Haynes Report

(noun)

A report drafted by Dr. George Edmund Haynes, the director of Negro Economics for the U.S. Department of Labor, as a study of the violence-filled Red Summer of 1919. The Haynes Report identified 38 separate riots in widely scattered cities in which whites attacked blacks.

Related Terms

  • Dillingham Commission
  • Nativism
  • National Equal Rights League
  • First Red Scare
  • National Equal Rights league
  • Industrial Workers of the World

Examples of Haynes Report in the following topics:

  • Racial Friction

    • George Edmund Haynes, the director of Negro Economics for the U.S.
    • The so-called Haynes Report identified 38 separate riots in widely scattered cities, in which whites attacked blacks.
    • In addition, Haynes reported that between January and September 1919, white mobs lynched at least 43 African-Americans, with 16 hanged and others shot, while another eight men were burned at the stake.
    • Published in major newspapers, the Haynes Report was a call for national action.
    • FBI agents filed reports that leftist views were winning converts in the black community.
  • Conclusion: The Legacy of WWI

    • In the autumn of 1919, the so-called Haynes Report identified 38 separate riots in widely scattered cities, in which whites attacked blacks.
    • It was reported that between January and September 1919, white mobs lynched at least 43 African-Americans, with 16 hanged and others shot, while another eight were burned at the stake.
  • African Americans in Southern Politics

    • Joseph Hayne Rainey (June 21, 1832 – August 1, 1887) was the first African American to serve in the United States House of Representatives, the second black person to serve in the United States Congress, the first African American to be directly elected to Congress (Revels had been appointed), and the first black presiding officer of the United States House of Representatives.
  • MLA: Reporting Data

  • APA: Reporting Data

  • Chicago/Turabian: Reporting Data

  • MLA: Reporting Data

  • Chicago/Turabian: Reporting Data

  • Reporting Receivables

    • Accounts receivable are reported as a line item on the balance sheet and in a more detailed again report.
    • Accounts receivable are reported as a line item on the balance sheet.
    • Supplementary reports, such as the accounts receivable aging report, provide further detail.
    • The aging report, for example, shows how long invoices from each customer have been outstanding.
    • Generally the accounts in an aging report are subdivided into categories based on how overdue the invoices are.
  • Statistical Literacy

    • The monthly jobs report always gets a lot of attention.
    • Presidential candidates refer to the report when it favors their position.
    • Referring to the August 2012 report in which only 96,000 jobs were created, Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney stated "the weak jobs report is devastating news for American workers and American families ... a harsh indictment of the president's handling of the economy. " When the September 2012 report was released showing 114,000 jobs were created (and the previous report was revised upwards), some supporters of Romney claimed the data were tampered with for political reasons.
    • Given that, what do you think of the difference between the two job reports?
    • It is not sensible to take any single jobs report too seriously.
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