Findings Concerning Negroes. n.p., 1927.
"Germans Rebuke American Prejudice: Brand Views of Athletes as Barbaric Shun Tolan, Star of Cinder Path," The Chicago Defender, September 21, 1929.
"McMillan Finds German People Very Friendly," The Chicago Defender, October 5, 1929.
"American Makes Fine Record at German Capital: George Van Popular At U. S. Embassy Has Spent 30 Years in Europe," The Chicago Defender, November 2, 1929.
"Germans Left in Straits by the World War," The Chicago Defender, November 9, 1929.
"Nationality Means Little to Germany," The Chicago Defender, November 16, 1929.
"German Youngsters Much Like Americans: They Are a Fine Lot of Happy Creatures," The Chicago Defender, January 25, 1930.
"German Youngsters Much Like Americans," The Chicago Defender, February 1, 1930.
"German People Show Keen Interest in Race Problem," The Chicago Defender, April 5, 1930.
"Distorting a Speech," The Washington Post, July 19, 1934.
"Negro Higher Education as I Have Known It," The Journal of Negro Education 8, no. 1 (1939).
Carl Schnaase als Hegelianer. Kunst und Geschichtsphilosophie. Bonn, Germany: Druck H. Ludwig, 1933.
"The Negro Forty-Ninth State in the Light of the Jewish National Home," The Journal of Negro Education 9, no. 2 (1940).
"Review of Five North Carolina Negro Educators," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 27, no. 1 (1940).
"Review of Freedom of Thought in the Old South," The Journal of Negro Education 9, no. 4 (1940).
"Review of The Negro in English Romantic Thought. Or a Study of Sympathy for the Oppressed," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 67, no. 2 (1943).
"Light Which Two World Wars Throw Upon the Plight of the American Negro," The Journal of Negro Education 12, no. 3. (1943).
"Review of American Negro Slave Revolts," The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 30, no. 4 (1944).
"The Role of the Social Sciences in Ordering the Post-War World," The Quarterly Review of Higher Education Among Negroes 12, no. 3 (1944).
"What The German People Think Of The Negro G I," The Chicago Defender, October 29, 1949.
"War Babies: An Intimate Story Of How These Children Are Cared For Inside Hitler's Germany Today," The Chicago Defender, November 5, 1949.
The Founding Of South Carolina's State College For Negroes. Orangeburg, SC: Self-published, 1952.
Negro Higher Education in the State of South Carolina. Orangeburg, SC: Self-published, 1953.
"Cold Civil War: What happened in Orangeburg, So. Carolina when a group of Negroes petitioned the School Board to discontinue segregation in the schools. The Policy of 'Keeping The Nigger in His Place'," The Hartford Courant, April 22, 1956.
"Anthony Bowen and the Y.M.C.A.," Negro History Bulletin 21, no. 7 (1958).