101 - 125 of 122
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TitleCreatorCreation Date
101 Migration Series: The labor agent who had been sent South by Northern industry was a very familiar person in the Negro countiesJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
102 Migration Series: Child labor and a lack of education was one of the other reasons for people wishing to leave their homesJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
103 Migration Series: And people all over the South began to discuss this great movementJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
104 Migration Series: Race riots were very numerous all over the North because of the antagonism that was caused between the Negro and white workers. Many of these riots occurred because the Negro was used as a strike breaker in many of the Northern industriesJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
105 Migration Series: They also made it very difficult for migrants leaving the South. They often went to railroad stations and arrested the Negroes wholesale, which in turn made them miss their trainJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
106 Migration Series: Industries attempted to board their labor in quarters that were oftentimes very unhealthy. Labor camps were numerousJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
107 Migration Series: One of the main forms of social and recreational activities in which the migrants indulged occurred in the churchJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
108 Migration Series: One of the largest race riots occurred in East St. LouisJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
109 Migration Series: Housing for the Negroes was a very difficult problemJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
110 Migration Series: They also worked in large numbers on the railroadJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
111 Migration Series: Living conditions were better in the NorthJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
112 Migration Series: The migrants arrived in great numbersJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
113 Migration Series: They did not always leave because they were promised work in the North. Many of them left because of Southern conditions,; one of them being great floods that ruined the crops, and therefore they were unable to make a living where they wereJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
114 Migration Series: The railroad stations were at times so over-packed with people leaving that special guards had to be called in to keep orderJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
115 Migration Series: Among the social conditions that existed which was partly the cause of the migration was the injustice done to the Negroes in the courtsJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
116 Migration Series: The World War had caused a great shortage in Northern industry and also citizens of foreign countries were returning homeJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
117 Migration Series: Although the Negro was used to lynching, he found this an opportune time for him to leave where one had occurredJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
118 Migration Series: The Negro was the largest source of labor to be found after all others had been exhaustedJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
119 Migration Series: The trains were packed continually with migrantsJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
120 Migration Series: The migration gained in momentumJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
121 Migration Series: They were very poorJacob Lawrence1940 - 1941 CE
122 Boston, its environs and harbour, with the rebels works raised against that town in 1775Thomas Hyde Pagec. 1775 CE
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