prof. baldwin: i need find out more about that. thank you for that. was a product of the great migration. he wrote this story as a first-hand observer. ways, his paintings reinforced the traditional view of moving to the north for industry and there are questions about why he did that because of the funders, patrons, because of trying to get reception. in other paintings, one said another cause was lynching. it is one panel that stands out by itself. but it was in the context of these current -- the current scholarship, it haunts us. all of these panels on industry and opportunity, another cause was lynching. it speaks to these other factors that demonstrate the range of reasons. as well, the wonderful panel that shows different flows of migrants looking like tributaries and rivers. it speaks to the fact of the great migration being a social movement. the final panel where it says and they came and kept coming and kept coming. we get the imagery of movement without pause and increasing and expanding and growing as being much more than a response to jo