Alfred Holt Stone Born: 16-Oct-1870 Birthplace: New Orleans, LA Died: 11-May-1955 Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Scholar, Government Nationality: United States Executive summary: Studies in the American Race Problem Planter, scholar and author. For some time he was engaged in cotton planting, at Dunleith, Mississippi, as one of the largest individual cotton growers in the state. Stone spent considerable effort in the nation's capital engaged in research at the Library of Congress, studying the Amendments to the Constitution growing out of the Civil War and in the political and economic problems peculiar to the South, and specifically what was known at the time as the Negro Question. Stone's views are undeniably racist. But he assembled a library of over 3000 items on the subject, The Negro and Cognate Subjects, which has remained intact at the University of Mississippi. His library is interesting as it unexpectedly non-biased, including a large amount of abolitionist material. Father: Walter Wilson Stone (b. 20-Jul-1840) Mother: Eleanor Holt Wife: Mary Bailey Ireys (m. 1896, until his death, d. 3-Dec-1969)
Law School: LLD, University of Mississippi (1891) Law School: LLB, University of Mississippi (1916)
Mississippi State Official Tax Commissioner (1932-55) Mississippi State House of Representatives (1916-20) Greenville Times Editor (1900-01)
American Academy of Political and Social Science American Economic Association American Social Science Association
Mississippi Bar Association Mississippi Historical Society
Southern History Association
Author of books:
Studies in the American Race Problem (1908, social studies)
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