Our problem is not racial, but human and economic. . . . We hold the Negro racially responsible for conditions common to all races on his economic plane. The writings of reformer Lily Hardy Hammond (1859-1925) are filled with such forthright criticisms of southern white attitudes toward African Americans--enough so that her stature as a southern progressive thinker would seem assured. Yet Hammond, who once stood at the intellectual center of the southern women s social gospel movement and was in her time the South s most prolific female writer on the race question, has been...
Our problem is not racial, but human and economic. . . . We hold the Negro racially responsible for conditions common to all races on his economic...