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- Q5695149 subject Q16779995.
- Q5695149 subject Q5549635.
- Q5695149 subject Q6268104.
- Q5695149 subject Q6370569.
- Q5695149 subject Q6979991.
- Q5695149 subject Q7164136.
- Q5695149 subject Q8585941.
- Q5695149 subject Q8704678.
- Q5695149 abstract "The American Negro Academy (ANA) was an intellectual organization that supported African-American scholarship. It was organized in Washington DC, in 1897. The organization was the first in the United States composed of African-American scholars, and it operated from 1897 to 1928.Its founders were primarily composed of authors, scholars, and artists. of the organization included Alexander Crummell, an Episcopal priest and staunch Republican from New York City; John Wesley Cromwell; Paul Laurence Dunbar; Walter B. Hayson, and Kelly Miller. Reverend Doctor Alexander Crummell served as one the Academy's core founders and first president before his death in 1898.The organization was formed to provide an alternative to Booker T. Washington's approach to education and scholarship. Washington's Tuskegee University was based on what was called the Atlanta compromise. He emphasized vocational and industrial training for southern blacks, who lived mostly in rural areas, and discouraged academic studies in the liberal arts.The ANA took its turn in the struggle for equal rights for blacks, as it was organized shortly after the incorpoartion of legal segregation through the Supreme Court's decision in its 1896 case, Plessy v. Ferguson Du Bois suggested that his notions of a Talented Tenth of African Americans, primarily composed of blacks trained in higher education were responsible for educating masses of black citizens, forced to continue their existence as inferior to whites. Through a publication of works within the Academy's Occasional Papers, it sought to parallel the concept of "trickle-down economics, in which more black intellectuals efforts would trickle down into “his schools, academies and colleges; and then enters his pulpits; and so filters down into his families and his homes…to be a laborer with intelligence, enlightenment and manly ambitions”.".
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q11103183.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q16779995.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q1682329.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q1766103.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q319871.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q4816187.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q5549635.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q6268104.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q6370569.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q6502313.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q6979991.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q7164136.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q7768013.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q8585941.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q8704678.
- Q5695149 wikiPageWikiLink Q974678.
- Q5695149 comment "The American Negro Academy (ANA) was an intellectual organization that supported African-American scholarship. It was organized in Washington DC, in 1897. The organization was the first in the United States composed of African-American scholars, and it operated from 1897 to 1928.Its founders were primarily composed of authors, scholars, and artists.".
- Q5695149 label "Negro Academy".