The logical growth of achievement for the Negro is first within
the lines of his own race, but, all things being equal; genius
being the handmaiden of no particular race or clime, he is not to
be hindered by the law of the land, the prejudice of sections or
individuals, from seeking to climb to any height.
The bugbear and slander, raised and kept alive by that section of
the land south of the imaginary line, to wit: that the Negro was
ambitious for "racial equality," only is entitled to reference in
these pages for the purpose of according it the contempt due it.
That the whites of the country have not a complete monopoly of
those unpleasing creatures known as "tuft hunters" and "social
climbers," is no doubt true, but that the Negro, as represented
by intelligence and race pride, ever worries over it; cares a rap
for it, is not true.
Humanity's great benefit coming from the war, which cannot be
changed or abridged, will consist of a newer, broader sense of
manhood; a demand for the inherent opportunities and rights
belonging to it; for all men of all colors, of all climes; and
beyond that; of more significance; as marking the dawn indeed of
a NEW AND BETTER DAY, will be a larger, juster sense; springing
up in the nation's heart; watered by her tears, of repentance of
past wrongs inflicted on the Negro. The Negro will become the
architect of his own growth and development. The South will not
be permitted; through the force of national opinion, to continue
to oppress him.
The talk of the revival of KuKlux societies to intimidate the
Negro; "to keep him in his place," is the graveyard yawp of a
dying monster. Are the thousands of Negroes who faced bullets in
the most disastrous war of history, and several hundred thousand
more who were ready and willing to undergo the same perils,
likely to be frightened by such a threat, such an antiquated,
silly, short-sighted piece of injustice and terrorism?
Men's necessities force a resort to common sense. Racial
prejudice and ignorant, contemptible intolerance, must disappear
under, and before the presence of the renewal of business
activity in the South, and the necessity for Negro labor. Each
soldier returning from Europe is a more enlightened man than when
he went away. He has had the broadening effect of travel, the
chance to mingle with other races and acquire the views born of a
greater degree of equality and more generous treatment.
These men desire to remain in their southern homes. Climatically
they are suited and the country offers them employment to which
they are accustomed; but more than all, it is home, and they are
bound to it by ties of association and affection.
With a mutual desire of whites and blacks to achieve an end,
common sense will find a basis of agreement. The Negro will get
better pay and better treatment. His status accordingly will be
improved. His employer will get better service, he also will be
broadened and improved by a new spirit of tolerance and
charity.
Cooperation among the white and black races received a decided
impetus during the war. A movement so strongly started is sure to
gather force until it attains the objects more desirious of
accomplishment. Some of these objects undoubtedly are far in the
distance, but will be achieved in time. When they are, the Negro
will be far advanced on the road of racial development. The day
has dawned and the start has been made. Before the noontime,
America will be prouder of her Negro citizens and will be a
happier, a more inspired and inspiring nation; a better home for
all her people.
One of the results of the war will be an improvement in the
government and condition of Negroes in Africa. Exploitation of
the race for European aggrandisement is sure to be lessened. No
such misgoverned colonies as those of Germany will be tolerated
under the new rule and the new spirit actuating the victorious
Allies. Evils in other sections of that continent will disappear
or receive positive amelioration.
The most hopeful sign in America is the tendency in some sections
where trouble has been prevalent in the past, to meet and discuss
grievances. In some sections of the South, men of prominence are
exhibiting a willingness to meet and talk over matters with
representatives of the race. Such a spirit of tolerance will grow
and eventually lead to a better understanding; perhaps a general
reconciling of differences.
Many concessions will be required before complete justice
prevails and the Negro comes into his own; before the soil can be
prepared for the complete flowering of his spirit.
Primarily, before attaining to the full growth and usefulness of
the citizen under the rights guaranteed to him by the
Constitution, the Negro, especially in the South, will require
better educational facilities. If he is to become a better
citizen, he must have the education and training necessary to
know the full duties of citizenship. He pays his share of the
school taxes and it is manifestly unjust to deny him the accruing
benefits.
He is ambitious too, and should be encouraged to own land, and to
that end should have the assistance without prejudice or
discrimination, of national and state farm loan bureaus.
Unjust suffrage restrictions must and shall be removed, giving to
the Negro the full rights of other citizens in this respect. With
better educational facilities and the ownership of real estate,
he will vote more intelligently, and there will be no danger that
his vote will be against the interests of the country at large or
the section in which he resides.
The withering taint of "Jim Crow"-ism, must be obliterated; wiped
out—will be. Railroads will be compelled to extend the same
accommodations to white and colored passengers. The traveller;
whatever his color, who pays the price for a ticket, must and
shall in this land of Equality and Justice, be accorded the same
accommodations.
Peonage, so-called, will end. It cannot endure under an awakened,
enlightened public opinion. Negroes, all other things equal, will
be admitted to labor unions, or labor unions will lose the
potentiality and force they should wield in labor and industrial
affairs.
The Negro's contribution to the recent war and to previous
conflicts, has earned him beyond question or challenge, a right
to just consideration in the military and naval establishment of
the nation. America, grudging as she has been in the past to
enlarge his rights, or even to guarantee those which she has
granted, has grown too great indeed. Her discipline has been too
real to deny him this fair consideration. There will be more
Negro units in the Regular Army and National Guard organizations;
untrammelled facilities for training, in government, state and
college institutions.
Selective draft figures having revealed the Negro as a better; if
not the best, physical risk, will make it easier for him to
secure life insurance, which; after all is a plain business
proposition. Insurance companies are after business and are not
concerned with racial distinctions where the risk is good. The
draft has furnished figures regarding the Negro's health and
longevity which hitherto were not available to insurance
actuaries. Now that they have them, no reason exists for denying
insurance facilities to the race.
With a growing, every minute, of a better understanding between
the races; with the Negro learning thrift through Liberty Bonds,
Savings Stamps and the lessons of the war; with an encouragement
to own property and take out insurance; being vastly enlightened
through his military service, and with improved industrial
conditions about to appear, he is started on a better road, to
end only when he shall have reached the full attainment belonging
to the majesty of AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP.
With this start, lynchings, the law's delays, the denial of full
educational advantages; segregation, insanitary conditions,
unjust treatment in reform and penal institutions, will vanish
from before him; will be conditions that were, but are no
more.
There is a predominance of Anglo-Saxon heritage in the white
blood of America. The Anglo-Saxon was the first to establish fair
play and make it his shibboleth. Should he deny it to the Negro;
his proudest and most vaunted principle would prove to be a
doddering lie; a shimmering evanescence.
HE WILL NOT DENY IT!
NOTE—UP TO THIS POINT THE TEXT FACES ONLY HAVE BEEN
NUMBERED. THE 64 FULL PAGES OF HALF-TONE PHOTOGRAPHS (OVER 100
SEPARATE PICTURES) AND THE PLATES, TINTED IN MANY COLORS (NOT
PRINTED ON BACK) BRING THE TOTAL NUMBER OF PAGES TO OVER FOUR
HUNDRED.
THE PEACE TREATY
The treaty of peace was drawn by the allied and associated powers
at Versailles, and was there delivered to the German Government's
delegation on May 5, 1919—the fourth anniversary of the
Lusitania sinking.
It stipulates in the preamble that war will have ceased when all
powers have signed and the treaty shall have come into force by
ratification of the signatures.
It names as party of the one part the United States, The British
Empire, France, Italy, Japan, described as the five allied and
associated powers, and Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Cuba,
Equador, Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, the Hedjaz, Honduras, Liberia,
Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Portugal, Roumania, Serbia, Siam,
Czecho-Slovakia and Uruguay; and on the other side Germany.
The treaty contains agreements in substance as follows:
Section 1.
The League of Nations
—The league of
nations may question Germany at any time for a violation of the
neutralized zone east of the Rhine as a threat against the
world's peace. It will work out the mandatory system to be
applied to the former German colonies and act as a final court in
the Belgian-German frontier and in disputes as to the Kiel canal,
and decide certain economic and financial problems.
Membership
—The members of the league will be the
signatories of the covenant, and other states invited to accede.
A state may withdraw upon giving two years' notice, if it has
fulfilled all its international obligations.
Section 2. A permanent secretariat will be established at Geneva.
The league will meet at stated intervals. Each state will have
one vote and not more than three representatives.
The council will consist of representatives of the five great
allied powers, with representatives of four members selected by
the assembly from time to time. It will meet at least once a
year. Voting will be by states. Each state will have one vote and
not more than one representative.
The council will formulate plans for a reduction of armaments for
consideration and adoption. These plans will be revised every ten
years.
Preventing War
—Upon any war, or threat of war, the
council will meet to consider what common action shall be taken.
Members are pledged to submit matters of dispute to arbitration
or inquiry and not to resort to war until three months after the
award. If a member fails to carry out the award, the council will
propose the necessary measures. The council will establish a
permanent court of international justice to determine
international disputes or to give advisory opinions. If agreement
cannot be secured, the members reserve the right to take such
action as may be necessary for the maintenance of right and
justice. Members resorting to war in disregard of the covenant
will immediately be debarred from all intercourse with other
members. The council will in such cases consider what military or
naval action can be taken by the league collectively.
The covenant abrogates all obligations between members
inconsistent with its terms, but nothing in it shall affect the
validity of international engagements such as treaties of
arbitration or regional understandings like the Monroe doctrine,
for securing the maintenance of peace.
The Mandatory System
—Nations not yet able to stand
by themselves will be intrusted to advanced nations who are best
fitted to guide them. In every case the mandatory will render an
annual report, and the degree of its authority will be
defined.
International Provisions
—The members of the league
will in general, through the international organization
established by the labor convention to secure and maintain fair
conditions of labor for men, women and children in their own
countries, and undertake to secure just treatment of the native
inhabitants of territories under their control; they will intrust
the league with general supervision over the execution of
agreements for the suppression of traffic in women and children,
etc.; and the control of the trade in arms and ammunition with
countries in which control is necessary; they will make provision
for freedom of communications and transit and equitable treatment
for commerce of all members of the league, with special reference
to the necessities of regions devastated during the war; and they
will endeavor to take steps for international prevention and
control of disease.
Boundaries of Germany
—Germany cedes to France
Alsace-Lorraine 5,600 square miles to the southwest, and to
Belgium two small districts between Luxemburg and Holland,
totaling 989 square miles. She also cedes to Poland the
southeastern tip of Silesia, beyond and including Oppeln, most of
Posen and West Prussia, 27,686 square miles, East Prussia being
isolated from the main body by a part of Poland. She loses
sovereignty over the northeastern tip of East Prussia, forty
square miles north of the River Memel, and the internationalized
areas about Danzig, 729 square miles, and the basin of the Saar,
738 square miles, between the western border of the Rhenish
Palatinate of Bavaria and the southeast corner of Luxemburg; and
Schleswig, 2,767 square miles.
Section 3.
Belgium
—Germany consents to the
abrogation of the treaties of 1839 by which Belgium was
established as a neutral state, and agrees to any convention with
which the allied and associated powers may determine to replace
them.
Luxemburg
—Germany renounces her various treaties and
conventions with the grand duchy of Luxemburg, and recognizes
that it ceased to be a part of the German zolverein from January
1, 1919, and renounces all right of exploitation of the
railroads.
Left Bank of the Rhine
—Germany will not maintain any
fortifications or armed forces less than fifty kilometers to the
east of the Rhine, hold any maneuvers, nor within that limit
maintain any works to facilitate mobilization. In case of
violation she shall be regarded as committing a hostile act
against the powers who sign the present treaty and as intending
to disturb the peace of the world.
Alsace and Lorraine
—The territories ceded to Germany
by the treaty of Frankfort are restored to France with their
frontiers as before 1871, to date from the signing of the
armistice, and to be free of all public debts.
All public property and private property of German ex-sovereigns
passes to France without payment or credit. France is substituted
for Germany as regards ownership of the railroads and rights over
concessions of tramways. The Rhine bridges pass to France, with
the obligation for the upkeep.
Political condemnations during the war are null and void and the
obligation to repay war fines is established as in other parts of
allied territory.
The Saar
—In compensation for the destruction of coal
mines in northern France and as payment on account of reparation,
Germany cedes to France full ownership of the coal mines of the
Saar basin with the subsidiaries, accessories and facilities.
After fifteen years a plebiscite will be held by communes to
ascertain the desires of the population as to continuance of the
existing regime under the league of nations, union with France or
union with Germany. The right to vote will belong to all
inhabitants of over 20 years resident therein at the time of the
signature.
Section 4.
German Austria
—Germany recognizes the
total independence of German Austria in the boundaries
traced.
Germany recognizes the entire independence of the Czecho-Slovak
state. The five allied and associated powers will draw up
regulations assuring East Prussia full and equitable access to
and use of the Vistula.
Danzig
—Danzig and the district immediately about it
is to be constituted into the free city of Danzig under the
guaranty of the league of nations.
Denmark
—The frontier between Germany and Denmark
will be fixed by the self-determination of the population.
The fortifications, military establishments and harbors of the
islands of Helgoland and Dune are to be destroyed under the
supervision of the allies by German labor and at Germany's
expense. They may not be reconstructed, nor any similar
fortifications built in the future.
Russia
—Germany agrees to respect as permanent and
inalienable the independence of all territories which were part
of the former Russian empire, to accept abrogation of the
Brest-Litovsk and other treaties entered into with the Maximalist
government of Russia, to recognize the full force of all treaties
entered into by the allied and associated powers with states
which were a part of the former Russian empire, and to recognize
the frontiers as determined therein. The allied and associated
powers formally reserve the right of Russia to obtain restitution
and reparation of the principles of the present treaty.
SECTION 5.
German Rights Outside of Europe
—Outside
Europe, Germany renounces all rights, title and privileges as to
her own or her allied territories, to all the allied and
associated powers.
German Colonies
—Germany renounces in favor of the
allied and associated powers her overseas possessions with all
rights and titles therein. All movable and immovable property
belonging to the German empire or to any German state shall pass
to the government exercising authority therein. Germany
undertakes to pay reparation for damage suffered by French
nationals in the Kameruns or its frontier zone through the acts
of German civil and military authorities and of individual
Germans from January 1, 1900, to August 1, 1914.
China
—Germany renounces in favor of China all
privileges and indemnities resulting from the Boxer protocol of
1901, and all buildings, wharves, barracks, forts, munitions or
warships, wireless plants, and other property (except diplomatic)
in the German concessions of Tientsin and Hankow and in other
Chinese territory except Kiaochow, and agrees to return to China
at her own expense all the astronomical instruments seized in
1901. Germany accepts the abrogation of the concessions of Hankow
and Tientsin, China agreeing to open them to international
use.
Siam
—Germany recognizes that all agreements between
herself and Siam, including the right of extra territory, ceased
July 22, 1917. All German public property except consular and
diplomatic premises passes, without compensation, to Siam.
Liberia
—Germany renounces all rights under the
international arrangements of 1911 and 1912 regarding
Liberia.
Morocco
—Germany renounces all her rights, titles and
privileges under the act of Algeciras and the Franco-German
agreements of 1909 and 1911 and under all treaties and
arrangements with the sheriffian empire. All movable and
immovable German property may be sold at public auction, the
proceeds to be paid to the sheriffian government and deducted
from the reparation account.
Egypt
—Germany recognizes the British protectorate
over Egypt declared on December 19, 1914, and transfers to Great
Britain the powers given to the late sultan of Turkey for
securing the free navigation of the Suez canal.
Turkey and Bulgaria
—Germany accepts all arrangements
which the allied and associated powers make with Turkey and
Bulgaria with reference to any right, privileges or interests
claimed in those countries by Germany or her nationals and not
dealt with elsewhere.
Shantung
—Germany cedes to Japan all rights, titles
and privileges acquired by her treaty with China of March 6,
1897, and other agreements, as to Shantung. All German state
property in Kiaochow is acquired by Japan free of all
charges.
SECTION 6. The demobilization of the German army must take place
within two months. Its strength may not exceed 100,000, including
4,000 officers, with not over seven divisions of infantry, also
three of cavalry, and to be devoted exclusively to maintenance of
internal order and control of frontiers. The German general staff
is abolished. The army administrative service, consisting of
civilian personnel, not included in the number of effectives, is
reduced to one-tenth the total in the 1913 budget. Employes of
the German states, such as customs officers, first guards and
coast guards, may not exceed the number in 1913. Gendarmes and
local police may be increased only in accordance with the growth
of population. None of these may be assembled for military
training.
Armaments
—All establishments for the manufacturing,
preparation or storage of arms and munitions of war, must be
closed, and their personnel dismissed. The manufacture or
importation of poisonous gases is forbidden as well as the
importation of arms, munitions and war material.
Conscription
—Conscription is abolished in Germany.
The personnel must be maintained by voluntary enlistment for
terms of twelve consecutive years, the number of discharges
before the expiration of that term not in any year to exceed 5
per cent of the total effectives. Officers remaining in the
service must agree to serve to the age of 45 years and newly
appointed officers must agree to serve actively for twenty-five
years.
No military schools except those absolutely indispensable for the
units allowed shall exist in Germany. All measures of
mobilization are forbidden.
All fortified and field works within fifty kilometers (thirty
miles) east of the Rhine will be dismantled. The construction of
any new fortifications there is forbidden.
Control
—Interallied commissions of control will see
to the execution of the provisions, for which a time limit is
set, the maximum named being three months. Germany must give them
complete facilities, and pay for the labor and material necessary
in demolition, destruction or surrender of war equipment.
Naval
—The German navy must be demobilized within a
period of two months. All German vessels of war in foreign ports,
and the German high sea fleet interned at Scapa Flow will be
surrendered, the final disposition of these ships to be decided
upon by the allied and associated powers. Germany must surrender
forty-five modern destroyers, fifty modern torpedo boats, and all
submarines, with their salvage vessels; all war vessels under
construction, including submarines, must be broken up.
Germany is required to sweep up the mines in the North sea and
the Baltic. German fortifications in the Baltic must be
demolished.
During a period of three months after the peace, German high
power wireless stations at Nauen, Hanover and Berlin, will not be
permitted to send any messages except for commercial
purposes.
Air
—The armed forces of Germany must not include any
military or naval air forces except one hundred unarmed
seaplanes. No aviation grounds or dirigible sheds are to be
allowed within 150 kilometers of the Rhine or the eastern or
southern frontiers. The manufacture of aircraft and parts of
aircraft is forbidden. All military and aeronautical material
must be surrendered.
The repatriation of German prisoners and interned civilians is to
be carried out without delay and at Germany's expense.
Both parties will respect and maintain the graves of soldiers and
sailors buried on their territories.
Responsibility and Reparation
—The allied and
associated powers will publicly arraign William II of
Hohenzollern, formerly German emperor, before a special tribunal
composed of one judge from each of the five great powers, with
full right of defense.
Persons accused of having committed acts in violation of the laws
and customs of war are to be tried and punished by military
tribunals under military law.
SECTION 7.
Reparation
—Germany accepts responsibility
for all loss and damages to which civilians of the allies have
been subjected by the war, and agrees to compensate them. Germany
binds herself to repay all sums borrowed by Belgium from the
Allies. Germany irrevocably recognizes the authority of a
reparation commission named by the Allies to enforce and
supervise these payments. She further agrees to restore to the
Allies cash and certain articles which can be identified. As an
immediate step toward restoration, Germany shall pay within two
years $5,000,000,000 in either gold, goods, ships or other
specific forms of payment.
The measures which the allied and associated powers shall have
the right to take, in case of voluntary default by Germany, and
which Germany agrees not to regard as acts of war, may include
economic and financial prohibitions and reprisals and in general
such other measures as the respective governments may determine
to be necessary in the circumstances.
The commission may require Germany to give from time to time, by
way of guaranty, issues of bonds or other obligations to cover
such claims as are not otherwise satisfied.
The German government recognizes the right of the Allies to the
replacement, ton for ton and class for class, of all merchant
ships and fishing boats lost or damaged owing to the war, and
agrees to cede to the Allies all German merchant ships of sixteen
hundred tons gross and upward.
The German government further agrees to build merchant ships for
the account of the Allies to the amount of not exceeding 200,000
tons' gross annually during the next five years.
SECTION 8.
Devastated Areas
—Germany undertakes to
devote her economic resources directly to the physical
restoration of the invaded areas.
Coal
—Germany is to deliver annually for ten years to
France coal equivalent to the difference between annual pre-war
output of Nord and Pas de Calais mines and annual production
during above ten year period. Germany further gives options over
ten years for delivery of 7,000,000 tons coal per year to France,
in addition to the above, of 8,000,000 tons to Belgium, and of an
amount rising from 4,500,000 tons in 1919 to 1920 to 8,500,000
tons in 1923 to 1924 to Italy, at prices to be fixed as
prescribed. Coke may be taken in place of coal in ratio of three
tons to four.
Dyestuffs and Drugs
—Germany accords option to the
commission on dyestuffs and chemical drugs, including quinine, up
to 50 per cent of total stock to Germany at the time the treaty
comes into force, and similar option during each six months to
end of 1924 up to 25 per cent of previous six months' output.
Cables
—Germany renounces all title to specific
cables, value of such as were privately owned being credited to
her against reparation indebtedness.
Restitution
—As reparation for the destruction of the
library of Louvain, Germany is to hand over manuscripts, early
printed books, prints, etc., to the equivalent of those
destroyed, and all works of art taken from Belgium and
France.
SECTION 9.
Finances
—Germany is required to pay the
total cost of the armies of occupation from the date of the
armistice as long as they are maintained in German territory.
Germany is to deliver all sums deposited in Germany by Turkey and
Austria-Hungary in connection with the financial support extended
by her to them during the war and to transfer to the Allies all
claims against Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria or Turkey in connection
with agreements made during the war.
Germany guarantees to repay to Brazil the fund arising from the
sale of Sao Paulo coffee which she refused to allow Brazil to
withdraw from Germany.
Contracts
—Pre-war contracts between allied and
associated nations, excepting the United States, Japan and
Brazil, and German nationals, are canceled except for debts for
accounts already performed.