The slaughter-house cases and their implications
The civil rights cases and their consequences
Plessy's argument before the court
Plessy v. Ferguson, May 18, 1896
Selected views on the "race question" at the time of Plessy
The race question in the United States, September 1890 / John Tyler Morgan
Race amalgamation, August 1896 / Frederick L. Hoffman
Capacity of the negro-his position in the North. The color line in New England, 1890 / Henry M. Field
Atlanta exposition address, September 18, 1895 / Booker T. Washington
Central Law Review, January 17, 1896
Equality, but not socialism May 19, 1896 / Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
The unfortunate law of the land, May 19, 1896 / Tribune (New York)
State sovereignty, May 19, 1896 / Union Advertiser (Rochester, New York).
(cont.)A strange decision, May 20, 1896 / Democrat and chronicle (Rochester, New York)
Evening journal (New York), May 20, 1896
Journal (Providence, Rhode Island), May 20, 1896
Separate coaches, May 21, 1896 / Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia)
Weekly blade (Parsons, Kansas), May 30, 1896
A.M.E. Church Review (Philadelphia), June 1896
Who is permanently hurt? June 1896 / Booker T. Washington
Central Law Journal, August 14, 1896
Michigan Law Journal, 1896
American Law Review, 1896
Virginia Law Register, 1896
African American intellectuals
Strivings of the negro people, 1897 / W.E.B. Du Bois
The courts and the negro, ca. 1911 / Charles W. Chesnutt
Sixteen years after the decision
From the fourteenth amendment and the states, 1912 / Charles Wallace Collins.
(cont.)Dissenting opinions of Mr. Justice Harlan, 1912 / Henry Billings Brown
Chronology of events related to Plessy (1849-1925)
Questions for consideration