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Table of Contents
Introduction
"I am yet waitin": African American women and free labor banking experiments in the emancipation-era South, 1860s-1900
"Who is so helpless as the Negro woman?": the independent order of St. Luke and the quest for economic security, 1856-1902
"Let us have a bank": St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, economic activism, and state regulation, 1903-World War I
Rituals of risk and respectability: gendered economic practices, credit, and debt to World War I
"A good, strong, hustling woman": financing the new Negro in the new era, 1920-1929
Epilogue.
"I am yet waitin": African American women and free labor banking experiments in the emancipation-era South, 1860s-1900
"Who is so helpless as the Negro woman?": the independent order of St. Luke and the quest for economic security, 1856-1902
"Let us have a bank": St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, economic activism, and state regulation, 1903-World War I
Rituals of risk and respectability: gendered economic practices, credit, and debt to World War I
"A good, strong, hustling woman": financing the new Negro in the new era, 1920-1929
Epilogue.