Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence: The Best Speeches Delivered by the Negro from the days of Slavery to the Present Time

  • New York: The Bookery Publishing Company, 1914
By Alice Moore Dunbar [Nelson] [ed.]; Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Fanny Jackson Coppin, Frederick Douglass, Prince Saunders et al. [contrs.]
New York: The Bookery Publishing Company, 1914. Very Good +. New York: The Bookery Publishing Company, 1914. First Edition. Large octavo; publisher's red over green cloth, gilt-lettered spine, top edge gilt; 512pp.; portrait frontispiece of Frederick Douglass with tissue guard. Light wear to edges; a few scuffs and smudges; binding sound; contemporary ownership inscription (Dr. S.S. Thompson) to front pastedown, else unmarked; Very Good or better. 

Quite substantial collection of Black speeches from Prince Saunders to W.E.B. Du Bois compiled by noted Louisiana essayist, poet, suffragist and activist Alice Dunbar Nelson (1875-1935). Published in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, the editor notes the "grim eloquence" of the earlier entries and the difficulty of procuring speeches from the living, either due to their modesty, desire not to appear in print, or simply having lost them. She thanks John E. Bruce and Arthur A. Schomburg for lending priceless books and manuscripts for her to copy from. Notable for its inclusion of slightly lesser known figures such as Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin and Fanny Jackson Coppin. Uncommon in retail. .

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