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William G. Allen

 William G. Allen THE AMERICAN PREJUDICE AGAINST COLOR

THE AMERICAN PREJUDICE AGAINST COLOR

Sinopsis

I am a quadroon, that is, I am of one-fourth African blood, and three-fourths Anglo-Saxon. I graduated at Oneida Institute, in Whitesboro', New York, in 1844; subsequently studied Law with Ellis Gray Loring, Esq., of Boston, Massachusetts; and was thence called to the Professorship of the Greek and German languages, and of Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres of New York Central College, situated in Mc. Grawville, Cortland County,—the only College in America that has ever called a colored man to a Professorship, and one of the very few that receive colored and white students on of perfect equality, if, indeed, they receive colored students at all.
In April, 1851, I was invited to Fulton, to...