Early Activism and the Niagara Movement: Early Activism and the Niagara Movement. ABC-CLIO, August 15, 2011
  60. The Booker T. Washington Papers: 1912-14. University of Illinois Press, 1982 page 464. Bruce and Hershaw were familiar, Hershaw was president of a Parent and Teacher Association for Washington, D.C.'s Normal School No. 2 while Bruce was assistant superintendent of Colored Schools in the city, see "Parents and Teachers Organize". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). January 8, 1909. Page 20.
  61. "Auditor Tyler". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). November 4, 1911. Volume XXXII Issue 22 Page 1
  62. The color blind policies of Assistant Secretary Carmi Thompson, Commissioner of the General Land Office Fred Dennett, and President Taft are also considered important for Hershaw's advancement, see: "Prof. L. M. Hershaw Promoted. A Deserving Promotion of a Representative Citizen and an Educator" Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). October 21, 1911. Volume XXXII Issue 20 Page 1
  63. "Fifth Annual Banquet". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). April 19, 1900. page 10
  64. See for example: "Short Flights". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). December 9, 1905. Volume XVIII Issue 49 Page 3 and "Short Flights. By R. W. Thompson". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). July 20, 1907. Volume XX Issue 28 Page 3
  65. Smith, Jr., J. Clay. Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 61, 90.
  66. "No Headline". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). May 16, 1936 Page 11
  67. The Colored American, Washington, D.C., March 15, 1902 Volume IX Issue 48 Page 5
  68. "Afro-American Council. The Most Successful Meeting in the History of the Organization". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). July 6, 1907. Volume XXVII Issue 6 Page 1
  69. "The Week in Society". Washington Bee (Washington, D.C.). January 30, 1909. Volume XXIX Issue 36 Page 5
  70. "American Negro Academy Elects Officers". Freeman (Indianapolis, Indiana). January 8, 1916. Page 8
  71. "American Negro Academy Twenty-third Annual Gathering – A Program of Excellent Papers – Election of New Officers". Cleveland Gazette (Cleveland, Ohio). January 17, 1920. Page 2 and "[No Headline]". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). December 27, 1921. Page 26
  72. "News from Washington D.C." Savannah Tribune (Savannah, Georgia). January 20, 1917. Volume XXXII Issue 20 Page 8
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