Knowledge

Jesse Duke

Source ๐Ÿ“

38: 168:
where he started another newspaper. Local whites held a public meeting and condemned him as a vile and dangerous character after he published a statement about the growing appreciation a white "Juliet" could have for a "colored Romeo".
152:. At the age of 10 he was hired as a servant to a family of French refugees. The eldest daughter taught school, giving Jesse his first education. In the 1870s he owned a grocery store and was a teacher. He established the 163:
article that called out white journalists for turning a blind to the children fathered by white men and African American women, drawing a strong reaction that instigated Duke fleeing with his family to
184: 128: 554: 222: 470: 534: 487:
Booker T. Washington Papers Volume 2: 1860โ€“89. Assistant Editors, Pete Daniel, Stuart B. Kaufman, Raymond W. Smock, and William M. Welty
495: 485: 454: 376: 349: 232: 126:(March 7, 1853 โ€“ January 23, 1916) was a religious and political leader in Alabama who established and edited the Baptist 396: 339: 444: 406: 559: 177: 549: 295: 366: 425: 172:
Duke condemned biased all-white juries and the convict labor system it supplied. He corresponded with
20: 224:
Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities Among Southern Baptists, 1865โ€“1925
249: 544: 539: 365:
Nerone, John C.; PhD, Associate Professor of Communications John Nerone (January 2, 1994).
173: 165: 37: 8: 311: 198: 191: 464: 277: 269: 250:"The Black Press in The "New South": Jesse C. Duke's Struggle for Justice and Equality" 491: 450: 443:
Hill, N. C. ) Southern Conference on Women's History 1991 (Chapel (January 2, 1994).
402: 372: 345: 281: 228: 261: 133: 145: 62: 484:
Washington, Booker T.; Harlan, Louis R.; Harlan, Louis R. (October 31, 1972).
528: 19:
This article is about the newspaper editor. For the fictional character, see
156:
in the 1880s. Duke was an influential political leader among Republicans.
144:
Duke was born into slavery in March 1853 and raised on a plantation near
511: 273: 368:
Violence Against the Press: Policing the Public Sphere in U.S. History
321: 265: 398:
White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-century South
294: 160: 89: 149: 85: 66: 136:
trustee. He advocated for civil rights for African Americans.
341:
Women Writers and Journalists in the Nineteenth-Century South
317: 483: 526: 469:: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list ( 395:Hodes, Martha Elizabeth (January 2, 1997). 338:Wells, Jonathan Daniel (October 24, 2011). 284:– via journals.uchicago.edu (Atypon). 446:Hidden Histories of Women in the New South 36: 555:Interracial marriage in the United States 512:"The Herald (Montgomery, Ala.) 1886โ€“1887" 364: 333: 331: 527: 420: 418: 390: 388: 220: 21:The Dukes of Hazzard ยง Jesse Duke 394: 337: 247: 16:American newspaper editor (1853โ€“1916) 535:African-American publishers (people) 442: 328: 415: 385: 13: 214: 14: 571: 221:Harvey, Paul (November 9, 2000). 185:Alabama Colored Press Association 490:. University of Illinois Press. 449:. University of Missouri Press. 248:Jones, Allen W. (July 1, 1979). 227:. Univ of North Carolina Press. 205:1886 to 1887 in its collection. 504: 477: 436: 358: 344:. Cambridge University Press. 288: 241: 1: 208: 254:The Journal of Negro History 139: 7: 371:. Oxford University Press. 117:Editor, publisher, activist 10: 576: 426:"Encyclopedia of Arkansas" 302:. June 27, 1890. p. 1 187:during its establishment. 132:newspaper and served as a 18: 500:– via Google Books. 459:– via Google Books. 411:– via Google Books. 401:. Yale University Press. 381:– via Google Books. 354:– via Google Books. 237:– via Google Books. 194:(1879โ€“1952) was his son. 180:in Marion to Montgomery. 113: 105: 97: 74: 44: 35: 28: 430:Encyclopedia of Arkansas 560:Selma University alumni 190:Architect and engineer 550:Baptists from Alabama 176:about relocating the 174:Booker T. Washington 166:Pine Bluff, Arkansas 516:Library of Congress 312:Chronicling America 201:has the Montgomery 199:Library of Congress 192:Charles Sumner Duke 124:Jesse Chisholm Duke 49:Jesse Chisholm Duke 497:978-0-252-00243-4 456:978-0-8262-0958-0 378:978-0-19-508698-0 351:978-1-139-50349-5 234:978-0-8078-6195-0 159:He wrote an anti- 129:Montgomery Herald 121: 120: 567: 520: 519: 508: 502: 501: 481: 475: 474: 468: 460: 440: 434: 433: 422: 413: 412: 392: 383: 382: 362: 356: 355: 335: 326: 324: 315: 309: 307: 292: 286: 285: 245: 239: 238: 218: 134:Selma University 106:Other names 81: 78:January 23, 1916 58: 56: 40: 26: 25: 575: 574: 570: 569: 568: 566: 565: 564: 525: 524: 523: 510: 509: 505: 498: 482: 478: 462: 461: 457: 441: 437: 424: 423: 416: 409: 393: 386: 379: 363: 359: 352: 336: 329: 320: 305: 303: 296:"Jesse C. Duke" 293: 289: 266:10.2307/2717034 246: 242: 235: 219: 215: 211: 142: 93: 83: 79: 70: 60: 54: 52: 51: 50: 31: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 573: 563: 562: 557: 552: 547: 542: 537: 522: 521: 503: 496: 476: 455: 435: 414: 407: 384: 377: 357: 350: 327: 287: 260:(3): 215โ€“228. 240: 233: 212: 210: 207: 178:Lincoln School 141: 138: 119: 118: 115: 111: 110: 107: 103: 102: 99: 95: 94: 84: 82:(aged 62) 76: 72: 71: 61: 48: 46: 42: 41: 33: 32: 29: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 572: 561: 558: 556: 553: 551: 548: 546: 543: 541: 538: 536: 533: 532: 530: 517: 513: 507: 499: 493: 489: 488: 480: 472: 466: 458: 452: 448: 447: 439: 431: 427: 421: 419: 410: 408:0-300-07750-5 404: 400: 399: 391: 389: 380: 374: 370: 369: 361: 353: 347: 343: 342: 334: 332: 323: 319: 313: 301: 297: 291: 283: 279: 275: 271: 267: 263: 259: 255: 251: 244: 236: 230: 226: 225: 217: 213: 206: 204: 200: 195: 193: 188: 186: 181: 179: 175: 170: 167: 162: 157: 155: 151: 147: 137: 135: 131: 130: 125: 116: 114:Occupation(s) 112: 108: 104: 100: 96: 91: 87: 77: 73: 68: 64: 59:March 7, 1853 47: 43: 39: 34: 27: 22: 515: 506: 486: 479: 445: 438: 429: 397: 367: 360: 340: 310:– via 304:. Retrieved 299: 290: 257: 253: 243: 223: 216: 202: 196: 189: 182: 171: 158: 153: 143: 127: 123: 122: 80:(1916-01-23) 545:1916 deaths 540:1854 births 183:He led the 98:Nationality 529:Categories 322:sn83016810 300:The Appeal 209:References 109:J. C. Duke 55:1853-03-07 30:Jesse Duke 465:cite book 306:April 24, 282:150173844 140:Biography 161:lynching 101:American 90:Illinois 274:2717034 150:Alabama 86:Chicago 67:Alabama 494:  453:  405:  375:  348:  316:(Also 280:  272:  231:  203:Herald 154:Herald 146:Cahaba 92:, U.S. 69:, U.S. 63:Cahaba 278:S2CID 270:JSTOR 492:ISBN 471:link 451:ISBN 403:ISBN 373:ISBN 346:ISBN 318:LCCN 308:2021 229:ISBN 197:The 75:Died 45:Born 325:.) 262:doi 531:: 514:. 467:}} 463:{{ 428:. 417:^ 387:^ 330:^ 298:. 276:. 268:. 258:64 256:. 252:. 148:, 88:, 65:, 518:. 473:) 432:. 314:. 264:: 57:) 53:( 23:.

Index

The Dukes of Hazzard ยง Jesse Duke

Cahaba
Alabama
Chicago
Illinois
Montgomery Herald
Selma University
Cahaba
Alabama
lynching
Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Booker T. Washington
Lincoln School
Alabama Colored Press Association
Charles Sumner Duke
Library of Congress
Redeeming the South: Religious Cultures and Racial Identities Among Southern Baptists, 1865โ€“1925
ISBN
978-0-8078-6195-0
"The Black Press in The "New South": Jesse C. Duke's Struggle for Justice and Equality"
doi
10.2307/2717034
JSTOR
2717034
S2CID
150173844
"Jesse C. Duke"
Chronicling America
LCCN

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

โ†‘