For an accurate understanding of the political and racial atmosphere in late 1860s through 1890s North Carolina and Wilmington, we highly recommend the following titles as worthy of the reader’s time, and they are cited below:
Reconstruction in NC, Jos. deR. Hamilton, 1971
Politics in Wilmington/New Hanover County, McDuffie, 1979
Editor in Politics, Josephus Daniels, UNC Press, 1941
Life and Speeches of Charles B. Aycock, Conner/Poe, 1912
Prince of Carpetbaggers, Jonathan Daniels, 1958
Chronicles of the Cape Fear, James Sprunt, 1916
Pictorial/Historical New Hanover County/Wilmington, deRosset, 1938
Memoirs of An Octogenarian, John D. Bellamy, Jr. 1941
General Overview
Black newspaperman Alexander Manly, perhaps due to lagging revenue and prone to inflammatory editorials like the one cited below, was responding to an 1897 speech by Georgian Rebecca Felton to a Georgia Agricultural Fair assembly. She decried the rape of white farm women by black men while the white farmers were working the fields, and that this crime had become epidemic. She blamed the Republican party for fostering the belief among blacks that their crime of rape would not be punished. Manly's editorial was seen as suggesting that the rape was somehow consensual and absolving the criminal.
The following from the DeRosset source, published in 1938:
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