Acknowledgment
Appendices
Introduction
1. Who Were the Populists?
2. Race or Reason?
3. Neither Revolution Nor Reform
4. The Populist Mentality
5. Fusion and Confusion
6. What Happened to the Populists?
7. The Progressive Alternative
8. The Movement for Disfranchisement
9. The Negro and Disfranchisement
10. Politics in the Convention
11. Progressivism Finds a Formula
12. The Election of 1906
13. The Comer Administration
14. The Crocheted Design
I. Negro Percent of Total Male Voting Age Population, Alabama, 1900
II. Pearson Product Moment Coefficients of Correlation Among Political and Social Indicators, All 66 Alabama Counties
II. Pearson Product Moment Coefficients of Correlation Among Political and Social Indicators, 30 Alabama Counties Outside the Black Belt with No Significant Urban Population
II. Some Political and Ecological Correlations
III. The Pattern of Populism: The Alabama House of Representatives, 1894
IV. The Results of Elections of April 23, 1901 Calling the Constitutional Convention, and of November 11, 1901 Ratifying the New Constitution
V. Home Counties of Convention Delegates of 1901 Indicating Membership in Political Pattern
VI. Method
VII. The Percent of Agreement of Each Delegate with the Majority of Each Group and with the Majority of the Convention on 133 Roll Calls
VIII. The Proportion of Voting Delegates of Each Group Who Voted Yes on Each of the 133 Roll Calls
Notes on Sources
Index