Previous Section,
Previous Section,
  Next Chapter,
Next Chapter,
Go to Table of Contents
Go to Table of Contents    
Print a lo-res (300 dpi x 150 dpi) PDF image of this page
   

 

 

The page presentation framework of the Booker T. Washington papers is designed to provide researchers worldwide with searchable access to the thousands of pages comprising the fourteen volumes, most of which are out of print. Adapted from the National Academy Press's Open Book framework, this framework allows searching down to the page level, provides sorting of search results chronologically, enables easy navigation across multiple volumes, and allows page-by-page local printing (via PDF) of every page.

[ Top of Page ] [ Home ] [ Contact Us ] [ Help ]

©2000 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois
All rights reserved


OCRed data provided for searching only.
E R RATA VOLUME 4, P. 433, Judge George W. Kelley was a white man, originally of South Braintree, Mass. He moved to Rockland, Mass., in Age, where he lived until his death in Age. Beginning in 1883, he was justice of the second district of Plymouth. He was chairman of the board of trustees of the Voorhees Normal and Industrial School for many years. VOLUME 8, P. 145, the endnote of the Article on Black Labor in the South should read: ''PD Con. 956 BTW Papers DLC.'' The version that appeared in the Atlanta Constitution, Nov. ~7, 1904, 9, had another headline and varied slightly from the pamphIet version in capitalization and punctuation. xxx