Part IV: Miscellaneous 



UNITED STATES. 



SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROGRESS OF THE NEGRO FARMERS. 



OFFICIAL SOURCES.- 



Negroes in the United States. Bulletin 8 of the Department of Commerce and I^abour. 



Bureau of the Census. Washington, Government Printing Office, 1904^ 

 Thirteenth Census of the U^^TED States: 1910 

 Holmes (George K.): Supply of Farm I*abor. Published by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, 



Bureau of Statistics. Bull. 94. Washington, Government Printing Office. 



OTHER SOURCES : 



Washington (Booker) : The Story of the Negro The Rise of the Race from Slavery. 2 vols. 

 New York. Doubledaj', Page and Company, 1909. 



Bryce (James): The American Commonwealth. 2 vols. New York. The Macmillan Company, 

 1911. 



Work (Monroe N.) : Negro Yearbook. Published by the "Negro Yearbook Co. " Tuskegee 

 Institute, Alabama, 1913. 



The New South in the " Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science ". 

 vol. XXXI. January, 1910. Philadelphia. 



Country I,ife. Do., vol. XI. March, 1912. 



The Negro's Progress in FimcY Years. Do. vol. XI^IX. September, 1912. 



Coulter (John I<ee) : The Rural South. — Frissel (K. B.): Southern Agriculture and the 

 Farmer. — Branson (E. C.) : Rural I/ife in the South. — Glassow (William H.) : Rural 

 Conditions in the South. — Du Bois (W. E.): The Rural South. In " Quarterly Publi- 

 cations of the American Statistical Association ". No. 97, March, 1912. Boston. 



HrBBARD(BenjaminII.):TenancyintheSouthemStatcs.In" Quarterly Journal of Economics " 

 Vol. XXVII. May, 1913. Harvard University Press. Cambridge. Mass. 1913. 



