Southern Workman was a monthly journal published in the United States by the at Hampton Institute. The press was founded in 1871 and the Southern Workman began publication in 1872. For a time it was known as the Southern Workman and Hampton School Record. According to the the publication "published news and information about Hampton, its faculty, and its graduates, as well as lectures, articles, book reviews, and essays on topics in African American and American Indian history and education." Many volumes of the Southern Workman are available online. Issues are also in the collections of various libraries.
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| - Southern Workman was a monthly journal published in the United States by the at Hampton Institute. The press was founded in 1871 and the Southern Workman began publication in 1872. For a time it was known as the Southern Workman and Hampton School Record. According to the the publication "published news and information about Hampton, its faculty, and its graduates, as well as lectures, articles, book reviews, and essays on topics in African American and American Indian history and education." Many volumes of the Southern Workman are available online. Issues are also in the collections of various libraries. (en)
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| - Southern Workman was a monthly journal published in the United States by the at Hampton Institute. The press was founded in 1871 and the Southern Workman began publication in 1872. For a time it was known as the Southern Workman and Hampton School Record. According to the the publication "published news and information about Hampton, its faculty, and its graduates, as well as lectures, articles, book reviews, and essays on topics in African American and American Indian history and education." Many volumes of the Southern Workman are available online. Issues are also in the collections of various libraries. Contributors included columnist Orra Henderson Moore Gray Langhorne, , Natalie Curtis, Anna Evans Murray, Jane E. Davis, Julian Bagley, Charles Holston Williams, and Della Irving Hayden. In 1900, the journal was edited by J. E. Davis (Jane E. Davis) who shifted into the role full-time and expanded the size and scope of the publication. Her series of articles on early Eastern Virginia was published in 1907 as Round about Jamestown: Historical Sketches of the Lower Virginia Peninsula. Hampton Institute Press published General Samuel Chapman Armstrong's 1913 founder's day address. It also published Then and now at Hampton Institute, 1868-1902 in 1902. (en)
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