117:, about the effect of poor living conditions. He found that there was a lack of conscience in the greater community that allowed for children "to live sunlight, pure air, pure thoughts, chaste conduct and associates… are denied them from their very birth" and were a breeding ground for lawlessness. He established the first Boy Scout troop for African American children in the District of Columbia.
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Waring also practiced medicine in the
District of Columbia, was superintendent of Camp Pleasant, and worked with the Associated Charities of the District. He operated a free medical clinic in the People's Congregational Church and was a physician at Howard University. In 1916, he became the principal
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He recognized that there was unfounded fear of
African Americans by whites and that African Americans were more likely to be charged with minor offenses, which led to friction between the police and African Americans. Waring, a member of the Colored Law and Order League, was concerned with the living
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Waring was an educator and supervisor in
Washington, D.C., schools for about 23 years, from 1879 to 1891. He then became a principal of the Colored High School in Baltimore and then a supervising principal of Baltimore's colored schools and the Teacher's Training School. He developed carpentry,
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Waring was married in
Washington, D.C., on April 4, 1883, to Carrie Brown, also known as Caroline Brown. They had seven children, six of whom were Roberta, Regendia, James, Dorothy, Mary, and Alfred. James N. H. Waring, Jr. was also an educator who also secured the position of principal at the
141:. After the war, he practiced medicine in Hopkinton, Massachusetts before he moved to Downington, Pennsylvania and worked at the Industrial School for Boys. He sat on the Board of Trustees for Howard University, with his term ending in 1920.
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in
Downington, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Dorothy, who married Dr. William J. Howard (son of humanitarian and activist Reverend William James Howard), established in 1929 one of the first private nursery schools, The Garden of Children.
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conditions and social constructs of the lives of
African Americans. The group was founded by "prominent black" physicians, lawyers, educators, and business leaders. He researched the problems of African Americans in Baltimore and wrote
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77:, he was a chaplain of the Michigan Volunteers. He became the Berean Baptist Church's first pastor. He was a co-founder of the country's first black bank, Capital Savings Bank. He was on the board of trustees at
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Regendia and Alfred were not mentioned in the obituary for James Waring, and may have predeceased their father. His daughter's married names were
Roberta W. Booker, Dorothy W. Howard, and Mary W. Steele.
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on
September 22, 1861, to Amanda Fitzallen (nee Hill) Waring, the daughter of Henry Nelson Hill, and Reverend William Waring. William Waring attended schools in
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cooking, drawing, sewing, and printing courses for the colored schools, which were subsequently added to the curriculum of the city's white schools.
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Town and City Clerks of
Massachusetts. Massachusetts Vital and Town Records. Provo, UT: Holbrook Research Institute (Jay and Delene Holbrook)
45:. He implemented trade courses in Baltimore and studied societal pressures on African Americans. During World War II, he treated soldiers at
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One source states that his father's name is James, but census and other public records state that his father's name is
William.
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482:"Constitution of the American Society of Free Persons of Colour, for improving their condition in the United States"
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81:. James' great uncle was Arthur Waring, a member of the American Society of Free Persons of Color (1830).
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725:. Cheyney, Pennsylvania: Committee of Twelve for the Advancement of the Interests of the Negro Race.
538:""Manufacturing Criminals": The Historical Roots of Baltimore's Racialized Criminal Justice System"
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37:, (September 22, 1861 – December 29, 1923) was an educator and physician who practiced in
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595:"James H. Waring, born in Michigan in 1861, lived in Wheaton, Montgomery, Maryland in 1900",
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United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900
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District of Columbia, Marriages, 1830-1921. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013
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293:"Educators of the First Half Century of Public Schools of the District of Columbia"
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241:. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. p. 131.
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Infectious Fear: Politics, Disease, and the Health Effects of Segregation
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Waring's siblings were Charles, Robert Louis, Lavinia, Hattie, Bert, and
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599:, Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration
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Work of the Colored Law and Order League, Baltimore, Maryland
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epidemic. He sat on the Board of Trustees of his alma mater,
704:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 199–227.
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88:. He attended public schools in his birth state and in
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He is also commonly referred to as Dr. James Waring.
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100:. In 1897, Howard awarded him a Master's degree.
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669:"Letter from J. N. H. Waring to W. E. B. DuBois"
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620:. Washington, D.C. February 18, 1927. p. 9
115:Some Causes of Criminality Among Colored People
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152:Downingtown Industrial and Agricultural School
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121:of the Howard Orphanage Industrial School in
765:Howard University College of Medicine alumni
421:"James Henry Nelson Waring - death record",
352:Woodson, C. G. (1948). "The Waring Family".
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388:"Howard University Catalogue 1917-1918"
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701:Black Baltimoreans and the Bawdy Trade
512:"The Negro in the Cities of the North"
449:"Mary Ann French, Augustus Palmer Wed"
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65:James Henry Nelson Waring was born in
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158:Waring died on December 29, 1923, in
614:"Obituary for Caroline Brown Waring"
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291:Wormley, G. Smith (April 4, 1932).
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235:Robert, Samuel Kelton Jr. (2009).
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643:"Dr. James H. N. Waring obituary"
698:Hemphill, Katie M., ed. (2020).
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536:Halpin, Dennis (July 1, 2015).
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16:American educator and physician
770:American school administrators
649:. December 29, 1923. p. 7
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516:Charity Organization Society
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780:Schoolteachers from Michigan
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719:Waring, James H. N. (1908).
297:The Journal of Negro History
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785:People from Niles, Michigan
740:African-American physicians
486:Colored Conventions Project
92:and taught school first in
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745:African-American activists
565:"Howard University Record"
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750:Physicians from Baltimore
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755:Activists from Baltimore
137:in Massachusetts during
61:Early life and education
19:Not to be confused with
673:credo.library.umass.edu
543:Perspectives on History
354:Negro History Bulletin
164:Wayland, Massachusetts
760:Howard College alumni
581:"Jas H. N. Waring",
94:St. Louis, Missouri
43:Baltimore, Maryland
395:moses.law.umn.edu/
31:James H. N. Waring
711:978-1-108-48901-0
248:978-0-8078-9407-1
98:Howard University
79:Howard University
55:Howard University
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677:. Retrieved
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133:epidemic at
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21:James Waring
570:. May 1918.
397:. p. 5
139:World War I
135:Camp Devens
131:Spanish flu
127:Long Island
51:Spanish flu
49:during the
47:Camp Devens
734:Categories
360:(5): 101.
174:References
160:Cochituate
123:Kings Park
461:0190-8286
366:0028-2529
325:149604129
217:Citations
162:, within
75:Civil War
653:March 1,
492:March 1,
466:March 1,
374:44174775
317:2714463
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488:. 1830
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104:Career
41:, and
568:(PDF)
391:(PDF)
370:JSTOR
321:S2CID
313:JSTOR
179:Notes
86:Alice
706:ISBN
681:2021
655:2021
626:2021
551:2021
523:2021
494:2021
468:2021
457:ISSN
403:2021
362:ISSN
332:2021
243:ISBN
305:doi
23:or
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