The five Negro Presidents : according to what white people said they were / by J. A. Rogers.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York, Helga M. Rogers, 1965Description: 19 p. : ill. 21 cmSubject(s): Summary: In 1963 When Attorney-General Kennedy and Senator Javits said there might be a Negro President in the next thirty or forty years, FACT, most outspoken of the big magazines, replied there was already one and in its January February, 1964 issue had an article "America's First Negro President." It named Warren G. Harding as the one and had affidavits from elderly whites who knew the Harding family. But before Harding three other Presidents had been loudly proclaimed by white people as being of Negro Ancestry...Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, and Abraham Lincoln--from page 1.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
American Learning Resource American Learning Resource Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center E 185 .R632 1965 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 9ALRC201100220

In 1963 When Attorney-General Kennedy and Senator Javits said there might be a Negro President in the next thirty or forty years, FACT, most outspoken of the big magazines, replied there was already one and in its January February, 1964 issue had an article "America's First Negro President." It named Warren G. Harding as the one and had affidavits from elderly whites who knew the Harding family. But before Harding three other Presidents had been loudly proclaimed by white people as being of Negro Ancestry...Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, and Abraham Lincoln--from page 1.

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