Contributors' Table of Contents
Earliest Known History of Blacks in Maine
Bangor, Houlton, and New Brunswick
Service, Occupations, and Businesses
Outdoors, Labor, and the Trades
White Congregations, Negro Pews, and Black Membership
Black Schools and Black Students
Education in Black History
Blacks in Maine Literature and Anti-Slavery Authors
Nineteenth-Century Black Speakers
Early Laws, Citizenship, and Race
Negro Conventions of the Nineteenth Century
The 1850s Until the End of the Century
Racial Prejudice, Discrimination, and Violence
Clubs, Centers, and Parties
Cemeteries and Burial Sites
I. References on the Slave Trade and Its Relationship to Maine
II. List of Negroes in Merrill Quarry Payroll and Time Sheets, Brownville, Maine, August 1868; and Blacks Listed in the Brownville and Williamsburg, Maine, 1870 Census
III. 1850 Census List of Black Mariners in Portland
IV. Work: Short Lists of Individuals and Their Occupations
VI. Green Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church Ministers
VII. School Agents, Superintendents, and Teachers in Maine State Administrative District #16, Warren, Maine
VIII. Footprints on the Sands-The Life of Samuel Osborne
IX. Black Veterans of Peterborough
X. Some Sketches of Maine's Black Revolutionary War Veterans
XI. Some Black Civil War Veterans in Maine
XII. John Brown Russwurm's Commencement Oration at Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1826
XIII. Thomas G. Brown Timeline
XIV. John Nichols's Story, from Lewiston Journal Illustrated Magazine, April 16, 1921