Compare Constellations
Information: The first column shows data points from Congress of Racial Equality in red. The third column shows data points from Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Congress of Racial Equality
Shared
Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter
Congress of Racial Equality
Name Components
Name :
Congress of Racial Equality
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Dates
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- Name Entry
- Congress of Racial Equality
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
CORE (Congress of Racial Equality)
Name Components
Name :
CORE (Congress of Racial Equality)
eng
Latn
alternativeForm
rda
Dates
- Name Entry
- CORE (Congress of Racial Equality)
Citation
- Name Entry
- CORE (Congress of Racial Equality)
C.O.R.E. (Congress of Racial Equality)
Name Components
Name :
C.O.R.E. (Congress of Racial Equality)
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Latn
alternativeForm
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Dates
- Name Entry
- C.O.R.E. (Congress of Racial Equality)
Citation
- Name Entry
- C.O.R.E. (Congress of Racial Equality)
Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter
Name Components
Name :
Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter
Dates
- Name Entry
- Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter
Citation
- Name Entry
- Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), a chapter of the CORE national organization, was formed in March 1963 and remained active until the end 1966. Based on Manhattan's Lower East Side, it was one of nearly a dozen New York City local chapters organized in the early 1960s. Its founders included Rita and Michael Schwerner (the latter one of the group of three civil rights workers murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi in 1964), and its members included radical pacifist Igal Rodenko, anarchist activist and theorist Murray Bookchin, and writer Bell Gale Chevigny.
While the chapter focused much of its energy on tenant organizing and combatting racial discrimination in housing, its first local action, in July and August of 1963, was organizing demonstrations protesting discrimination in hiring of workers building Rutgers Houses (a public housing development then under construction on the Lower East Side), as part of a national CORE campaign against all-white building trades unions. A dozen and half Downtown members were arrested on disorderly conduct charges during these demonstrations and sentenced to five days in prison or paying a $25 fine. Three of them, including Helena Lewis (sometimes also known as Helena Levine), an administrative assistant at New York University and a Downtown CORE officer, refused to pay their fines and served their time at New York City's Women's House of Detention, in October 1964. Appalled by what they saw and experienced there, they mounted a campaign, in concert with others, to protest and focus public attention on conditions at the prison. This campaign included sending letters to editors of newspapers and confidential memoranda to New York City and State public officials, and testifying to a grand jury convened (possibly in part because of their actions) to investigate complaints against state of affairs at the jail, as well as to the New York State legislature's Joint Committee on Penal Institutions.
eng
Latn
Citation
- BiogHist
- BiogHist
https://viaf.org/viaf/264215175
https://viaf.org/viaf/264215175
https://viaf.org/viaf/264215175
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://viaf.org/viaf/264215175
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80080481
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80080481
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80080481
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n80080481
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80080481
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80080481
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80080481
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n80080481
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1125901
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1125901
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1125901
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q1125901
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10522820
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10522820
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10522820
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10522820
https://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
https://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
https://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010198162
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010198162
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010198162
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010198162
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2010198162
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2010198162
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2010198162
Citation
- Same-As Relation
- https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2010198162
Wikipedia, viewed May 30, 2023
The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) is an African-American civil rights organization in the United States that played a pivotal role for African Americans in the civil rights movement. Founded in 1942, its stated mission is "to bring about equality for all people regardless of race, creed, sex, age, disability, sexual orientation, religion or ethnic background."[2] CORE was founded in Chicago, Illinois, in March 1942. The organization's founding members included James Leonard Farmer Jr., Anna Pauline "Pauli" Murray, George Mills Houser, Elsie Bernice Fisher and Homer A. Jack. Of the 50 original founding members, 28 were men and 22 were women, roughly one-third of them were Black and the other two-thirds white.[ On April 10, 1947, CORE sent a group of eight white (including James Peck, their publicity officer) and eight black men on what was to be a two-week Journey of Reconciliation through Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky in an effort to end segregation in interstate travel. The members of this group were arrested and jailed several times, but they received a great deal of publicity, and this marked the beginning of a long series of similar campaigns.[13][14] In the 1960s, the Chicago chapter of CORE began to challenge racial segregation in the Chicago Public Schools (CPS).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_of_Racial_Equality
eng
Latn
Citation
- Source
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_of_Racial_Equality
Finding Aid, Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) Records, Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archive, viewed May 30, 2023
Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), a chapter of the CORE national organization, was formed in March 1963 and remained active until the end 1966. Based on Manhattan's Lower East Side, it was one of nearly a dozen New York City local chapters organized in the early 1960s. Its founders included Rita and Michael Schwerner (the latter one of the group of three civil rights workers murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi in 1964), and its members included radical pacifist Igal Rodenko, anarchist activist and theorist Murray Bookchin, and writer Bell Gale Chevigny. While the chapter focused much of its energy on tenant organizing and combatting racial discrimination in housing, its first local action, in July and August of 1963, was organizing demonstrations protesting discrimination in hiring of workers building Rutgers Houses (a public housing development then under construction on the Lower East Side), as part of a national CORE campaign against all-white building trades unions. A dozen and half Downtown members were arrested on disorderly conduct charges during these demonstrations and sentenced to five days in prison or paying a $25 fine. Three of them, including Helena Lewis (sometimes also known as Helena Levine), an administrative assistant at New York University and a Downtown CORE officer, refused to pay their fines and served their time at New York City's Women's House of Detention, in October 1964. Appalled by what they saw and experienced there, they mounted a campaign, in concert with others, to protest and focus public attention on conditions at the prison. This campaign included sending letters to editors of newspapers and confidential memoranda to New York City and State public officials, and testifying to a grand jury convened (possibly in part because of their actions) to investigate complaints against state of affairs at the jail, as well as to the New York State legislature's Joint Committee on Penal Institutions.
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_633/tam_633.html
eng
Latn
Citation
- Source
- http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_633/tam_633.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/688320233
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/688320233
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/701720805
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/701720805
http://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
Citation
- Source
- http://viaf.org/viaf/160496208
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/715318801
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/715318801
King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968,. Civil rights movement literature, 1958-1967.
Title:
Civil rights movement literature, 1958-1967.
The collection contains fliers, pamphlets, form letters, newsletters, and postal cards documenting the civil rights movement in the United States focusing on the March on Washington in 1963, boycott of Woolworth's, freedom rides, and meetings, lectures, and concerts to support the activities of the Committee to Defend Martin Luther King, Jr., Congress of Racial Equality, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Also, includes seven form letters signed by Martin Luther King, Jr.
ArchivalResource: 151 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34968940 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968,. Civil rights movement literature, 1958-1967.
Papers of Florynce Kennedy, (inclusive), (bulk), 1915-2004, 1947-1993
Title:
Papers of Florynce Kennedy, (inclusive), (bulk) 1915-2004 1947-1993
The papers of Florynce Kennedy, lawyer, political activist, civil rights advocate, lecturer and feminist.
ArchivalResource: 14.45 linear ft.; (31 + 1/2 file boxes, 1 folio box, 1 carton) plus 4 folio folders, 2 folio+ folders, 1 oversized folder, 15 photograph folders, 205 videotapes, 1 motion picture
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01221/catalog View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Papers of Florynce Kennedy, (inclusive), (bulk), 1915-2004, 1947-1993
Morey, R. Hunter, 1940- . Papers, 1962-1967.
Title:
Papers, 1962-1967.
Papers of R. Hunter Morey, a civil rights activist who was Mississippi legal coordinator for Freedom Summer for the Council of Federated Organizations, organizer for the Young Democratic Club of Mississippi, and administrative assistant for the Child Development Group of Mississippi. The processed portion of this collection is summarized above, dates 1962-1967, and is described in the register. Additional accessions date to the early 1960s, and are described below.
ArchivalResource: 2.0 c.f. (5 archives boxes) and2 tape recordings; plusadditions of 0.1 c.f.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173692709 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Morey, R. Hunter, 1940- . Papers, 1962-1967.
Brown, Gloria. Gloria Brown papers, 1964-1967.
Title:
Gloria Brown papers, 1964-1967.
Correspondence, news releases, and printed material relating to the activities of the Detroit C.O.R.E.
ArchivalResource: 50 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34421906 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Brown, Gloria. Gloria Brown papers, 1964-1967.
Greenberg, Jack, 1924-. Oral history interview with Jack Greenberg, 1975.
Title:
Oral history interview with Jack Greenberg, 1975.
New York City family background; education and naval duty; Law Revision Commission; history of Legal Defense Fund; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Legal Defense Fund, 1949- : important cases, staff problems, conflicts; Miranda case, racial discrimination in jury selection and housing, capital punishment, welfare rights; sit-ins and Freedom Rides; contributions of Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee and Congress of Racial Equality to civil rights movement; Mexican-American Legal Defense Fund; working relationship of Legal Defense Fund with Supreme Court; impressions of Thurgood Marshall, James Meredith, others.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 404 leaves.Tape: 3 cassettes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/309731484 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Greenberg, Jack, 1924-. Oral history interview with Jack Greenberg, 1975.
Fraser, Steve, 1945-. Oral history interview with Steven Fraser, 1984-1985.
Title:
Oral history interview with Steven Fraser, 1984-1985.
Background and childhood: Born 1945, Brooklyn, NY, Jewish family, lived in Great Neck, Long Island, parents members of Communist party; education: University of Wisconsin, Madison, City College, Temple University, undergraduate; themes: experiences growing up in a Communist household, memories of parents' political activism, childhood rebellion, formation of Long Island Congress of Racial Equality [CORE], involvement in political and civil rights demonstrations during youth, first arrest as a result of political demonstrations during high school, reluctance about going to college, civil rights demonstrations at Madison, participation in Mississippi Freedom Summer, involvement with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee [SNCC], arrests as a result of civil rights movement, experiences with drugs, feelings of disaffection for Columbia University, May 2nd Movement, movements at City College, experiences in cadre school, involvement in Students for a Democratic Society [SDS], avoiding military draft, Columbia University strike, University of Pennsylvania strike, involvement with Progressive Labor [PL], working with high school-aged Black Panthers, the framing of SDS by law enforcement, campaigning for public office, relationships and marriage, life after politics, peer and colleague reminiscences, family reminiscences.
ArchivalResource: transcript: 296 leaves.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/713803440 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Fraser, Steve, 1945-. Oral history interview with Steven Fraser, 1984-1985.
Zippert, John S. Papers, 1965-1966.
Title:
Papers, 1965-1966.
Papers of a Congress of Racial Equality worker in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, who organized farmers into marketing and agricultural cooperatives. The papers illustrate his efforts to organize the Grand Marie Vegetable Producers Co-operative, Inc., Sunset, Louisiana (also known as the Grand Marie Sweet Potato Co-operative), to market sweet potatoes, with future plans to open supply cooperatives and canning operations. Zippert also helped write the Rural Community Visitors Proposal, designed to bring information on federal assistance programs, civil rights, and voter education to poor people in rural areas. Copies of the proposal (in varying forms) are present in the collection, with organizational papers, promotional items, and progress reports of the Grand Marie Co-operative; flyers; material on political candidates for local offices; and a letter from Zippert to his draft board, summarizing his work in Louisiana.
ArchivalResource: 0.2 c.f. (1 archives box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145771615 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Zippert, John S. Papers, 1965-1966.
Parker, Karen L. Karen L. Parker diary, letter, and clippings, 1963-1966.
Title:
Karen L. Parker diary, letter, and clippings, 1963-1966.
Karen L. Parker's diary with entries 5 November 1963-11 August 1966. The entries appear regularly every few weeks in the beginning of the diary and gradually appear less often, ending with entries every several months. Parker began the diary while she was a student majoring in journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. One of the first entries concerns the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, her observations of reactions in Chapel Hill to the assassination, and her own thoughts and feelings about it. Diary entries describe her experiences as the first African American woman undergraduate to attend UNC-Chapel Hill, her involvement with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), her participation in civil rights demonstrations against segregation in Chapel Hill, and her arrest after entering a segregated Chapel Hill restaurant. An entry dated 30 April 1964 describes the visit of former segregationist governor of Mississippi Ross R. Barnett to the UNC-Chapel Hill campus and his remarks about the inferiority of African Americans. The diary also includes entries detailing Parker's observations and experiences concerning race relations and discrimination in Grand Rapids, Mich., while copy editor for the Grand Rapids Press and her changing views of the civil rights movement as she considered the merits of self-defense as opposed to non-violent resistance. Entries throughout the diary describe her thoughts about where she belonged as an educated African-American female during the civil rights era. The Addition of February 2008 consists of a letter from Katherine Kennedy Carmichael, Dean of Women at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, to Karen L. Parker's mother, F.D. Parker, concerning Karen L. Parker's arrest on 19 December 1963. Also included are newspaper clippings about Karen L. Parker's accomplishments as a journalism student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
ArchivalResource: 4 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/69679342 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Parker, Karen L. Karen L. Parker diary, letter, and clippings, 1963-1966.
Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
Title:
Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
An account of the attempts of the Committee of Federated Organizations and the Congress of Racial Equality to secure African-American farmer representation on the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Board in Mississippi.
ArchivalResource: 5 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122443631 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- McHugh, Madeleine. Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Baltimore (Maryland) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 91 linear feet, 10 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1455551 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
Sondheim, Walter, 1908-2007,. Oral history interview, 1976.
Title:
Oral history interview, 1976.
Topics include Sondheim's and Lillie May Jackson's involvement in eliminating discriminatory practices in department stores; Jewish-black relations; Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin and urban renewal; and the interactions of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Congress of Racial Equality, and National Urban League.
ArchivalResource: Typescript : 25 p.Tape : cassette (50 min.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32819081 View
View in SNACreferencedIn
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Sondheim, Walter, 1908-2007,. Oral history interview, 1976.
Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality records, 1944-1968.
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality records, 1944-1968.
The collection consists of records of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) from 1944-1968. The records include the files of National Directors James Farmer and Floyd McKissick; files of the Associate National Director George Wiley; bookkeeping files; and records of the Community Relations, Organization, and Legal Depts. The materials document the administrative and civil rights activities of the CORE and its staff members as well as illustrating CORE's shift from non-violence to Black power and Black separatism.
ArchivalResource: 42.75 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476540 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality records, 1944-1968.
J. R. George's Subject Files, January 20, 1989–January 20, 1993
Title:
J. R. George's Subject Files, January 20, 1989–January 20, 1993
ArchivalResource: 27 linear feet, 1 linear inch
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/2580246 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
Congress of Racial Equality. Correspondence : with Marian Anderson, 1959.
Title:
Correspondence : with Marian Anderson, 1959.
Comprises 2 items, 2 leaves correspondence. Contains letters from James R. Robinson and Steve Allen.
ArchivalResource: 2 : items (4 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/63557163 View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Correspondence : with Marian Anderson, 1959.
Assassination International Committee. Abbie Hoffman/civil rights/"The Movement" collection, 1964-1989 (bulk 1964-1978).
Title:
Abbie Hoffman/civil rights/"The Movement" collection, 1964-1989 (bulk 1964-1978).
Materials relating to the activities of Abbie Hoffman, civil rights worker and political activist, a native of Worcester, Mass., during the civil rights and anti-war movements and protests of the 1960s and 1970s; together with documents concerning activities taken on behalf of Hoffman when he went underground in the 1970s.
ArchivalResource: 1 box.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70958169 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Assassination International Committee. Abbie Hoffman/civil rights/"The Movement" collection, 1964-1989 (bulk 1964-1978).
Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection, Bulk, 1961-1971, 1943-2007
Title:
Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection Bulk, 1961-1971 1943-2007
The Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection consists principally of the subject files concerning 1960s civil rights activism maintained by Arnie Goldwag, an officer of Brooklyn CORE during the first half of the 1960s. These files include correspondence, newsletters, event announcements (e.g., fliers), directions for demonstrators, photographs, press releases, clippings, and other documents related to many of the actions conducted by Brooklyn CORE, particularly for the period 1961-1965. Actions represented in the collection include those protesting discrimination in employment, housing, schools, and the like, including the controversial initiative to block traffic in connection with the opening of the 1964 World's Fair. The collection also includes reminiscences by Goldwag and other CORE members looking back from the 1990s and 2000s. In addition to Brooklyn CORE-related material, the collection includes material related to other 1960s activist groups, including those involved with civil rights, Vietnam War opposition, and draft resistance, among others.
ArchivalResource: 13.75 Linear feet; in 13 manuscript boxes, 5 record cartons, and 2 artifact boxes
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/bhs/arc_002_goldwag_core/arc_002_goldwag_core.html View
View in SNACcreatorOf
Citation
- Resource Relation
- Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection, Bulk, 1961-1971, 1943-2007
Loren Miller papers, 1876-2003, 1932-1966
Title:
Loren Miller papers 1876-2003 1932-1966
This collection consists of the personal and professional papers ofjournalist, civil rights activist, attorney and judge Loren Miller (1903-1967).
ArchivalResource: 10,454 items.; 72 boxes.
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt3489r8ph View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Loren Miller papers, 1876-2003, 1932-1966
Series 1, Subseries 1, Sub-subseries 2. Moe Foner interview
Title:
Series 1, Subseries 1, Sub-subseries 2. Moe Foner interview
Foner discusses the history of 1199, its policies and politics; its organizing activities; relations with other unions and public figures; hospital working conditions and labor relations in the health care industry; union leadership and administration; and 1199 strikes of hospitals in New York City and Charleston, S.C. Moe Foner discusses the history of 1199, its policies and politics; its organizing activities; relations with other unions and public figures; hospital working conditions and labor relations in the health care industry; union leadership and administration; and 1199 strikes of hospitals in New York City and Charleston, S.C. Interview with Moe Foner regards his personal background; the social and political history of 1199 (1932-1976); the founding of the Pharmacists' Union of Greater New York; affiliations and disaffiliations of AFL-CIO unions; the racial composition and ethnic composition of the Drug Division; the organizing of 2,000 drugstores and the administration of resultant collective bargaining agreements; Elliott Godoff's personality, his experience in organizing hospital workers, his background in the United Public Workers of America (UPWA) and the Teamsters, and his decision to join 1199 (1958). Foner also discusses the radical element in the CIO and in District 65 of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU); the relationship of UPWA and RWDSU; 1199's historical role in social politics, cultural and social programs; union militancy and goal setting; the red-baiting of union leaders; and George Meany's and Ray Corbett's (AFL-CIO) stand on collective bargaining legislation, compulsory arbitration and the no-strike pledge. Also discussed are Bayard Rustin's and Harry Van Arsdale's participation in hospital organizing; the relationship between Van Arsdale and Leon Davis; Van Arsdale's role in acquiring Mayor Wagner's pledge of financial support for a strike settlement; Van Arsdale's role in the AFL-CIO merger; A. Philip Randolph's and Rustin's role in the alliance between 1199 and civil rights organizations; RWDSU's participation in 1199's organizing campaign, including the activities of Bob Burke, David Livingston, Aberdeen David, Armando Ramirez, Max Greenberg, Max Steinbach, Bernie Stevens, Bill Michaelson and Joella Thomas; District 65 reaction to the growth of 1199 and challenges to the International board; and Van Arsdale's contacts with Mayor Wagner and New York City judges regarding strike settlement. Included also are discussions of the participation and opinions of various public figures and politicians on hospital unionization, passage of collective bargaining legislation and relations with Moe Foner. These individuals include: Eleanor Roosevelt, Herbert Lehman, Jimmy Wechsler, the Sulzbergers, Evans Clark (professor of economics, Princeton University), Frieda Kirchway (editor, THE NATION), Victor Riesel, Alfred Rose (Mount Sinai Hospital), Arnold Beichmans (professor, University of Massachusetts), Doris Schiff, Mayor Wagner, John Connorton, Paul Screvane, Saul Corbin, Anthony Carlino, Governor Rockefeller, Hank Paley, Murray Kempton, Benjamin Buttenwieser, Helen Buttenwieser, James Healey, and Cardinal Spellman. Organizations discussed in this context include the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the Congress of Racial Equality. Foner also discusses working conditions in hospitals; grievances relating to unionization and the conduct of organizing campaigns and strikes; wages; hours of work; working conditions; turnover rates; arbitrary supervisory policies; the hierarchy of unskilled vs. skilled hospital jobs; patient care; Foner's role in public relations, Davis' position as overall leader, and the assignment of Godoff and Ted Mitchell as leaders of the hospital organizing campaign; the allocation of Drug Division funds for the hospital organizing campaign; the participation of Drug Division members in hospital organizing activities; raising workers' consciousness; mobilizing the Crack of Dawn Brigade; donations and contributions by the public and the labor movement to the strike fund; strike benefits; the morale of strikers; and the operation of hospitals with volunteer and scab labor. Other topics discussed include the strategy employed in organizing professional and technical workers and the viewpoints of such workers on social politics; service workers' consciousness of changing working conditions; raising rank and file to leadership positions; Mitchell's role as a black organizer; the strategy of assigning organizers by geographic areas and ethnic background; solidarity among black and Puerto Rican workers; patient care and safety; 1199 policies and contacts in public relations; the preparation and distribution of leaflets; 1199 support for Governor Rockefeller's re-election; 1199 lobbying activities for passage of collective bargaining legislation for hospital workers; ethical questions concerning unions and strikes in hospitals and the denial of protective collective bargaining legislation; strike conduct and pickets; the decision to organize six Jewish hospitals; the signing of membership cards; mobilizing workers' committees through hospital departments; the reinstatement of strikers; the jailing of Leon Davis; the creation of crisis strike conditions in order to gain collective bargaining rights; strike settlements; 1199's position on national health issues; training and upgrading funds; union democracy; leader self-evaluation; record retention and research on union administration; union finances; and evolutionary changes in the union organizational structure. Issues pertaining to the nature of hospitals and the health care industry include the organizational structure, administration and locus of ownership and financing of religious, public, voluntary and proprietary hospitals; the influence of philanthropists on the administration of voluntary hospitals; protective coverage of hospital workers by the Wagner Act (1935) and the Taft Hartley Act (1947); the influence of third party payers, philanthropists, public opinion, clergymen and politicians on unionization of the health care industry; the Greater New York Hospital Association (GNYHA) position on unionization; opposition to unionization by Jewish philanthropic elites and the Catholic Archdiocese; Catholic and Protestant philanthropic interests; the politics of municipal health care delivery systems; Catholic hospitals and the Archdiocese; the ethnic composition of hospital boards; a comparison of Russian and Jewish hospitals; and the role of boards of trustees in hospital administration. Other topics discussed include hospital strategies to avoid unionization; a comparison of New York City and upstate health care systems; GNYHA's opposition to unions; industry-wide collective bargaining in the health care industry; the establishment of the Permanent Administrative Committee (PAC); the William H. Davies Committee; union administration under the PAC; communication between union administration and workers through newsletters, dues collection and grievance handling; 1199's strategy to block Beth-El Hospital membership on the PAC; and reorganization of the PAC with labor representatives. Issues pertaining to the organization of Montefiore Hospital (1958) include establishment of organizing committees and contacts by departments; organizing meetings; shift scheduling and organizing meetings; supervisors' interference with organizing activities; community support for hospital workers; media publicity; mobilization of civil rights and community leaders; Foner's interpretation of Martin Cherkasky's politics and views on the labor movement; the role of the labor movement in the Montefiore settlement; the key role of service workers; and activities of various organizers and mediators in the dispute. Topics relating to the Charleston, S.C. hospital workers' strike (1969) include contacts with Isaiah Bennett (RWDSU); participation of 1199 members Henry Nicholas, Godoff, Turner and Davis; meetings between SCLC, 1199 and hospital workers; the racial composition of hospital workers and strikers; the development of the strike into a national civil rights issue; contacts between Stanley Levitson, 1199 and the SCLC; the training of SCLC members as 1199 organizers; the decline of SCLC after the death of Martin Luther King; Andrew Young's role as SCLC representative; the organization of boycotts and demonstrations; and media coverage of the strike. Also mentioned is the intervention of Strom Thurmond, U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, U.S. Dept. of Labor, U.S. Office of Civil Rights Compliance, James Farmer, Ted, Bob, and Ethel Kennedy, Walter Mondale, Daniel Moynihan, John Ehrlichman and Charles Shultz; Federal government pressure on Charleston Medical College to comply with the Civil Rights Act; jailing of Ralph Abernathy and the strike settlement; violence; and SCLC connections with Mary Moultries.
ArchivalResource: 4 transcripts (247 p.)
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- National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees. Series 1, Subseries 1, Sub-subseries 2. Moe Foner interview, 1975-1981.
Congress of Racial Equality. Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1944-1968.
Title:
Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1944-1968.
ArchivalResource: 25 microfilm reels.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71071250 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1944-1968.
Queens Borough Public Library. Long Island Division. Afro-Americans. C.O.R.E. / [compiled by Queens Borough Public Library, Long Island Division].
Title:
Afro-Americans. C.O.R.E. / [compiled by Queens Borough Public Library, Long Island Division].
Consists of newspaper clippings and pamphlets. Material is still being added when appropriate. Clippings are photocopied onto acid free paper and bound when sufficient material accumulates.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/460684878 View
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- Queens Borough Public Library. Long Island Division. Afro-Americans. C.O.R.E. / [compiled by Queens Borough Public Library, Long Island Division].
Congress of Racial Equality. WRKL-AM Radio Collection.
Title:
WRKL Station records
Rockland County's first radio station, WRKL began broadcasting on July 4, 1964. WRKL featured local and world news, call-in shows and some music. Known for featuring controversial guests and topics, WRKL was firebombed in 1967 after an appearance by a representative from the Congress for Racial Equality on the popular call-in show "Hotline." The station resumed broadcasting shortly after the bombing and went on to earn several prestigious awards for journalism including the DuPont-Columbia award for outstanding political coverage. The collection documents the station's founding and activities.
ArchivalResource: 2.75 linear feet
http://hdl.handle.net/1903.1/5401 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. WRKL-AM Radio Collection.
Michaels, Sheila Shiki y Kessler, 1939-. Michaels (Sheila) papers, 1960-2001 (bulk 1962-1964).
Title:
Michaels (Sheila) papers, 1960-2001 (bulk 1962-1964).
The papers contain records created during Michaels' tenure with the Congress of Racial Equality and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Mississippi between 1962 and 1964, including her field diary and copies of the Mississippi Free Press from 1963.
ArchivalResource: 1.0 cu. ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/55128318 View
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- Michaels, Sheila Shiki y Kessler, 1939-. Michaels (Sheila) papers, 1960-2001 (bulk 1962-1964).
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Charlotte (North Carolina) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 268 linear feet, 8 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1487607 View
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Rosenfeld, Ralph. Ralph Rosenfeld papers, 1965-1966.
Title:
Ralph Rosenfeld papers, 1965-1966.
Correspondence, memos, schedules and other papers concerning the activities of Detroit, Michigan CORE.
ArchivalResource: 35 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34420881 View
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- Rosenfeld, Ralph. Ralph Rosenfeld papers, 1965-1966.
Michael Padwee Papers, 1966-1979
Title:
Michael Padwee Papers 1966-1979
Michael Padwee was a caseworker for the New York City Department of Social Services, Human Resources Administration and a member of the Social Service Employees Union (SSEU, AFSCME District Council 37, Local 371). While a member of the union, he served as a union delegate and grievance committee chairman and was an active member of several union caucuses. Beginning in his student days at Rutgers University, Padwee was active in several leftist and activist organizations. He was a founding member of Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) chapters at Rutgers. After college, he became active in the New American Movement (NAM) and the Movement for a Democratic Society. This collection contains material documenting his involvement with various political organizations and unions, and it includes material authored by Michael Padwee for SSEU caucuses and for NAM. NOTE: This collection is stored offsite and advance notice is required for use.
ArchivalResource: 4.0 linear feet; (4 boxes)
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/wag_004/wag_004.html View
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- Michael Padwee Papers, 1966-1979
Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records, 1961-1970
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records 1961-1970
Records of the Seattle chapter of the national civil rights organization
ArchivalResource: 5 cubic feet; 12 boxes
http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv53708 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records, 1961-1970
Waite, Edward F. (Edward Foote), 1860-1958. Edward F. Waite papers, 1764-1958.
Title:
Edward F. Waite papers, 1764-1958.
Correspondence, speeches, and printed materials (comprising about half the collection) relating to the involvement of Waite, a juvenile court judge for the fourth judicial district of Minnesota (1911-1921, 1931-1941), in social welfare, civil rights, and civil liberties issues.
ArchivalResource: 3.25 cu. ft. (8 boxes and 5 oversize items).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/313834100 View
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- Waite, Edward F. (Edward Foote), 1860-1958. Edward F. Waite papers, 1764-1958.
Garrow, David J., 1953-. Freedom of Information Act materials on the Civil Rights movement, 1958-1969.
Title:
Freedom of Information Act materials on the Civil Rights movement, 1958-1969.
Memoranda, correspondence, logbooks and printed matter documenting the activities of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the civil rights movement in the United States, obtained by David J. Garrow through the Freedom of Information Act from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other United States government agencies. Sizeable files are also available on two King associates and suspected communists Stanley Levison and Clarence B. Jones. Additional files relate to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Congress of Racial Equality, the Council of Federated Organizations and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. The FBI maintained extensive files on the 1965 Selma to Montgomery Freedom March, racial conflicts and the registration of African American voters in Alabama and other southern states. Other holdings relate to the civil rights record of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the March on Washington movement (1942-43, 1959, 1963), the Mississippi Freedom Summer Project, the FBI's Black Nationalist Groups Informant Program, and to prominent individuals such as Marcus Garvey, Malcolm X, Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Archibald Carey, Roy Wilkins and Donald Wilson Jackson.
ArchivalResource: 16 microfilm reels
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122686871 View
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- Garrow, David J., 1953-. Freedom of Information Act materials on the Civil Rights movement, 1958-1969.
Craft, Silas E.,. Oral history interview, 1976.
Title:
Oral history interview, 1976.
Topics include the influence of Lillie May Jackson and Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin; school desegregation; blacks in the military; and the relationship between the Congress of Racial Equality and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
ArchivalResource: Typescript : 49 p.Tape : cassette (2 hrs.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32819035 View
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- Craft, Silas E.,. Oral history interview, 1976.
Richardson, Judy, 1944-. Oral history interview with Judy Richardson, 1986.
Title:
Oral history interview with Judy Richardson, 1986.
Background and childhood: Born March 10, 1944, Tarrytown, NY; education: Sleepy Hollow High School, Swarthmore College, undergraduate, Columbia University, undergraduate, 1966-67; themes: involvement in Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee [SNCC], Dr. Martin Luther King, 1963 March on Washington, civil rights demonstrations, arrests as a result of civil rights demonstrations, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party [MFDP], Congress for Racial Equity [CORE], role of religion in civil rights movement, relationships between black and white SNCC volunteers, community service in black neighborhoods, 1965 Voting Rights Bill, creation of the Poor People's Corporation, SNCC red-baiting and accusations of communism, involvement with New York Friends of SNCC, family reminiscences, colleague reminiscences.
ArchivalResource: transcript: 95 leaves.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/713803514 View
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- Richardson, Judy, 1944-. Oral history interview with Judy Richardson, 1986.
Jones, Johnnie, 1919-. Johnnie Jones, Sr. oral history interview, 1993-1994.
Title:
Johnnie Jones, Sr. oral history interview, 1993-1994.
Jones discusses his family, his early education and the education of African-American children, his attendance at Southern University Demonstration High School, race relations in Baton Rouge, and his service during World War II. Jones describes in detail his work as a civil rights attorney, including his relationships with Louisiana civil rights leaders, the NAACP, and CORE; his participation in numerous civil rights cases; student activism at Southern University; and the wider civil rights movement in Louisiana.
ArchivalResource: 12 sound cassettes (14 hours);Transcript (483 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70888796 View
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- Jones, Johnnie, 1919-. Johnnie Jones, Sr. oral history interview, 1993-1994.
National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees. Series 6, Subseries 4. Bayard Rustin interview, 1977.
Title:
Bayard Rustin interview, 1977.
Focuses on the relationship between 1199 and various civil rights organizations; the role of black leaders; collective bargaining legislation; and New York City and union politics. Rustin discusses A. Philip Randolph's connections with 1199; contacts with Governor Rockefeller; the passage of collective bargaining legislation for hospital workers; relations with Leon Davis, the American Labor Council, Raymond Corbett, Harry Van Arsdale, Jay Lovestone, and Charles Zimmerman; 1199 leaders' reaction to red-baiting; his role in setting up a meeting between Davis and Peter Otley; contacts with New York City government; the formation of the Citizens Committee for Justice to Hospital Workers; leafleting hospital workers; the participation of civil rights organizations in hospital demonstrations; and the connections between Randolph, Davis, and Thomas Kilbourne (Harlem clergyman), Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, the Negro American Labor Council, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Urban League, the National Council of Negro Women, and the Congress of Racial Equality. Also discussed are the recruitment and training of minority building construction workers; the reaction of black leaders to red-baiting of 1199 leaders; black leadership of 1199; relationships between blacks, Catholic leaders and hospital boards; and the connections of New York politicians to Jewish leaders and hospital boards. Also commented upon are the roles played by Roy Wilkins, Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, and Malcom X in leading civil rights demonstrations; the teachers' strike and community control in New York City (1968); 1199's position on Vietnam; the formulation of the collective politics of labor unions and the exchange of opinions between leaders and rank and file.
ArchivalResource: 1 transcript (25 p.)
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- National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees. Series 6, Subseries 4. Bayard Rustin interview, 1977.
Fellowship of Reconciliation, Michigan records, 1940-1957
Title:
Fellowship of Reconciliation, Michigan records, 1940-1957
Correspondence, printed materials, and other papers from the files of the editors of the M̲i̲c̲h̲i̲g̲a̲n̲ F̲.̲O̲.̲R̲.̲ N̲e̲w̲s̲, largely relating to the peace movement and the problem of conscientious objection; also tape recording of Dr. Martin Niemoeller at the F.O.R. national conference in 1954. Correspondents include: Henry H. Crane, Homer Ferguson, Patrick V. McNamara, George Meader, Abraham J. Muste, Scott Nearing, Wallace F. Nelson, Martin Niemoeller, Charles E. Potter, Bayard Rustin, John N. Sayre, Rebecca Shelley, Morton J. Sobel, Adlai E. Stevenson, John M. Swomley, and Albert G. Watson.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34421744 View
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- Fellowship of Reconciliation (U.S.). Michigan. Fellowship of Reconciliation, Michigan records, 1940-1957.
American Association for the Advancement of Atheism. General brochure and pamphlet collection, 1921-ongoing (bulk 1948-1967)
Title:
General brochure and pamphlet collection, 1921-ongoing (bulk 1948-1967)
The General Brochure and Pamphlet Collection includes material published by non-profit, government and corporate organizations that provide information about their products, services or viewpoints. The collection includes several Civil Defense brochures from the 1950s and 1960s. Organizations represented include the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, Federal Civil Defense Administration, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Freedom Associates, among others. The collection is arranged by subject.
ArchivalResource: 0.4 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/219746959 View
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- American Association for the Advancement of Atheism. General brochure and pamphlet collection, 1921-ongoing (bulk 1948-1967)
Congress of Racial Equality. Collected records, 1942-1972.
Title:
Collected records, 1942-1972.
Includes history and by-laws, budgets and financial papers, minutes of meetings, reports of projects and programs, newsletters, pamphlets, and correspondence and scrapbooks of George M. Houser.
ArchivalResource: 10 linear in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/42415763 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Collected records, 1942-1972.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Birmingham (Alabama) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 110 linear feet, 2 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1461836 View
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Coleman, Mary. Papers, 1952-1960.
Title:
Papers, 1952-1960.
Papers of a civil rights advocate concerning her membership in both the Baltimore and Washington, D.C., chapters of the Congress of Racial Equality, including scattered minutes, clippings, membership lists, and printed matter concerning lunch counter sit-ins, playground integration, supermarket employment, and the national CORE office.
ArchivalResource: 0.1 c.f. (1 folder)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145770779 View
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- Coleman, Mary. Papers, 1952-1960.
Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s
Title:
Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s
<p>Floyd B. McKissick (1922-1991) was born in Asheville, N.C. He was an attorney, businessman, and civil rights leader. McKissick married Evelyn Williams, with whom he had four children: Joycelyn; Andree; Floyd, Jr.; and Charmaine. The collection contains materials documenting Floyd B. McKissick's work as an lawyer, businessman, and civil rights leader. Included are items pertaining to his law practice in Durham, N.C.; his service, beginning in 1966, as national director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); his work as advisor to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); and his interests in politics and education. Many items relate to Soul City, N.C., a town owned and operated by African Americans near Warrenton, N.C. Included are items describing the impact of Soul City on rural Warren County, N.C., and Vance County, N.C. Among the companies documented are McKissick Enterprises of New York and North Carolina; City Development, Inc.; HealthCo, Inc.; Madison and McKissick Development, Inc.; McKissick S.C. Associates; the Soul City Foundation and other Soul City companies; and the Warren Regional Planning Corporation. There are also a few items relating to the McKissick family and to his affiliation with the Republican Party at the local, state, and national levels.</p> <p>Collection is jointly held by Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the African American Resources Collection of North Carolina Central University.</p>
ArchivalResource: 126.0 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 157,000 items)
https://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/04930/ View
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- Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s
Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality records, 1962-1965.
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality records, 1962-1965.
Mimeographed correspondence, minutes of meetings of the National Action Council, reports, some financial data, printed pamphlets, and issues of the newsletter, CORElator, documenting activities of the Congress of Racial Equality. Most concern discrimination nationally, particularly housing, police relations, and in restaurants. The few papers of the Twin Cities chapter deal mainly with alleged discrimination against three black teachers in the Minneapolis public schools.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 cu. ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122507962 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality records, 1962-1965.
Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s
Title:
Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s
<p>Floyd B. McKissick (1922-1991) was born in Asheville, N.C. He was an attorney, businessman, and civil rights leader. McKissick married Evelyn Williams, with whom he had four children: Joycelyn; Andree; Floyd, Jr.; and Charmaine. The collection contains materials documenting Floyd B. McKissick's work as an lawyer, businessman, and civil rights leader. Included are items pertaining to his law practice in Durham, N.C.; his service, beginning in 1966, as national director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); his work as advisor to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); and his interests in politics and education. Many items relate to Soul City, N.C., a town owned and operated by African Americans near Warrenton, N.C. Included are items describing the impact of Soul City on rural Warren County, N.C., and Vance County, N.C. Among the companies documented are McKissick Enterprises of New York and North Carolina; City Development, Inc.; HealthCo, Inc.; Madison and McKissick Development, Inc.; McKissick S.C. Associates; the Soul City Foundation and other Soul City companies; and the Warren Regional Planning Corporation. There are also a few items relating to the McKissick family and to his affiliation with the Republican Party at the local, state, and national levels.</p> <p>Collection is jointly held by Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the African American Resources Collection of North Carolina Central University.</p>
ArchivalResource: 126.0 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 157,000 items)
https://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/04930/ View
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- McKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-1991. Floyd B. McKissick papers, 1940s-1980s.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 157 linear feet, 1 linear inch
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1524565 View
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Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Field Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Field Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Butte (Montana) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 3 linear feet, 11 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1468437 View
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August Meier papers, 1930-1998.
Title:
August Meier papers, 1930-1998.
The August Meier papers document this historian's personal development as a liberal and progressive thinker stemming from his formative years, and emphasizing his professional activities in the roles of researcher, historian, lecturer and editor of several series in black studies. The collection is divided into ten series and forty subseries.
ArchivalResource: 74 lin.ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122346110 View
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- Meier, August, 1923-2003. August Meier papers, 1930-1998.
Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality. Records, 1944-1976.
Title:
Records, 1944-1976.
Records of a fund-raising and legal defense arm of the Congress of Racial Equality, also involved in providing scholarships to minority students, organizing black communities, and training black leaders. Through the years, SEDFRE evolved from a predominantly fund-raising organization to an activist group dedicated to social change through grass-roots organizing and leadership development. Most of the records in the collection date from the period of SEDFRE's greatest activity during the mid-1960s. Administrative Files include correspondence, organizational and financial records, fund-raising material, scholarship applications and inquiries, and records of several SEDFRE projects created and collected by executive director Marvin Rich, with a few items from his successor, Ronnie Moore. Almost every aspect of SEDFRE's programs is illustrated to some degree in the Administrative Files. Three projects sponsored by SEDFRE are significantly illustrated within the Administrative Files, including the Meridian, Mississippi, community center planned by SEDFRE as a memorial to slain civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner; Citizenship Education Projects and Workshops conducted in Louisiana, Northern Florida, South Carolina, and Georgia, designed to encourage blacks to register to vote; and the Newark (New Jersey) Welfare Rights Project. The Leadership Development Program of SEDFRE is illustrated through the Program's prospectus, papers, records of its Advisory Committee, reports, and general and specific correspondence files of director Ronnie Moore. A major portion of the series includes applications, training designs and plans, evaluations, and correspondence regarding the leadership development workshops sponsored throughout the country by SEDFRE. The Neighborhood Action Institute of Gary, Indiana, is a particularly well-documented example of a city-wide organization responsible for conducting these workshops. Also represented in this series are the Citizenship Education Workshops, and subject files concerning leadership development topics. The records of SEDFRE's Legal Department consist of the private and professional correspondence, and private legal and professional papers of Carl Rachlin; general correspondence and files of correspondence with other civil rights, civil liberties, and legal organizations, most of which was written by Rachlin; administrative records; and extensive case files concerning legal cases litigated by SEDFRE, those in which SEDFRE had an interest but took no active part, which were kept for reference and research purposes, or those which were never developed into active cases. Other papers concern complaints and requests for help to the SEDFRE Legal Department, and New York City housing and rent strike cases and files concerning fair hearings. A departmental reference file is also present. The processed portion of this collection is summarized above and is described in the register. Additional accessions are described below.
ArchivalResource: 35.6 c.f. (24 record center cartons, 30 archives boxes) and7 tape recordings; plusadditions of 0.1 c.f.,62 photographs, and10 negatives.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173692787 View
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- Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality. Records, 1944-1976.
Political and Radical Ephemera Collection: Area Studies ARCH 00165 ., ca. 1900s-1970s
Title:
Political and Radical Ephemera Collection: ca. 1900s-1970s
The collections contains miscellaneous flyers, newspapers, manuscripts, broadsides, and buttons.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tamucush/00165/00165-P.html View
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- Political and Radical Ephemera Collection: Area Studies ARCH 00165 ., ca. 1900s-1970s
Curvin, Robert. Papers, 1965-1969.
Title:
Papers, 1965-1969.
Photocopied papers of a chairman of the Newark, N.J., chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality, concerning the National Action Council of CORE of which he was also a member; including minutes of national and regional staff meetings, field reports and recommendations, and internal memoranda.
ArchivalResource: 0.1 c.f. (1 folder)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145770834 View
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- Curvin, Robert. Papers, 1965-1969.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office. Research Dept. records, 1959-1969.
Title:
Research Dept. records, 1959-1969.
The series consists of records of the Research Dept. of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1959-1969. The Africa files (1961-1968) contain primarily printed research matter on individual countries, liberation organizations, and Afro-American groups. There is little correspondence or SNCC-generated material in these files. The files relating to the Southern States (1960-1967) consist mostly of information on Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, and Mississippi. These files contain materials gathered by the Research Dept., as well as reports prepared by the Dept. either on states or on individual counties and localities within states. Materials also include correspondence, memoranda, newspaper clippings, and legal documents. The general files (1959-1969) are the largest group of material in the series and include information on individuals, topics, and organizations of interest to SNCC. The files contain correspondence, memoranda, reports, speeches and essays, newspaper clippings, and printed materials. The files document subjects such as Civil Rights Act of 1964, farm workers, freedom schools, labor unions, race relations, segregation, and Vietnam; and organizations such as the Black Panthers, Ku Klux Klan, American Civil Liberties Union, American Friends Service Committee, Congress of Racial Equality, Fellowship of Reconciliation, and the Coordinating Council of Community Organizations. The court case files (1962-1968) consist of legal briefs, petitions, affidavits, and decisions for both state and federal courts, most of which directly or indirectly relate to SNCC activities.
ArchivalResource: 10 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476661 View
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- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office. Research Dept. records, 1959-1969.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Richmond (Virginia) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 107 linear feet, 7 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1535898 View
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Tucson Commission on Human Relations. Records, ca. 1956-1968.
Title:
Records, ca. 1956-1968.
Summary: Correspondence, meeting minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, and reports concerning civil rights in Tucson, ca. 1956-1968. Commission members and correspondents include Roy Twitty, Morgan Maxwell, Jr., George and Alice Papcun, and Rev. P. David Sholin. Organizations represented include the Committee for Economic Opportunity, the Congress of Racial Equality (C.O.R.E.), Ecumenical Council, and others. Some subjects addressed by the commission include poverty, housing discrimination, and education. In some cases, individuals are interviewed. There is one report from a study concerning discrimination in the establishment of the Pascua Yaqui neighborhood.
ArchivalResource: 1.75 linear ft. (4 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/423394893 View
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- Tucson Commission on Human Relations. Records, ca. 1956-1968.
Correspondence Relating to Inquiries, July 25, 1966–May 1967
Title:
Correspondence Relating to Inquiries, July 25, 1966–May 1967
This series consists of correspondence and memoranda relating to requests by the National Advisory Commission on Selective Service for information and advice on the concept of national service. These requests were sent to Federal officials, Federal agencies, State and local officials, organizations, colleges, universities, high schools, interested prominent individuals, and selected student volunteers.
ArchivalResource: 7 linear feet, 5 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7172157 View
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Miller, Loren. Papers of Loren Miller, 1876-2003 (bulk dates 1932-1966)
Title:
Papers of Loren Miller, 1876-2003 (bulk dates 1932-1966)
The collection contains 10,454 semi-cataloged items and housed in 72 boxes and 3 oversize folders. The collection documents Loren Miller's four decades of fighting for equality and civil rights and his legal work against racial real estate covenants and discrimination in housing. It contains material related to his work with several organizations including the NAACP, National Urban League and the ACLU. The collection also contains material related to Loren Miller's personal life and family as well as his journalism career and ownership of the California eagle. The collection also contains many items related to Langston Hughes including letters written between Miller and Hughes and copies of some of Hughes' writings. The collection contains the following types of material: correspondence, telegrams, postcards, manuscripts, speeches, newspaper and magazine clippings, publications including full magazines, briefs and other legal documents, brochures, meeting minutes, reports and photographs as well as research notes for and drafts of Miller's book The petitioners: The story of the Supreme Court of the United States and the Negro. Participants in the collection include: Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, Fletcher Bowron, Tom Bradley, Edmund G. "Pat" Brown, Nathaniel Colley, Lester B. Granger, Augustus Hawkins, Langston Hughes, John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Thurgood Marshall, Henry Lee Moon, Stanley Mosk, Walter White, Roy Wilkins and Franklin Williams, American Civil Liberties Union, American Federation of Labor, Congress of Industrial Organizations, Congress of Racial Equality, Japanese American Citizens' League, League for Struggle for Negro Rights, Los Angeles Urban League, NAACP and its legal defense fund, National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, National Negro Congress, National Urban League and the California Eagle. The collection highlights events in Birmingham and Montgomery, Alabama; Harlem, New Yok; Little Rock, Arkansas; Los Angeles, California; Washington, D.C. and the Soviet Union. Subjects include: James Baldwin, W.E.B. Du Bois, Medgar Evers, Angelo Herndon, Martin Luther King, Jr., Thomas J. Mooney, Joel Elias Spingarn, Malcolm X, and Whitney M. Young. The California Supreme Court and Municipal Court (Los Angeles Judicial District), Los Angeles Police Department, Meschrabpom Film Company, National Bar Association, and the U.S. Civil Rights Act of 1964, 14th Amendment to the Constitution, Fair Employment Practices Committee, Federal Housing Administration, National Housing Agency, President's Committee on Civil Rights, Commission on Civil Rights and the US Supreme Court. And African American authors; civil rights workers, judges, lawyers and newspapers; civil liberties and civil rights; crime and race; Communism; discrimination in general but more specifically criminal justice administration, employment and housing; hate crimes; inner cities; other minorities including Japanese Americans, Mexican Americans and Jews; journalists; labor law; lynching; mass media and minorities; police brutality with emphasis on Los Angeles; racial profiling; racism; real covenants; segregation; slavery and American history; socialists; United States government and politics and California government and politics; the Scottsboro trial; and the Watts Riot and Zoot Suit Riots of Los Angeles.
ArchivalResource: 10,454 items.72 boxes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/232610923 View
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- Miller, Loren. Papers of Loren Miller, 1876-2003 (bulk dates 1932-1966)
Southern Regional Council. Voter Education Project files, 1954-1971.
Title:
Voter Education Project files, 1954-1971.
The collection consists of records of the Voter Education Project (VEP) of the SRC from 1954-1971. Includes correspondence, financial records, project reports, memoranda, and printed materials. The administrative files include materials on VEP's relationship with a variety of other agencies interested in voter education, voter registration activities in specific southern states, and reports submitted by field representatives regarding their work in the region. The individual project files document the breadth and scope of the many projects that were carried out at the local level through such organizations as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Congress of Racial Equality, National Urban League, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the NAACP.
ArchivalResource: 50 linear ft.15 microfilm reels ; 35 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38477150 View
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- Southern Regional Council. Voter Education Project files, 1954-1971.
Ferriday Freedom Movement (Ferriday, La.). Records, 1964-1966.
Title:
Records, 1964-1966.
Records of a Ferriday, Louisiana, civil rights organization closely tied to the Congress of Racial Equality.
ArchivalResource: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145770908 View
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- Ferriday Freedom Movement (Ferriday, La.). Records, 1964-1966.
Charles Brittin papers, 1914-2004 (bulk 1950-1975)
Title:
Charles Brittin papers 1914-2004 (bulk 1950-1975)
The papers of photographer Charles Brittin contain photographs, negatives, slides and transparencies documenting the Los Angeles art scene and social and political movements that occurred during the 1950s-1970s. Accompanying the photographs are correspondence, personal writings, printed ephemera, posters, maquettes, clippings, and publications. The archive also includes works of art by Brittin and other artists such as Bob Alexander, Wallace Berman and George Herms.
ArchivalResource: 72.0 linear feet; (82 boxes, 7 flatfile folders, 1 roll)
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifa2005m11 View
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- Charles Brittin papers, 1914-2004 (bulk 1950-1975)
Gartner, Alan. Papers, 1961-1965.
Title:
Papers, 1961-1965.
Papers of a member of the National Action Council of the Congress of Racial Equality, consisting almost entirely of mimeographed reports, minutes, and memoranda on a wide range of CORE activities.
ArchivalResource: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145770945 View
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- Gartner, Alan. Papers, 1961-1965.
Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio). Vanguard Leauge papers [microform], 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
Title:
Vanguard Leauge papers [microform], 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
Microfilm collection of records of the Vanguard League, Inc., of Columbus, Ohio, an organization of African Americans dedicated to the elimination of all racial discrimination through inter-racial direct non-violent action. It merged with the Congress of Racial Equality in 1950. The records consist of correspondence, minutes, and printed material that document the League's civil rights activities in the Columbus, Ohio area.
ArchivalResource: 3 microfilm reels ; 35 mm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41324589 View
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- Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio). Vanguard Leauge papers [microform], 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
Bock, Laura J. Laura J. Bock papers, 1961-1969.
Title:
Laura J. Bock papers, 1961-1969.
Contains leaflets, pamphlets, newsletters and other ephemera relating to Congress of Racial Equality, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, W.E.B. DuBois Clubs, Vietnam Day Committee and other organizations.
ArchivalResource: 1 box, 1 oversize folder (.4 linear ft.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50393171 View
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- Bock, Laura J. Laura J. Bock papers, 1961-1969.
Ralph, Leon D. Oral history interview with Hon. Leon D. Ralph, 1991 : oral history transcript / by Arlene Lazarowitz, Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, for the State Government Oral History Program, California State Archives, 1993.
Title:
Oral history interview with Hon. Leon D. Ralph, 1991 : oral history transcript / by Arlene Lazarowitz, Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, for the State Government Oral History Program, California State Archives, 1993.
Leon Ralph discusses Democratic party politics, specifically legislation he sponsored, his personal opinions and relationships with fellow politicians, particularly his disagreements with Speaker Willie Brown.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: iii, 193 leaves ; 29 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/214947232 View
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- Ralph, Leon D. Oral history interview with Hon. Leon D. Ralph, 1991 : oral history transcript / by Arlene Lazarowitz, Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton, for the State Government Oral History Program, California State Archives, 1993.
DeMeunier, Leon. Leon DeMeunier papers, 1960-1964.
Title:
Leon DeMeunier papers, 1960-1964.
Correspondence, minutes of CORE meetings, and printed materials, relating primarily to the activities of CORE in Detroit, Michigan, concerning activities against job discrimination, and in support of "Freedom Rides" into the South in the early 1960's.
ArchivalResource: 1 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/34422672 View
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- DeMeunier, Leon. Leon DeMeunier papers, 1960-1964.
Congress of Racial Equality. Seattle Chapter. Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records, 1961-1970.
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records, 1961-1970.
Most of the materials relate to Seattle CORE's activities both in local and national civil rights campaigns. The records include correspondence, minutes, case files, financial records, committee records, convention and workshop materials, and subject files concerning civil rights projects in several southern states as well as housing, education, and employment in Seattle. Included is material relating to the American Civil Liberties Union, the Washington State Board Against Discrimination, James Baldwin, George Washington Bush, and James Farmer.
ArchivalResource: 5 cubic feet (12 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/28418270 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Seattle Chapter. Congress of Racial Equality, Seattle Chapter, records, 1961-1970.
August Meier papers, 1930-1998
Title:
August Meier papers 1930-1998
Since the early 1960's August Meier has been a major force in the study of African-American history in his examination of late nineteenth and twentieth century America by his application of rigorous social and intellectual analysis. Meier was actively involved in the civil rights movement and studied its origins and development. He taught at three historic black colleges followed by twenty years at Kent State University. As editor of two major series on blacks in America, he influenced scholars and students alike.
ArchivalResource: 73.6 lin. ft.; 149 boxes
http://archives.nypl.org/scm/20836 View
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- August Meier papers, 1930-1998
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the New York (New York) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 149 linear feet, 7 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1518843 View
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Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Phoenix (Arizona) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 9 linear feet, 7 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1525356 View
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Bell, Murphy W. Papers [microform], 1958-1966.
Title:
Papers [microform], 1958-1966.
Papers of a Baton Rouge lawyer who represented the NAACP and CORE in legal cases throughout Louisiana.
ArchivalResource: 4 reels of microfilm (35mm)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122415541 View
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- Bell, Murphy W. Papers [microform], 1958-1966.
Rusco, Elmer R. [Elmer Rusco papers]
Title:
[Elmer Rusco papers] 1941-1969.
ArchivalResource: 1.5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71252357 View
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- Resource Relation
- Rusco, Elmer R. [Elmer Rusco papers]
Congress of Racial Equality (1941- ). Papers. 1941-67.
Title:
Papers. 1941-67.
Pioneering use of passive non-violence in 1940's, spread nationally by 1960's, organized Freedom rides, moved toward militancy and Black separatism in later '60's. Principally correspondence from 1959 to 1964.
ArchivalResource: 49 reels micro. (positive)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18976236 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality (1941- ). Papers. 1941-67.
Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, 1789 - 2015. Bill Files, 1903 - 1968
Title:
Records of the U.S. House of Representatives, 1789 - 2015. Bill Files, 1903 - 1968
ArchivalResource: 1453 linear feet
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/559823 View
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Redden, Meg, 1944-. Meg Redden oral history interview, 1996.
Title:
Meg Redden oral history interview, 1996.
Redden discusses her early views on American race relations, joining CORE, her work on voter registration issues in Louisiana, race relations in Louisiana, and the aims of the wider civil rights movement.
ArchivalResource: 1 sound cassette (45 minutes);Transcript (31 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/76173775 View
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- Redden, Meg, 1944-. Meg Redden oral history interview, 1996.
Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (U.S.). Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity executive director files, 1959-1970.
Title:
Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity executive director files, 1959-1970.
The series consists of files of the Executive Director for the Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (ESCRU) from 1959-1970. The records include correspondence, minutes, press releases, reports, clippings, and printed materials. The correspondence contains letters of Executive Director John Burnett Morris, correspondence between board members pertaining to annual meetings and strategies, and letters from individuals or civil rights organizations regarding the efforts of the ESCRU to eliminate discrimination in the Episcopal Church and community. Notable correspondents include John Lassoe, Joseph Pelham, Kenneth Edghill, Arthur Lichtenberger, Warner Turner, Carl Braden, Congress of Racial Equality, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Southern Regional Council, Gandhi Society for Human Rights, National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, and the Student Interracial Ministry. The minutes (1960-1969) document ESCRU's campaigns, its financial status, and administrative structure.
ArchivalResource: 5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476459 View
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- Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (U.S.). Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity executive director files, 1959-1970.
Congress of Racial Equality. Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1941-1967.
Title:
Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1941-1967.
ArchivalResource: 49 microfilm reels.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71071248 View
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- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Records of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1941-1967.
Leon DeMeunier papers, 1960-1964 and 1971
Title:
Leon DeMeunier papers 1960-1964 and 1971
Chairman of the Detroit Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) from its establishment in 1960 until sometime in 1962 or 1963. Papers include material on the operation of the Detroit chapter of CORE and its role in the national civil rights movement.
ArchivalResource: 0.8 linear ft.
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-851131?rgn=main;view=text View
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- Leon DeMeunier papers, 1960-1964 and 1971
Brewster, Robert Wallace, 1905-. Robert W. Brewster papers. [manuscript].
Title:
Robert W. Brewster papers. [manuscript]. 1949-1965.
Political scientist, historian and university administrator. The Papers consist of material which deals mainly with academic freedom, the Pennsylvania Loyalty Act of 1952, and academic tenure. The collection contains abstracts and transcripts of court testimony, copies of bills introduced and acts passed by the Pennsylvania State Legislature, minutes of CORE and the Pennsylvania Political Science and Public Administration Association meetings, and course syllabi and lecture notes. The Brewster papers include details of the Jack Sirott case, the Lee Lorch case, the Wendell S. MacRae case, and the Lloyd D. Jones case. Additional materials deal with scholarship programs, law school recruitment, the Pennsylvania Internship Program and lectures in political science at Haverford College.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 ft. (1 box).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/316858872 View
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- Brewster, Robert Wallace, 1905-. Robert W. Brewster papers. [manuscript].
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Tampa (Florida) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 117 linear feet, 3 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1537563 View
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Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1487610 View
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- Resource Relation
President's Daily Diary, 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969. President's Daily Diary, 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969
Title:
President's Daily Diary, 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969. President's Daily Diary, 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969
ArchivalResource: 6 linear feet, 9 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/192429 View
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Lewis, Tom, 1940-. Reminiscences of Tom Lewis: oral history, 1986.
Title:
Reminiscences of Tom Lewis: oral history, 1986.
Catholic upbringing; early interest in art; military service; experiences in Europe, 1960; involvement with civil rights movement and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)in Baltimore; concern over Vietnam conflict and personal involvement; relationship with Philip Berrigan; protests involving destruction of draft records; trial and imprisonment; interactions of art, religion, and morality.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 74 leaves.Tape: 3 cassettes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/309744577 View
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- Lewis, Tom, 1940-. Reminiscences of Tom Lewis: oral history, 1986.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Columbia (South Carolina) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 64 linear feet, 9 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1487612 View
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King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968. Martin Luther King, Jr. subject files, 1955-1967.
Title:
Martin Luther King, Jr. subject files, 1955-1967.
The collection consists of subject files of Martin Luther King, Jr. from 1955-1968. The files contain clippings, printed material, programs, sermons, and speeches either by, about, or of interest to King pertaining to civil rights in the United States and other countries. Topics documented by the materials include race relations; civil rights; Vietnam War; Congress of Racial Equality; discrimination in education, employment, and housing; nonviolence; social integration; the Southern Regional Council, and trade unions.
ArchivalResource: 9.5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476536 View
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- Resource Relation
- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968. Martin Luther King, Jr. subject files, 1955-1967.
Records of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1896 - 2008. Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
Title:
Records of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1896 - 2008. Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
ArchivalResource: 331 linear feet, 8 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1513558 View
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Harold K. Brown Papers, 1956-2000, 1963-1965, 1990s
Title:
Harold K. Brown Papers 1956-2000 1963-1965, 1990s
The Harold K. Brown Papers (1963-2000) document Brown's participation in the local Civil Rights Movement, his dedication to community economic development, and his professional life, with a heavy emphasis on the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Brown's role in the School Integration Task Force, and his involvement with the Black Economic Development Task Force. Highlights include the Congress of Racial Equality's actions against the employment practices of the San Diego Zoo, SDG&E, Montgomery Ward, and Bank of America. Filed alphabetically, the collection consists of correspondence, reports, meeting minutes, slides, reel-to-reels of the "Viewpoint" program on KSDO Radio, and photographs. In addition, the collection's extensive newspaper clippings include articles from and full issues of The Voice, The San Diego Light House, the San Diego Monitor, and Logan Heights' Independent. The majority of materials date from 1963 to 1966, and the mid-1990s.
ArchivalResource: 4.59
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/kt0p3033n1 View
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- Harold K. Brown Papers, 1956-2000, 1963-1965, 1990s
J. B. Matthews Papers, 1862-1986 and undated
Title:
J. B. Matthews Papers, 1862-1986 and undated
J. B. Matthews (1894-1966) was a Methodist missionary, college professor, author, lecturer, and prominent conservative spokesman. Collection consists of correspondence, memoranda, statements, speeches, reprints, clippings, broadsides, newsletters, press releases, petitions, and other printed material, chiefly 1930-1969. The principal focus of the collection relates to the work and research of Matthews and his associates in the area of anti-communism, particularly in connection with Matthews' role as Director of Research for the Special Committee on Un-American Activities of the U.S. House of Representatives (1938-1945), Executive Director of the Permanent Subcommittee on Government Operations of the U.S. Senate (1953), and a consultant for John A. Clements Associates. Many of the organizations, newspapers, periodicals, and persons represented in the collection have various leftist, socialist, communist, radical, or pacifist (especially anti-Vietnam War) connections.Individuals represented in the files include Ralph Abernathy, Bella Abzug, Roy Cohn, John Foster Dulles, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Michael Harrington, Alger Hiss, J. Edgar Hoover, Jesse Jackson, John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Coretta Scott King, Joseph Lash, Joseph McCarthy, Carl McIntire, Benjamin Mandel, Richard Nixon, Aristotle Onassis, Lee Harvey Oswald, Linus Pauling, Drew Pearson, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Louis Untermeyer.
ArchivalResource: 479 Linear Feet; 307,000 Items
http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/matthews/ View
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- J. B. Matthews Papers, 1862-1986 and undated
Congress of Racial Equality. Associate National Director George Wiley files, 1962-1966 (bulk 1965).
Title:
Associate National Director George Wiley files, 1962-1966 (bulk 1965).
The series consists of files of George Wiley pertaining to his involvement in the Congress of Racial Equality (C0RE) from 1962-1966, particularly as Associate National Director (1965-1966). The papers include internal memoranda from various CORE depts. and offices, correspondence and printed materials relating to other civil rights organizations, as well as memoranda, reports, and lists reflecting the internal workings of the National Action Committee. Topics documented by the materials include the Ku Klux Klan, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, and fund raising efforts. Correspondents include Floyd McKissick, James Farmer, and Gordon Carey.
ArchivalResource: .75 linear ft.
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Associate National Director George Wiley files, 1962-1966 (bulk 1965).
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office. Other organizations files, 1959-1969.
Title:
Other organizations files, 1959-1969.
The series consists of material relating to a wide variety of civil rights and direct-action organizations which were in contact with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1959-1969. Includes mostly correspondence, although there are also reports and printed materials. Among the important groups represented in this series are the Americans for Democratic Action, Congress of Racial Equality, Council of Federated Organizations, Medical Committee for Human Rights, NAACP, National Conference for New Politics, National Council of Churches, National Student Christian Federation, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Southern Regional Council, Students for a Democratic Society, and the United States National Student Association.
ArchivalResource: .5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476668 View
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- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office. Other organizations files, 1959-1969.
Rabin, Jack, 1945-. Jack Rabin collection on Alabama civil rights and southern activists, 1941-2004 (bulk 1956-1974).
Title:
Jack Rabin collection on Alabama civil rights and southern activists, 1941-2004 (bulk 1956-1974).
The collection is a compact but highly complex, multi-layered compilation of documents, sound recordings, and visual images. It includes records of the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) (1955-1974); photographs and surveillance tapes of Martin Luther King, Ralph Abernathy, and many others involved in sit-ins (early 1960s), the MIA (1963), the Selma March (1965), and the Poor People's Campaign (1968); oral histories of the white activists Clifford and Virginia Durr, John Beecher, and Myles Horton (late 1960s - 1975); and films of the African-American activists Luther Henderson (in Savannah, Georgia, 1964) and Stokely Carmichael (in Montgomery, Alabama, circa 1972). Other individuals represented in the collection include James L. Bevel, Anne Braden, Carl Braden, Ralph J. Bunche, Johnnie Rebecca Carr, James A. Dombrowski, James O. Eastland, James Forman, Charles Gomillion, Lester Hankerson, James A. Hood, John Lewis, Rufus A. Lewis, E.D. Nixon, Rosa Parks, Amelia Boynton Robinson, T.Y. Rogers, Fred Shuttlesworth, Don Slayman, Hosea Williams, Whitney Young, and Bob Zellner. Organizations represented include AFL-CIO, Alabama. Dept. of Public Safety. Investigative and Identification Division. Subversive Unit, American Nazi Party, Congress of Racial Equality, Defense Plant Corporation, Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.), Montgomery Improvement Association, National Socialist White People's Party, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
ArchivalResource: 3.15 cubic feet and 371 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71330033 View
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- Rabin, Jack, 1945-. Jack Rabin collection on Alabama civil rights and southern activists, 1941-2004 (bulk 1956-1974).
Deming, Barbara, 1917-1984. Papers: Series I-III, 1908-1985 (inclusive).
Title:
Papers: Series I-III, 1908-1985 (inclusive).
Series I, Biographical, contains articles about and interviews with Deming (including an audiotape), correspondence, engagement calendars, clippings, and some financial material. In addition to a biographical overview, this series provides information about Deming's daily life, Jane and Oscar Verlaine's custody battle, and houses owned by Deming with Mary Meigs or Jane Verlaine. Series II, Alphabetical correspondence, and Series III, Chronological correspondence, include notes, drafts, photographs, and writings by Deming and others, documenting her activities, thoughts, and friendships. Her correspondents include many notable authors, publishers, artists, and political activists from the early 1940s through the early 1980s, mostly in the United States. These series document the peace movement, the 1960s civil rights movement, and the women's movement and lesbian activism in the 1970s and 1980s.
ArchivalResource: 25.5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/232008644 View
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- Deming, Barbara, 1917-1984. Papers: Series I-III, 1908-1985 (inclusive).
Congress of Racial Equality. Records, 1941-1967.
Title:
Records, 1941-1967.
Records of a national inter-racial organization of semi-autonomous groups dedicated to the use of non-violent direct action to combat racial discrimination. Although the type of materials present vary for each series, the documentation generally consists of correspondence, constitutions, minutes, reports, memoranda, financial statements, press releases, clippings, and printed matter. Most of the collection is available on film from the Microfilm Corporation of America, together with a printed guide, The Papers of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1941-1967 (1980). The processed portion of the collection is summarized above, dates 1941-1967, and is described in the register. Additional accessions date 1945-1964 and are described below.
ArchivalResource: 43.5 c.f. (103 archives boxes),49 reels of microfilm (35mm), and1 tape recording; plusunprocessed additions of 0.2 c.f.,58 photographs, and11 negatives.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173692476 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Records, 1941-1967.
Ring, Benjamin A., 1925-1992. Papers, 1951-1992
Title:
Papers, 1951-1992
The Benjamin A. Ring papers were separated from several boxes of documents deposited by the Philosophy Department in 1994. While they were processed, the Ring papers were divided into five series. Series I. Personal contains a draft of Ring's autobiography, How I Lived and What I Lived For; a transcript of a Ring interview (JUN 1975); materials related to Ring's graduate studies; and a limited amount of correspondence. Series II. Professional/UND contains Ring's Academic Supplements (1967-87), promotion files (1962-90), course syllabi, travel requests, as well as documents related to "AGORA of the Air," graduate school, honors program, Indian Education Committee, and Human Relations Committee. Series III. Professional Associations consists of materials related to the ND Committee on the Humanities, ND Council for Higher Education, State Board of Higher Education, AAUP, and the American Council on Education. Series IV. Summer Programs consists of materials the Institute on Student Involvement (ISI) and National Science Foundation (NSF) summer institute for gifted high school students. ISI was a six-week program that Ring attended in 1969. Held at Claremont Colleges, California, ISI brought together about 35 deans and professors from around the nation to study "sources of student discontent." ISI documents include schedules, discussion topics, Ring's notes, correspondence, questionnaires, reading lists, poetry, news clippings, articles, and staff & participant rosters. NSF documents relate to a summer institute for gifted high school students that was hosted by UND in the early 1960's. NSF materials include correspondence, proposals & grants, budget, expenditures, as well as student applications, evaluations, and publications. Documents are arranged chronologically. (For other NSF Summer Institute materials, see: OGL #683, Paul B. Kannowski Papers) Series V. SERIES V, Underground & Student Press contains several student newspapers (1964-70). Also included in this series are documents related to a variety of free press issues, such as the ACLU, Committee Concerned About Vietnam, CORE, UND Indian Association, and Young Democrats. Newspapers and organizations are arranged alphabetically.
ArchivalResource: 3.25 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/469741175 View
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- Ring, Benjamin A., 1925-1992. Papers, 1951-1992
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation Records, 1940-1960
Title:
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation Records 1940-1960
Religious pacifist organization; correspondence, minutes of meetings, files of the editor of the Michigan F.O.R. News, topical files, and sound recording.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear feet
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/bhlead/umich-bhl-851326?rgn=main;view=text View
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- Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation Records, 1940-1960
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the San Diego (California) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 54 linear feet, 3 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1535906 View
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Bob Adelman photographs of Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) demonstrations, Circa 1962
Title:
Bob Adelman photographs of Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) demonstrations Circa 1962
ArchivalResource: 0.03 Linear feet; 17 items housed in on film slides binder.
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/bhs/v1989_022_adelman/v1989_022_adelman.html View
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- Bob Adelman photographs of Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) demonstrations, Circa 1962
Records Relating to Police - Community Relations in Urban Areas, 1957–1966
Title:
Records Relating to Police - Community Relations in Urban Areas, 1957–1966
This series consists of records pertaining to police - community relations in various urban areas that document incidents of police brutality, false arrests, police in-action, assault-and-battery, race relations and training programs within police departments. Also included are reports and other records, such as Detroit's Citizens Committee for Equal Opportunity report entitled, "Police, Law Enforcement, and the Detroit Community" (Summer, 1965); a report from the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission entitled, "Status Report on Police Training in Intergroup Relations and Workshops on Community Responsibility in Race Relations;" and a "Survey of Minority Group Employment Patterns, City of Minneapolis," created by the Mayor's Commission on Human Relations. Other urban areas documented in this series include Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; Cleveland, Ohio; New York, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; San Francisco, California; Savannah, Georgia; St. Louis, Missouri; and Washington, DC. The records also document activities and concerns of various organizations, such as the National Urban League, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) about police-community relations.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear feet, 7 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1079209 View
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Zippert, John, 1945-. John Zippert oral history interview, 1998.
Title:
John Zippert oral history interview, 1998.
Zippert describes his political activity while at the City College of New York, his experiences as a CORE summer volunteer in Louisiana, and his involvement in the Grand Marie Sweet Potato Marketing Cooperative. He discusses his work with the Southern Cooperative Development Program and the Federation of Southern Cooperatives, being investigated by the FBI and the Joint Legislative Committee on Un-American Activities, and his participation in removing the miscegenation statute in Louisiana.
ArchivalResource: 2 sound cassettes (2 hr.)Transcript (59 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/76173806 View
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- Zippert, John, 1945-. John Zippert oral history interview, 1998.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Detroit (Michigan) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 116 linear feet, 4 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1487615 View
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National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Records, 1842-1999, (bulk 1919-1991)
Title:
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Records 1842-1999 (bulk 1919-1991)
Civil rights organization. Records of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People consisting of correspondence, memoranda, minutes, reports, itineraries, biographical material, speeches, testimony, writings, annual convention files, legal case files, legislation, publications, resolutions, policy statements, constitutions, bylaws, charters, contracts, proposals, scripts, financial records, publicity files, manuals, handbooks, music, awards, certificates, directories, subject files, daily mail sheets, notes, lists, questionnaires and surveys, certificates, awards, flags, photographs, maps, and printed matter.
ArchivalResource: 3,000,000 items; 8,602 containers plus 46 oversize and 2 classified; 3,965 linear feet; 39 microfilm reels
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms008007 View
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- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Records, 1842-1999, (bulk 1919-1991)
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Atlanta (Georgia) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 183 linear feet, 9 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1450334 View
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Burnstein, Malcolm. Malcolm Burnstein papers, 1963-1994 (bulk 1963-1973).
Title:
Malcolm Burnstein papers, 1963-1994 (bulk 1963-1973).
Selected professional and personal papers from Burnstein's files relating to the Free Speech Movement defense trial, the Oakland Seven and others. Also includes files on liberal and Berkeley politics.
ArchivalResource: 4 cartons, 4 boxes, 1 card file box (7.1 linear ft.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/50392944 View
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- Burnstein, Malcolm. Malcolm Burnstein papers, 1963-1994 (bulk 1963-1973).
Printed Ephemera Collection on Organizations, 1886-
Title:
Printed Ephemera Collection on Organizations 1886-
The Tamiment Library, New York University, founded in 1906 as the library of the Rand School of Social Science, is a special collection documenting the history of United States radicalism, labor, and progressive social action. The Printed Ephemera Collection on Organizations consists of flyers, broadsides, leaflets, clippings, reports, pamphlets, catalogs, brochures, bibliographies, press releases, programs, and other printed ephemera, arranged alphabetically by organization.
ArchivalResource: 121.0 linear feet; (121 boxes)
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/pe_036/pe_036.html View
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- Printed Ephemera Collection on Organizations, 1886-
McCain, James T. James T. McCain papers, 1957-1972.
Title:
James T. McCain papers, 1957-1972.
Letters, publications, appointment calendars and other papers (448 items) document McCain's involvement with local and national civil rights organizations; bulk of items evidence his interest in local issues such as illiteracy, integration of public schools, and low voter turnout in S.C.'s black communities; includes essays, keynote addresses re suffrage, "black power," etc.; many booklets, speeches, agendas, and other items document conferences around the U.S. which McCain attended. Includes list of expenses, Sept. 1961, incurred by freedom riders returning to Jackson, Miss., for arraignment; materials re Greenville, S.C., "Emancipation Day Pilgrimage" of 1 Jan. 1960, an event following a visit to S.C. by Jackie Robinson; and Grand Marie is Ours (1968), a booklet written and illustrated by John Zippert, re a cooperative venture for potato farmers in Lafayette, La., and founding of the Southern Cooperative Development Program. Appointment calendars and notebooks, 19 volumes, further document McCain's activism on behalf of various causes; stenographer's notebook, ca. 1968, discusses his visit with students at S.C. State College following the Orangeburg Massacre, Feb. 1968; series of illustrated day calendars designed by the War Resisters League, includes, "Days of Civil Disobedience" (1968), which includes photograph of dissident G.I.s participating in a pray-in for peace at Fort Jackson in Columbia, S.C. Several publications from collection listed in online catalog; enter AUTHOR search for "James T McCain papers."
ArchivalResource: 1 carton (1.25 linear ft.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/48472097 View
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- McCain, James T. James T. McCain papers, 1957-1972.
King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968. Martin Luther Luther King, Jr., primary correspondence, 1955-1968.
Title:
Martin Luther Luther King, Jr., primary correspondence, 1955-1968.
The collection consists of primary correspondence of Martin Luther King, Jr. from 1955-1968. Includes correspondence regarding his civil rights activities in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Chicago (Ill.), and Mississippi; his involvement with the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church (Montgomery, Ala.) and Ebenezer Baptist Church (Atlanta, Ga.); and his interest and involvement in a myriad of civil rights or pacifist organizations including the American Foundation on Nonviolence, American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa, Congress of Racial Equality, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Gandhi Society for Human Rights, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, National Council of Churches of Christ of the United States of America, the Southern Regional Council, and the White House Conference of 1966. Correspondents include Ralph Abernathy, Chauncy Eskridge, Aaron Henry, Clarence B. Jones, Kivie Kaplan, Theodore W. Kheel, Lyndon Johnson, William M. Kunster, Benjamin Mays, Richard M. Nixon, Jack O'Nell, Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Harry H. Wachtel.
ArchivalResource: 14 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476515 View
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- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968. Martin Luther Luther King, Jr., primary correspondence, 1955-1968.
Black, Timuel D. Timuel Black papers, 1956-1973 (bulk 1964-1972).
Title:
Timuel Black papers, 1956-1973 (bulk 1964-1972).
Reports, brochures, convention packets, newspaper clippings, correspondence, minutes, newsletters, pamphlets, publications, course materials, and other papers of Timuel D. Black, Jr., a Chicago educator, civil and labor rights activist, and oral historian. Materials largely pertain to the civil rights movement in education. Also present are materials by or about the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, the Negro American Labor Council, the National Association of Afro-American Educators, and the riots after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in April 1968.
ArchivalResource: 1 oversize folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/718738158 View
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- Black, Timuel D. Timuel Black papers, 1956-1973 (bulk 1964-1972).
Rustin, Bayard, 1912-1987. Reminiscences of Bayard Rustin : oral history, 1987.
Title:
Reminiscences of Bayard Rustin : oral history, 1987.
Childhood & World War I period, Pennsylvania; education, Wilberforce University, Teachers College, City College of New York; discrimination within trade union movement; black nationalism; Fellowship of Reconciliation, World War II; experiences in prison, 1943-45; penal reform; Congress of Racial Equality protests, Freedom Ride; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; rivalry between Martin Luther King Jr. and Roy Watkins; A. Philip Randolph and the labor movement; Montogomery bus protest; work with Martin Luther King in organization of Southern Christian Leadership Conference; recollections of Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee; black protests at National Democratic Convention, 1960; A.P. Randolph and the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO); March on Washington, 1963; Martin Luther King's assassination; genesis of A.P. Randolph Institute; improving employment situation of blacks; Voting Rights Act; social decline in America; South African anti-apartheid movement; communism and factionism in South African government and tribal groups; views on divestment, disinvestment, Reagan administration policies on South Africa; 1987 elections in South Africa. Impressions of: A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 675 leaves.Tape: 15 reels.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/309726466 View
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- Rustin, Bayard, 1912-1987. Reminiscences of Bayard Rustin : oral history, 1987.
Congress of Racial Equality. National Director James Farmer files, 1960-1966.
Title:
National Director James Farmer files, 1960-1966.
The series consists of files of James Farmer from 1960-1966 particularly as National Director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) from 1961-1966. The records include correspondence especially between other civil rights organizations, reports, memoranda, speeches, transcripts of Farmer's radio and television appearances, clippings, and printed material relating to CORE's evolving programs. The series documents CORE's extensive involvement in the New York metropolitan area including information on housing and job discrimination, police brutality, school integration, New York City politics, and rioting in urban areas. The series also contains information on the Freedom Riders, mainly through speeches and articles by Farmer; litigation involving the participants; and minutes, memoranda, and lists pertaining to the National Action Council.
ArchivalResource: 7 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476541 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. National Director James Farmer files, 1960-1966.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Buffalo (New York) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 47 linear feet, 3 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1468096 View
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Shapiro, Peter. Reminiscences of Peter Shapiro : oral history, 1984.
Title:
Reminiscences of Peter Shapiro : oral history, 1984.
Family background; initial political involvement during high school: member of Student Congress of Racial Equality and Students Organized Education and Action League, relationship with the counter culture; first term as a student at University of California at Berkeley, 1966; transfer to San Francisco State; writer for an underground newspaper, "Open Process"; experience with early anti-war rallies, stop the draft week, the Experimental college; increased political power of the Black Students Union; students' reaction to Columbia's and Paris' student movement; trip to Columbia University campus; description of the six month strike at San Francisco State: role of "Open Process" and the faculty, issues of the strike, police violence; decision to write "An End to Silence" with Bill Barlow; post-strike campus environment; Chicago Students for a Democratic Society convention; reaction to the emerging women's movement; graduate school in history at Berkeley; work with Radical Students Union; creation of the Bay Area School and the Liberation School; critique of Berkeley's political environment; problems of the new left; recent political involvement.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 203 leaves.Tape: 5 cassettes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/86147647 View
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- Shapiro, Peter. Reminiscences of Peter Shapiro : oral history, 1984.
Boyte Family Papers, 1941-1981
Title:
Boyte Family Papers, 1941-1981
ArchivalResource: 14.8 Linear feet; ca. 11,100 items
http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/boyte/ View
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- Boyte Family Papers, 1941-1981
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Savannah (Georgia) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 42 linear feet, 11 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1535907 View
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Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) papers, 1959-1976 (inclusive), [microform].
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) papers, 1959-1976 (inclusive), [microform].
Correspondence and subject files documenting the work of the Congress of Racial Equality on the West Coast and in fourteen Southern states and the District of Columbia. School segregation, equal employment opportunities, open housing, and voter registration are among the topics discussed. Also included are files relating to the Scholarship, Educational and Defense Fund for Racial Equality (SEDFRE), whose purpose was to seek funds for CORE and SEDFRE projects.
ArchivalResource: 80 reels.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122451122 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) papers, 1959-1976 (inclusive), [microform].
Mississippi Freedom Summer Collection, 1964-2010, 1964-2010
Title:
Mississippi Freedom Summer Collection 1964-2010 1964-2010
The collection consists of materials related to the Mississippi Freedom Summer Training that was held at Western College for Women in Oxford, Ohio in 1964. Mississippi Freedom Summer Project 1964 Digital Collection Mississippi Freedom Summer Collection
ArchivalResource:
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/archives/ead/OOxM0002 View
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- Mississippi Freedom Summer Collection, 1964-2010, 1964-2010
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Washington, D.C. Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 214 linear feet, 5 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/4685574 View
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Granger, Lester B. (Lester Blackwell), 1896-1976. Reminiscences of Lester B. Granger : oral history, 1961.
Title:
Reminiscences of Lester B. Granger : oral history, 1961.
Background and education; experiences as a Negro soldier in World War I; early encounters with discrimination and segregation; extension work, counselling, social work; Urban League, studies of employment structure and placement facilities; racial questions in labor unions; National Negro Congress; segregation in armed forces; community relations projects; approaches to leaders of industry; American Association of Social Work; international conferences; Negroes in international relations; Congress of Racial Equality; sit-in movements; Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Negro nationalism; new African leadership; federal record on equal rights in employment.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 326 leaves.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/309744132 View
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- Granger, Lester B. (Lester Blackwell), 1896-1976. Reminiscences of Lester B. Granger : oral history, 1961.
Goodlett, Carlton Benjamin, 1914-. Papers [microform], 1942-1967.
Title:
Papers [microform], 1942-1967.
Papers of a San Francisco physician, publisher of the Sun-Reporter, and civil rights, peace, and political activist.
ArchivalResource: 3 reels of microfilm (35 mm.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122416444 View
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- Goodlett, Carlton Benjamin, 1914-. Papers [microform], 1942-1967.
Innis, Roy, 1934-. Roy Innis correspondence, 1985.
Title:
Roy Innis correspondence, 1985.
Correspondence between Helene Kenvin and Roy Innis, concerning Innis's participation in a demonstration supporting Soviet Jews.
ArchivalResource: 3 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/727390345 View
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- Innis, Roy, 1934-. Roy Innis correspondence, 1985.
Grigsby family. Grigsby family papers, circa 1918-2002.
Title:
Grigsby family papers, circa 1918-2002.
The Grigsby family papers consist of correspondence and invitations, funeral and school materials, newspaper clippings and other printed biographical material, photographs, and other materials documenting the Grigsby family, especially publicist, civil rights activist, and editor Snow F. Grigsby, artist and art educator J. Eugene Grigsby (Gene), school principal J. E. Grigsby and school teacher Purry Leone Dixon Grigsby, and the family of teacher Miriam Grigsby Bates. Educational achievement is the central theme of the collection, in evidence in transcripts, diplomas, and photographs of family members receiving degrees. Other education-related materials include a letter from one Grigsby generation to the next providing personal insights on Langston Hughes for a research paper; a 1938 photograph of Purry Leone Dixon Grigsby teaching in a Biddleville (Charlotte, N.C.) elementary school classroom; and a small amount of material relating to the School Workers Federal Credit Union, which was founded in 1941 in Charlotte, N.C., by J. E. Grigsby, for African American teachers and employees of the public school system. Also of note are a 1942 living letter recorded at a USO Club; a 1980 letter that included a then-confidential list of the Detroit chapter of Tuskegee Airmen; a copy of a 1980 letter from Snow F. Grigsby to fellow Republican Strom Thurmond on racism, politics, and the economy; a CORE sit-in songs (Congress of Racial Equality) booklet; and the 1942 program for the women's West End Book Club of Charlotte, N.C.
ArchivalResource: About 100 items (1.0 linear feet).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/460724239 View
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- Grigsby family. Grigsby family papers, circa 1918-2002.
Elmer Rusco papers, 1941-1969
Title:
Elmer Rusco papers 1941-1969
Elmer R. Rusco, a Kansas native and graduate of the University of Kansas, was an activist, author, and professor of political science, specializing in the civil rights movement, at the University of Nevada-Reno. This collection is comprised of material related to Rusco's participation in the civil rights movement as well as research regarding minority rights, conducted for the completion of his master's thesis.
ArchivalResource: 1.5 linear ft (3 boxes)
http://hdl.handle.net/10407/8907849881 View
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- Elmer Rusco papers, 1941-1969
Alabama. Governor (1955-1959 : Folsom). Correspondence regarding Jimmy Wilson, 1958.
Title:
Correspondence regarding Jimmy Wilson, 1958.
Jimmy Wilson, a fifty-five year old black male and resident of Marion in Perry County, Alabama, was indicted on charges of robbery and burglary. Wilson allegedly robbed Estelle Baker, an elderly white female, who was also a resident of Marion, AL, of one dollar and ninety-five cents. Wilson was represented by two court-appointed attorneys who failed to cross examine state witnesses. A jury deliberated for less than an hour and found Wilson guilty of robbery. Wilson was sentenced to death by electrocution. His sentencing led to a public outcry from numerous civic, educational, legal, religious and political organizations and affiliated individuals. Official correspondence of Alabama Governor James E. Folsom, Sr. regarding Jimmy Wilson records the public response to Wilson's sentencing. Included are incoming and outgoing letters and petitions. A number of correspondents enclosed newspaper articles with their letters. Others enclosed symbolic checks for one dollar and ninety-five cents. In addition to letters that were sent directly to Governor Folsom's office, letters were solicited by Canadian radio station CKEY to be sent to the governor. Letters were sent from areas throughout the Americas, Europe, and Africa. They were written in numerous languages including Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, and English. Included in the collection is one folder containing letters from people favoring Wilson's execution. A number of these correspondents chose to remain anonymous and, therefore, withheld their names. The other correspondents requested and supported the commuting of Wilson's sentence to life imprisonment or that he be granted clemency. Wilson's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by Governor Folsom on September 29, 1958. Prominent correspondents include Averell Harriman, New York Governor, John Foster Dulles, U.S. Secretary of State; and Martin L. King, Jr., Civil Rights Leader. Of particular interest are letters from individual chapters of the NAACP; files that record contributions sent to the Governor's office on Wilson's behalf; a file of correspondents expressing favor in Wilson's execution; a file containing a letter from Dr. Martin L. King on behalf of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); and a file recording correspondence from the U.S. Secretary of State John F. Dulles.
ArchivalResource: 8 cubic ft. (8 records center cartons).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122388746 View
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- Alabama. Governor (1955-1959 : Folsom). Correspondence regarding Jimmy Wilson, 1958.
McHugh, Madeleine. Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
Title:
Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
An account of the attempts of the Committee of Federated Organizations and the Congress of Racial Equality to secure African-American farmer representation on the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Board in Mississippi.
ArchivalResource: 5 p.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173203876 View
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- McHugh, Madeleine. Madeleine McHugh article, 1964.
Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio). Vanguard League papers, 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
Title:
Vanguard League papers, 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
Records of the Vanguard League, Inc., of Columbus, Ohio, an organization of African Americans dedicated to the elimination of all racial discrimination through inter-racial direct non-violent action. It merged with the Congress of Racial Equality in 1950. The records consist of correspondence, minutes, and printed material that document the League's civil rights activities in the Columbus, Ohio area.
ArchivalResource: 0.25 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/46569411 View
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- Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio). Vanguard League papers, 1941-1972 (bulk 1941-1950, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1972).
James Leonard Farmer, Jr., and Lula Peterson Farmer papers
Title:
James Leonard Farmer, Jr., and Lula Peterson Farmer papers
Collection documents the Farmers' professional and personal activities including their involvement in the U. S. civil rights movement. Correspondence, minutes, financial records, and other materials relate to the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the civil rights organization James Farmer founded in 1942. The papers also contain extensive documentation of three organizations Farmer established in the 1960s and 1970s: the Center for Community Action Education, the Council on Minority Planning and Strategy (COMPAS), and the Public Policy Training Institute. In addition, the papers contain material relating to Farmer's unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 1968; his tenure as assistant secretary in the U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (1969-1970); printed materials on civil rights, education, housing, and labor issues in the 1960s and 1970s; extensive correspondence concerning Farmer's national lecture engagements (1967-1975); Farmer's literary productions; and personal papers relating to the Peterson and Farmer families.
ArchivalResource: 46.08 Linear Feet
http://briscoe-aspace.tacc.utexas.edu:8081/repositories/2/resources/4 View
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- Farmer, James, 1920-1999. Farmer, James Leonard, Jr., and Lula Peterson, Papers, 1908-, 1921-
Harold K. Brown Papers, 1956-2000 1963-1966.
Title:
Harold K. Brown Papers, 1956-2000 1963-1966.
The Harold K. Brown Papers (1963-2000) document Brown's participation in the local Civil Rights Movement, his dedication to community economic development, and his professional life, with a heavy emphasis on the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Brown's role in the School Integration Task Force, and his involvement with the Black Economic Development Task Force. Highlights include the Congress of Racial Equality's actions against the employment practices of the San Diego Zoo, SDG & E, Montgomery Ward, and Bank of America. The collection consists of correspondence, reports, meeting minutes, slides, reel-to-reels of the "Viewpoint" program on KSDO Radio, and photographs. In addition, the collection's extensive newspaper clippings include articles from and full issues of The Voice, The San Diego Light House, the San Diego Monitor, and Logan Heights' Independent.
ArchivalResource: 7 boxes (4.59 linear feet) : ill.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/630230773 View
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- Harold K. Brown Papers, 1956-2000 1963-1966.
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation. Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1960.
Title:
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1960.
Correspondence, printed materials, and other papers from the files of the editors of the Michigan F.O.R. News largely relating to the peace movement and the problem of conscientious objection; also tape recording of Dr. Martin Niemoeller at the F.O.R. national conference in 1954. Correspondents include: Henry H. Crane, Homer Ferguson, Patrick V. McNamara, George Meader, Abraham J. Muste, Scott Nearing, Wallace F. Nelson, Martin Niemoeller, Charles E. Potter, Bayard Rustin, John N.Sayre, Rebecca Shelley, Morton J. Sobel, Adlai E. Stevenson, John M. Swomley, and Albert G. Watson.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/85777056 View
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- Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation. Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1960.
Hobson, Julius W., 1922-1977. Julius Hobson papers, 1960-1977.
Title:
Julius Hobson papers, 1960-1977.
Contains material from organizations Hobson was involved with and from campaigns conducted during Hobson's career. The organizations included CORE, ACT (Association of Community Teams), WIQE (Washington Institute for Quality Education), and the campaigns included those against discrimination in education, federal employment, housing, transportation and the media. Materials also cover home rule, anti-war activities, and the years Hobson was on the Board of Education and the City Council. Personal information about his teaching career, efforts as a writer, illness, and death are present as well as numerous clippings and books.
ArchivalResource: 56 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/42277351 View
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- Hobson, Julius W., 1922-1977. Julius Hobson papers, 1960-1977.
Congress of Racial Equality. National Director Floyd McKissick files, 1960-1968.
Title:
National Director Floyd McKissick files, 1960-1968.
The series consists of papers of Floyd McKissick from 1960-1968 documenting his involvement in the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and his tenure as National Director (1966-1968). The papers include correspondence, memoranda, reports, speeches, articles by McKissick, printed material, and clippings documenting CORE's involvement in urban issues and its shift towards Black separatism and Black power. Of particular interest are materials pertaining to discrimination in housing, education, and employment in the New York Metropolitan area; CORE's participation in the Baltimore Target City Project (1966), and internal memoranda reflecting policy decisions made by CORE during McKissick's tenure.
ArchivalResource: 5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476571 View
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- Congress of Racial Equality. National Director Floyd McKissick files, 1960-1968.
Norman Dorsen Papers, 1953-2006
Title:
Norman Dorsen Papers 1953-2006
Norman Dorsen (1930- ) is a prominent American civil liberties advocate, professor and lawyer. He is best known for his tenure as president of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) between 1976 and 1991. As director of the Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Program at the New York University School of Law since 1961, Dorsen has participated in a large number of important civil liberties cases, including many in the U.S. Supreme Court. He has likewise been an active participant in debates over civil liberties issues in the press and other venues. The Norman Dorsen Papers consist of materials from Dorsen’s legal, political, and scholarly work on a wide variety of civil liberties issues. NOTE: This collection is housed offsite and advance notice is required for use.
ArchivalResource: 42.0 linear feet; (42 boxes)
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_251/tam_251.html View
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- Norman Dorsen Papers, 1953-2006
Papers, 1908-1985
Title:
Papers, 1908-1985
Correspondence, writings, etc., of Barbara Deming, author and activist.
ArchivalResource: 74 file boxes, 26 photograph folders, 2 folio folders, 6 folio+ folders, 3 oversize folders, 1 supersize folder, 1 audiotape (T-248)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch00057/catalog View
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- Papers, 1908-1985
Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906-. Papers of Sarah-Patton Boyle, 1949-1970.
Title:
Papers of Sarah-Patton Boyle, 1949-1970.
The collection contains a typed copy of Boyle's manuscript "The Desegregated Heart"; correspondence and material concerning "The Desegregated Heart" and her "For Human Beings Only"; speeches; editorials; book reviews; and material regarding the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Virginia Council on Human Relations, The Congress of Racial Equality, and the Southern Christian leadership Conference. There are also polls, miscellaneous clippings and articles, a scrapbook, and a cross which was burned on Mrs. Boyle's lawn. Among the correspondents are Kenneth Bancroft Clark, Hodding Carter, William Durant Campbell, James McBride Dabbs, Percy Dale East, Colgate Whitehead Darden, and Joseph Chamberlain Furnas. Other correspondents include Harry Golden, John Elbridge Hines, Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King, Jane Walker Stevenson McIlvaine, James Howard Meredith, Pauli Murray, Alan Paton, James Albert Pike, Carl Van Vechteon, Frederick John Warneck, and Roy Wilkins.
ArchivalResource: 12, 000 (ca.) items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32136557 View
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- Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906-. Papers of Sarah-Patton Boyle, 1949-1970.
KZSU (Radio station : Stanford). KZSU Project South interviews, 1965. [microform].
Title:
KZSU Project South interviews, 1965. [microform].
Transcribed interviews with Civil Rights workers in the South recorded by several Stanford students affiliated with the campus radio station KZSU during the summer of 1965. The project was sponsored by the Institute of American History at Stanford. Includes information relating to black history; interviews of members of the Congress of Racial Equality, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, the NAACP, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee; recordings of formal and informal remarks of persons working with smaller, independent civil rights projects, of local blacks associated with the civil rights momement, and other people, including Ku Klux Klansmen; "action tapes" of civil rights workers canvassing voters, conducting freedom schools, or participating in demonstrations; speeches by and/or interviews with Ralph David Abernathy, Charles Evers, James Farmer, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Hosea Williams; and a Ku Klux Klan meeting and speech made by Robert Sheldon, its Imperial Wizard.
ArchivalResource: 70 microfiche.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/703381576 View
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- KZSU (Radio station : Stanford). KZSU Project South interviews, 1965. [microform].
Records of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1896 - 2008. Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
Title:
Records of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1896 - 2008. Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957 - 1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Chicago (Illinois) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 410 linear feet, 4 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1487609 View
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Farmer, James, 1920-1999. James Farmer and the freedom ride, 1996 April 10 [sound recording].
Title:
James Farmer and the freedom ride, 1996 April 10 [sound recording].
The collection consists of a cassette and transcription of an interview with James Farmer conducted by Rene John Theriault, III, at Farmer's Fredericksburg home. Farmer discusses the Journey of Reconciliation to the upper South cosponsored by CORE in 1947 and the Freedom Ride to the lower South in 1961.
ArchivalResource: 1 sound cassette + transcription.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49864195 View
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- Farmer, James, 1920-1999. James Farmer and the freedom ride, 1996 April 10 [sound recording].
Wole Soyinka papers, 1966-1996.
Title:
Wole Soyinka papers, 1966-1996.
Papers of Nigerian author and humanitarian Wole Soyinka, including compositions, correspondence, and records of his teaching and human rights activities.
ArchivalResource: 16 boxes (24 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou01766/catalog View
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- Papers, 1966-1996.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Washington Office. Other organizations files, 1960-1968.
Title:
Other organizations files, 1960-1968.
The series consists of files relating to various organizations which had contact with the Washington Office of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1960-1968. Includes reports, printed materials, and some correspondence with such organizations as the Congress of Racial Equality, Council of Federated Organizations, Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, the National Council of Churches, and Students for a Democratic Society.
ArchivalResource: 2.5 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476676 View
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- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Washington Office. Other organizations files, 1960-1968.
Currier, Charles G. L. Papers, 1963-1966.
Title:
Papers, 1963-1966.
Papers of a staff member of CORE's Community Relations Department in New York City, consisting of general and personal correspondence, reports, clippings, lists, and miscellany pertaining to CORE projects in Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
ArchivalResource: 0.4 c.f. (1 archives box)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145770831 View
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- Currier, Charles G. L. Papers, 1963-1966.
James Forman Papers, 1848-2005, (bulk 1961-2001)
Title:
James Forman Papers 1848-2005 (bulk 1961-2001)
Author, journalist, and civil rights activist. Correspondence, memoranda, diaries, subject files, speeches and writings, family papers, appointment books and calendars, and other papers relating primarily to Forman's activities as executive secretary of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and president of the Unemployment and Poverty Action Committee.
ArchivalResource: 79,000 items; 255 containers plus 2 oversize and electronic files; 100.2 linear feet
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms010125 View
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- James Forman Papers, 1848-2005, (bulk 1961-2001)
Eakin, Robert J.,. Letters to William Faulkner [manuscript] 1961.
Title:
Letters to William Faulkner [manuscript] 1961.
Letters to Faulkner from Robert J. Eakin and James L. Kennedy request photographs for their Sigma Alpha Episilon chapters and one from Robert B. Silvers requests a Faulkner manuscript for an auction to benefit C.O.R.E. sponsored sit-ins. With the Silvers letter is an enclosure describing the sit-ins and auction [1 l. printed form completed by hand 28 cm.] -- Notice, 1962, from the University of Virginia Graduate English Club mentions a Faulkner reading [1 p. on 1 l. mimeograph 28 cm.] -- Memo, n.d., regarding possession of a Faulkner mss. by James Silver [1 item holograph 11.5 cm.] -- Newclipping, 1967 July 12, from the Charlottesville daily progress regarding a copyright suit against Cliff's Notes, Inc., brought by Estelle (Oldham) Franklin Faulkner and Jill (Faulkner) Summers.
ArchivalResource: 3 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647929613 View
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- Eakin, Robert J.,. Letters to William Faulkner [manuscript] 1961.
Bright, Marshall, 1903-. Oral history interview, 1976.
Title:
Oral history interview, 1976.
Topics include civil rights issues within the United States Postal Service and the National Alliance of Postal and Federal Employees; friendship with Maryland civil rights activist Lillie May Jackson; role of churches in the civil rights movement; relations between NAACP and Urban League; Congress of Racial Equality; Freedom House; and the future of civil rights.
ArchivalResource: Typescript : 4 p.Tape : cassette (50 min.)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32819190 View
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- Bright, Marshall, 1903-. Oral history interview, 1976.
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation. Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1957.
Title:
Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1957.
Correspondence, printed materials, and other papers from the files of the editors of the M̲i̲c̲h̲i̲g̲a̲n̲ F̲.̲O̲.̲R̲.̲ N̲e̲w̲s̲, largely relating to the peace movement and the problem of conscientious objection; also tape recording of Dr. Martin Niemoeller at the F.O.R. national conference in 1954. Correspondents include: Henry H. Crane, Homer Ferguson, Patrick V. McNamara, George Meader, Abraham J. Muste, Scott Nearing, Wallace F. Nelson, Martin Niemoeller, Charles E. Potter, Bayard Rustin, John N. Sayre, Rebecca Shelley, Morton J. Sobel, Adlai E. Stevenson, John M. Swomley, and Albert G. Watson.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/81950688 View
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- Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation. Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation records, 1940-1957.
Civil rights handouts
Title:
Civil rights handouts
A collection of handouts, distributed in the Boston, Mass. area, advocating for the civil rights of African Americans living in the Southern United States. Two items concern the segregation of Woolworth's lunch counters; two of the handouts are advertisements for freedom rallies to be held on Aug. 24, 1963, both to benefit sharecroppers, attending the March on Washington; one handout, addressed to President Johnson, details the disappearance of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner in June of 1964; another handout entitled, President Johnson and the right to vote, documents the 1965 demonstrations in Selma and Montgomery, Ala.; one handout advertises a freedom vigil, sponsored by a number of organizations, to be held in May of 1965; the final two concern the assassination of Martin Luther King, and memorial march in his honor to be held on Apr. 5, 1968.
ArchivalResource: 9 items (1 folder)
http://catalog.bostonathenaeum.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=485499 View
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- Ryan, Phyllis M., 1927-1998. Civil rights handouts, 1963-1965.
Padwee, Michael. Papers, 1966-1969.
Title:
Papers, 1966-1969.
The papers consist of newsletters, leaflets, speeches, pamphlets, programs, and correspondence of 1960's radical organizations, including the Congress of Racial Equality, Students for a Democratic Society, Movement for a Democratic Society, Peace and Freedom Party, The Resistance, Committee for Independent Political Action, Anti-Vietnam Draft and Vietnam GI Contact Committee, and Red Umbrella. Autobiographical manuscripts on the 1960's, organizational materials, newsletters, minutes of New American Movement and Social Service Employees Union, Local 371 of District Council 37 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, are also included.
ArchivalResource: 4 linear ft. (4 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/478370225 View
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- Padwee, Michael. Papers, 1966-1969.
Peurala, Alice, 1928-. Oral history interview with Alice Peurala, 1977.
Title:
Oral history interview with Alice Peurala, 1977.
In 1978, the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations of the University of Michigan and Wayne State University conducted oral history interviews with trade-union women. Major subjects covered were: women in trade-unions, wages and benefits, working conditions, and social issues.
ArchivalResource: Transcript: 53 leaves ; 29 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/32321628 View
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- Peurala, Alice, 1928-. Oral history interview with Alice Peurala, 1977.
KZSU (Radio station : Stanford). KZSU Project South interviews, 1965.
Title:
KZSU Project South interviews, 1965.
Transcribed interviews with Civil Rights workers in the South recorded by several Stanford students affiliated with the campus radio station KZSU during the summer of 1965. The project was sponsored by the Institute of American History at Stanford. Includes information relating to black history; interviews of members of the Congress of Racial Equality, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, the NAACP, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee; recordings of formal and informal remarks of persons working with smaller, independent civil rights projects, of local blacks associated with the civil rights movement, and other people, including Ku Klux Klansmen; "action tapes" of civil rights workers canvassing voters, conducting freedom schools, or participating in demonstrations ; speeches by and/or interviews with Ralph David Abernathy, Charles Evers, James Farmer, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Hosea Williams; and a Ku Klux Klan meeting and speech made by Robert Sheldon, its Imperial Wizard.
ArchivalResource: 7 linear feet (14 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122369558 View
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- KZSU (Radio station : Stanford). KZSU Project South interviews, 1965.
National Farm Workers Association. National Farm Workers Association records regarding the Delano Grape Boycott, 1965-1967.
Title:
National Farm Workers Association records regarding the Delano Grape Boycott, 1965-1967.
Collection primarily of materials created by the National Farm Workers Association (later to become the United Farm Workers of America) during the initial years of the Delano Grape Boycott (1965-1970). Materials include leaflets, fliers, pledge cards. A handful of documents from other organizations can also be found in the collection. These organizations include: Non-Violent Action Committee (N-VAC), the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the San Jose Peace Center, and Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
ArchivalResource: 29 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/137239717 View
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- National Farm Workers Association. National Farm Workers Association records regarding the Delano Grape Boycott, 1965-1967.
United States. Fair Employment Practices Committee. Fair Employment Practices Committee records, 1943-1946.
Title:
Fair Employment Practices Committee records, 1943-1946.
The collection consists of information on the March on Washington Movement, the Congress on Racial Equality, a plan to picket the Capitol in an effort to force the Senate to consider an anti-poll tax bill, and an attempt to force the Capitol Transit Company to hire African-Americans.
ArchivalResource: .25 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/51552119 View
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- United States. Fair Employment Practices Committee. Fair Employment Practices Committee records, 1943-1946.
Fisher, Charles, 1938-. Charles Fisher papers, 1964-1971.
Title:
Charles Fisher papers, 1964-1971.
Includes correspondence, meeting notes, newspaper clippings, research papers. Documents detail Charles Fisher's work with the Congress of Racial Equality in the San Francisco Bay area, primarily its direct action against the Bank of America due to employment discrimination ca. 1964; and the Boston Draft Resistance Group, between 1964 and 1971. They include his unpublished manuscript Midwives to History: the Sociology of a Radical Anti-War Organizing Group which analyzes the BDRG; collection also includes another unpublished, untitled manuscript about the history of the BDRG by Thomas W. Newman.
ArchivalResource: 20 linear in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/423751343 View
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- Fisher, Charles, 1938-. Charles Fisher papers, 1964-1971.
Erik H. and Joan M. Erikson papers, 1925-1985 (inclusive) 1960-1980 (bulk).
Title:
Erik H. and Joan M. Erikson papers, 1925-1985 (inclusive)1960-1980 (bulk).
Papers of American psychoanalyst, educator, and author Erik Erikson.
ArchivalResource: 78 boxes (25.7 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00342/catalog View
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- Erik H. and Joan M. Erikson papers, 1925-1985 (inclusive) 1960-1980 (bulk).
Civil Rights History Project collection
Title:
Civil Rights History Project collection
Collection of 145 filmed oral history interviews of 175 participants in the United States civil rights movement and their family members. Also includes interview transcripts and photographs. Collection materials were created by the National Museum of African American History and Culture in partnership with the American Folklife Center. The oral histories were conducted by historians Julian Bond, Taylor Branch, David P. Cline, Emilye Crosby, John Dittmer, Will Griffin, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Joseph Mosnier, LaFleur Paysour, Dwandalyn Reece, Patricia Sullivan, and Kieran Walsh Taylor. Most of the interviews were filmed by John Bishop.
ArchivalResource: 1,202 items
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005 View
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- Civil Rights History Project collection, 2010-2011
McSurely, Alan, 1936-. Alan McSurely papers, 1928-1985 (bulk 1960s-1980s).
Title:
Alan McSurely papers, 1928-1985 (bulk 1960s-1980s).
The collection contains correspondence, legal documents, photographs, and publications pertaining to Alan and Margaret McSurely's work with civil rights and labor organizations in the 1960s and 1970s. Among these groups were the Southern Conference Educational Fund, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (formerly known as the Student National Coordinating Committee), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Included are numerous documents concerning the McSurelys' 1967 arrest for sedition in Kentucky; their 1969 arrest for contempt of Congress; and their legal battles and appeals, which continued until the 1980s. The McSurelys were ultimately freed in both arrests and won a damage suit in 1983 against those who had arrested them. Also included are photocopies of materials relating to Drew Pearson that the McSurelys collected for the relevance to their own legal battles.
ArchivalResource: About 15000 items (15.0 linear ft.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/40337289 View
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- Resource Relation
- McSurely, Alan, 1936-. Alan McSurely papers, 1928-1985 (bulk 1960s-1980s).
Stallworth, Lola, 1918-1999,. Lola Stallworth oral history interview, 1998.
Title:
Lola Stallworth oral history interview, 1998.
Stallworth discusses her family; her education and teaching career; obstacles in setting up a Head Start program, a credit union for African Americans, and a Council on Aging in Greensburg, La.; the activities of CORE volunteers; difficulties in registering African Americans to vote; and problems faced by black teachers.
ArchivalResource: 1 sound cassette (1.5 hours);Transcript (42 leaves)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/76173793 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Stallworth, Lola, 1918-1999,. Lola Stallworth oral history interview, 1998.
Michael Padwee Papers 1966-1979.
Title:
Michael Padwee Papers 1966-1979.
Series I: Political Activity, 1963-1974. Series I includes documents illustrating Padwee's involvement in various leftist political groups including Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the Socialist Scholars Conference, the Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS), the Peace and Freedom Party (PFP), the Committee for Independent Political Action (CIPA), Red Umbrella, and the New American Movement (NAM). Included in this series are position papers, minutes, flyers, pamphlets, notes, clippings, ... Michael Padwee was a caseworker for the New York City Department of Social Services, Human Resources Administration and a member of the Social Service Employees Union (SSEU, AFSCME District Council 37, Local 371). While a member of the union, he served as a union delegate and grievance committee chairman and was an active member of several union caucuses. Beginning in his student days at Rutgers University, Padwee was active in several leftist and activist organizations. He was a founding member ...
ArchivalResource: 4.0 linear feet (4 boxes)
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- Resource Relation
- Michael Padwee Papers 1966-1979.
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the San Antonio (Texas) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 42 linear feet
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1535903 View
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- Resource Relation
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
Title:
Classification 157 (Civil Unrest) Case Files, 1957–1978
This series consists of letters, memorandums, teletypes, newspaper clippings, reports, logs, statements, notes, legal documents, interviews, transcripts, lists, court records, correspondence and other records contained in case files opened by the Omaha (Nebraska) Field Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The records constitute investigative case files on persons, organizations, groups, or events believed by the FBI to have the potential to ignite civil unrest that might possibly require the use of Federal troops, such as planned demonstrations and protest marches. Many of the records encompass surveillance of groups considered "agitator" organizations, such as various civil rights- and socialist-oriented groups that formed in the 1960s, many of which were specifically targeted by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for suspected Communist influence. Some material further pertains to investigations of political organizations and groups that formed on college campuses in the 1960s.
ArchivalResource: 35 linear feet, 10 linear inches
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/1518847 View
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- Resource Relation
Tallahassee Civil Rights Oral History Collection, July-August 1978, July 1978
Title:
Tallahassee Civil Rights Oral History Collection, July-August 1978, July 1978
ArchivalResource: 1.8 Linear Ft.
http://digitool.fcla.edu/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=221767&custom_att_2=direct View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Tallahassee Civil Rights Oral History Collection, July-August 1978, July 1978
Congress of Racial Equality. Bookkeeping files, 1953-1954, 1962-1966.
Title:
Bookkeeping files, 1953-1954, 1962-1966.
The series consists of bookkeeping records of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) containing financial files (1953-1954) and personnel files (1962-1966). The records include invoices, memoranda, job descriptions, personnel rosters, telephone logs, employment applications, and resignations documenting the internal organization of CORE as well as CORE's collective bargaining agreement with the community and the Social Agency Employees Union.
ArchivalResource: 1.25 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/38476575 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Bookkeeping files, 1953-1954, 1962-1966.
Title:
Production Library Audio Recordings, 1999 - 2005
ArchivalResource: 45,062 audio reels and 1 optical disk
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/118159 View
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- Resource Relation
Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality papers [microform] : addendum, 1944-1968.
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality papers [microform] : addendum, 1944-1968. 1944-1968.
ArchivalResource: ca. 1600 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122363887 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Congress of Racial Equality papers [microform] : addendum, 1944-1968.
President Ford Committee Records. 1975 - 1977. Black Desk Subject Files
Title:
President Ford Committee Records. 1975 - 1977. Black Desk Subject Files
ArchivalResource:
https://catalog.archives.gov/id/611778 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) Records, 1963-1967
Title:
Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) Records 1963-1967
Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality), one several New York City chapters of the CORE national organization, was formed in March 1963, and remained active until the end 1966. Founders included Rita and Michael Schwerner (the latter one of the group of three civil rights workers murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi in 1964), and members included well-known leftist and radical pacifist activists, such as Murray Bookchin and Igal Rodenko. The chapter focused on tenant organizing, combatting racial discrimination in housing and the exclusion of nonwhites from building trades unions. Women members of Downtown CORE who were arrested in a demonstration and had served jail terms at New York City’s Women’s House of Detention organized a campaign to reform the prison. Most of the materials in the collection concern conditions in New York City’s Women’s House of Detention or racial discrimination in housing in New York City. Organizations represented in the collection include Downtown CORE, the Human Rights Commissions of New York City and State, the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, Committee of Outraged Parents, and the national CORE office. Documents include letters to the editors of New York City newspapers and New York City public officials, memoranda to New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay, spiral bound notebooks with handwritten notes, newspaper clippings and newspapers, circulars, press releases, policy statements, reports, leaflets, and posters, mainly between the years 1963 to 1965.
ArchivalResource: 0.5 linear feet, Two boxes
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_633/tam_633.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) Records, 1963-1967
James Leonard Farmer, Jr., and Lula Peterson Farmer papers
Title:
James Leonard Farmer, Jr., and Lula Peterson Farmer papers
Collection documents the Farmers' professional and personal activities including their involvement in the U. S. civil rights movement. Correspondence, minutes, financial records, and other materials relate to the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the civil rights organization James Farmer founded in 1942. The papers also contain extensive documentation of three organizations Farmer established in the 1960s and 1970s: the Center for Community Action Education, the Council on Minority Planning and Strategy (COMPAS), and the Public Policy Training Institute. In addition, the papers contain material relating to Farmer's unsuccessful campaign for Congress in 1968; his tenure as assistant secretary in the U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (1969-1970); printed materials on civil rights, education, housing, and labor issues in the 1960s and 1970s; extensive correspondence concerning Farmer's national lecture engagements (1967-1975); Farmer's literary productions; and personal papers relating to the Peterson and Farmer families.
ArchivalResource: 46.08 Linear Feet
http://briscoe-aspace.tacc.utexas.edu:8081/repositories/2/resources/4 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- James Leonard, Jr. and Lula Peterson Farmer Papers AR NUMBER: 87-90; 89-251; 92-335; 89-207; 88-115; 88-162; 87-139; 87-159; 87-205; 97-296; 99-083; 99-213; 2000-28., 1908, 1921-1999
Charles Brittin papers, 1914-2004 (bulk 1950-1975)
Title:
Charles Brittin papers 1914-2004 (bulk 1950-1975)
The papers of photographer Charles Brittin contain photographs, negatives, slides and transparencies documenting the Los Angeles art scene and social and political movements that occurred during the 1950s-1970s. Accompanying the photographs are correspondence, personal writings, printed ephemera, posters, maquettes, clippings, and publications. The archive also includes works of art by Brittin and other artists such as Bob Alexander, Wallace Berman and George Herms.
ArchivalResource: 72.0 linear feet; (82 boxes, 7 flatfile folders, 1 roll)
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifa2005m11 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Brittin, Charles, 1928-. Charles Brittin papers, 1914-2004, bulk 1950-1975.
Atwood, Rufus B., 1897-. Rufus Ballard Atwood papers, [ca. 1929]-1965.
Title:
Rufus Ballard Atwood papers, [ca. 1929]-1965.
Materials consist mainly of news clippings, scrapbooks, and photographs which document Kentucky State activities such as sports, alumni, Board of Regents, commencement, faculty, students and homecoming, and Atwood's involvement with Kentucky Negro Education Association, Conference of Presidents of Negro Land Grant Colleges, and other organizations.
ArchivalResource: 33 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70972058 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Atwood, Rufus B., 1897-. Rufus Ballard Atwood papers, [ca. 1929]-1965.
Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter. Congress of Racial Equality, Chicago Chapter records, 1956-1966.
Title:
Congress of Racial Equality, Chicago Chapter records, 1956-1966.
Correspondence, meeting minutes, reports, press releases, articles, newspaper clippings, maps, brochures and booklets, advertisements, newsletters, testimonials, and other administrative documents of the Congress of Racial Equality, Chicago Chapter (CORE); plus papers from CORE's national office and local branches in various regions of the United States; the Chicago Urban League; the Coordinating Council of Community Organizations; and other civil rights organizations. Topics include segregation in Chicago public schools, discrimination in employment and housing, and voter rights. Includes items by Chicago Theological Seminary (1964 Mar. 12), Richard J. Daley (1961 Dec. 15), Everett McKinley Dirksen (1966, Jan. 24, Feb. 9, Apr. 21), Paul H. Douglas (1966 Jan. 20, Feb. 7), Edward Moore Kennedy (1966 Feb. 3), and Benjamin C. Willis (1963 Nov. 29; 1965 Dec. 13; 1966 Mar. 8). Box 1 contains correspondence, meeting minutes, general administrative materials, and materials regarding school segregation. Box 2 contains materials regarding school segregation. Box 3 contains materials regarding employment and housing discrimination and general files. Box 4 contains general files.
ArchivalResource: 1.5 linear ft. (4 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/715318801 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter. Congress of Racial Equality, Chicago Chapter records, 1956-1966.
Terry, Peggy, 1921-2004. Peggy Terry papers, 1937-2004.
Title:
Peggy Terry papers, 1937-2004.
Papers (bulk 1963-1972) collected by Peggy Terry while working as a civil rights activist and as editor of "The Firing Line," a community newspaper published by Jobs or Income Now (JOIN) Community Union in Uptown Chicago. Subjects documented include Terry's participation in sit-ins organized by the Chicago chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), her involvement in planning the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's (SCLC) Poor People's Campaign in Washington, D.C. in 1968 as a member of the event's steering committee, and her work for JOIN Community Union in assisting poor white southerners who had migrated to Chicago from Appalachia. Also documented is her opposition to the Vietnam War and her Vice Presidential campaign as Eldridge Cleaver's running-mate on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket in the 1968 Presidential election.
ArchivalResource: 2.5 c.f. (6 archives boxes and 1 oversize folder),137 photographs (1 archives box),15 posters (2 oversize folders),1 tape recording,1 compact disc, and6 videorecordings.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/701720805 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Terry, Peggy, 1921-2004. Peggy Terry papers, 1937-2004.
Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter. Archives, 1947-1990
Title:
Archives, 1947-1990
CORE, a national civil rights organization, began in Chicago in 1942, with protests to force desegregation of restaurants and other public accommodations. These archives cover the period of the early and mid-1960s, when Chicago CORE's membership was at its height. Records include meeting minutes, correspondence, flyers, programs, news clippings and photographs.
ArchivalResource: 2 linear feet
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/688320233 View
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- Resource Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Chicago Chapter. Archives, 1947-1990
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Adelman, Bob
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Alabama. Governor (1955-1959 : Folsom).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Allen, Steve.
Alliance for Jobs or Income Now (New York, N.Y.).
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bb0skh
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Alliance for Jobs or Income Now (New York, N.Y.).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Folklife Center
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Atwood, Rufus B., 1897-
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- Constellation Relation
- BARBARA DEMING, 1917-1984
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bell, Murphy W.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bernstein, Debbie.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Black, Timuel D.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bock, Laura J.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Boyte Family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Braden, Anne, 1924-2006.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brewster, Robert Wallace, 1905-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bright, Marshall, 1903-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brittin, Charles, 1928-
Brooklyn Civil Rights Defense Committee (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.).
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6ct1bsb
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brooklyn Civil Rights Defense Committee (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brown, Benjamin A.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brown, Gloria.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Brown, Harold K., 1934-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Burnstein, Malcolm.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carey, Gordon.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carmichael, Stokely.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coleman, Mary.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Collection created by Dr. Jackson Lee Ice
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Collins, Douglas.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Collins, Elie.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Committee for Peace Organization.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Committee of Outraged Parents.
Congress of Racial Equality. Brooklyn Chapter.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kr3kkg
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Brooklyn Chapter.
Congress of Racial Equality. National Action Council.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6mm511c
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. National Action Council.
Congress of Racial Equality. National Action Council.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6md7kxb
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. National Action Council.
Congress of Racial Equality. Seattle Chapter.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6x68rds
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Seattle Chapter.
Congress of Racial Equality. Twin Cities Chapter.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62s23mf
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Congress of Racial Equality. Twin Cities Chapter.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Craft, Silas E.,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Currier, Charles G. L.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Curvin, Robert.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- DeMeunier, Leon.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- DeMeunier, Leon.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Deming, Barbara, 1917-1984.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dennis, David J.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dorsen, Norman
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Duncan, Chet.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dymally, Mervyn M., 1926-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- End the Draft Committee.
Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (U.S.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61s5bgc
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity (U.S.)
Erikson, Erik H. (Erik Homburger), 1902-1994
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bv7fdz
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correspondedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- Erikson, Erik H. (Erik Homburger), 1902-1994
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Farmer, James, 1920-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Farmer, James Leonard, Jr., 1920-1999
Fellowship of Reconciliation (U.S.). Michigan.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6z95x5x
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fellowship of Reconciliation (U.S.). Michigan.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ferriday Freedom Movement (Ferriday, La.)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fisher, Charles, 1938-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Forman, James, 1928-2005.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fraser, Steve, 1945-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Freedom & Peace Party of New York State.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Garrow, David J., 1953-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gartner, Alan.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Goldwag, Arnold
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Goodlett, Carlton Benjamin, 1914-
Granger, Lester B. (Lester Blackwell), 1896-1976.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6pk0hm5
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Granger, Lester B. (Lester Blackwell), 1896-1976.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Greenberg, Jack, 1924-
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- Constellation Relation
- Grigsby family.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Haley, Richard.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Harlem Parents Committee.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hobson, Julius W., 1922-1977.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Holmdahl, John W.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Houser, George M.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Innis, Roy, 1934-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Jones, Johnnie, 1919-
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- Constellation Relation
- Kennedy, Florynce
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kuchel, Thomas H.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ku Klux Klan (1915- )
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Kunstler, William Moses, 1919- .
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- KZSU (Radio station : Stanford)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- KZSU (Radio station : Stanford)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lewis, Helena, Dr.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lewis, Tom, 1940-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lynn, Conrad J.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Matthews, J. B. (Joseph Brown), 1894-1966
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McCain, James.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McCain, James T.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McHugh, Madeleine.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McKissick, Floyd B. 1922-1991.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- McSurely, Alan, 1936-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Meier, August, 1923-2003.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mesher, Shirley Ann.
Metropolitan Council on Housing (New York, N.Y.).
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6773z95
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associatedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- Metropolitan Council on Housing (New York, N.Y.).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Michaels, Sheila Shiki y Kessler, 1939-
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- Constellation Relation
- Michigan Fellowship of Reconciliation
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Microfilming Corporation of America.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Miller, Loren
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- Constellation Relation
- Miller, Loren.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mississippi Freedom Summer
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mitchell, David Henry
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- Constellation Relation
- Moore, Ronnie.
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- Constellation Relation
- Morey, R. Hunter, 1940- .
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Muste, Abraham John, 1885-1967.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bw9j9z
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associatedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rc2p82
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- National Farm Workers Association.
National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.)
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61m1dvw
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associatedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.)
National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68d3pzd
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associatedWith
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- Constellation Relation
- National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Neubeck, Ralph Joseph, 1941-
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- Constellation Relation
- New York World's Fair, 1964-1965.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nussbaum, Judith.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Owens, Major R., (Major Robert Odell)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Padwee, Michael.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parker, Karen L.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peace and Freedom Party (U.S.).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Peurala, Alice, 1928-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Powell, Adam Clayton, 1908-1972.
Queens Borough Public Library. Long Island Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62n8qhf
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Queens Borough Public Library. Long Island Division.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rabin, Jack, 1945-
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- Constellation Relation
- Rachlin, Carl.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ralph, Leon D.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Redden, Meg, 1944-
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- Constellation Relation
- Reuther, Walter P., 1907-1970.
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- Constellation Relation
- Reynolds, Isaac.
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- Constellation Relation
- Richardson, Judy, 1944-
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- Constellation Relation
- Rich, Marvin.
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- Constellation Relation
- Ring, Benjamin A., 1925-1992.
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- Constellation Relation
- Robinson, James R.
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- Constellation Relation
- Rosenfeld, Ralph.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rumford, W. Bryon.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rusco, Elmer R.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rustin, Bayard, 1912-1987.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sachs, Nanette.
Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tr1rkz
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shapiro, Peter.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Smith, Lillian, 1897-1966.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Social Agency Employees Union.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sondheim, Walter, 1908-2007,
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Southern Regional Council.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Soyinka, Wole.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stallworth, Lola, 1918-1999,
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.).
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62v64j5
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.).
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62z9sm3
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6842cnh
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Atlanta Office.
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Washington Office.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xd9njs
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.). Washington Office.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Swarthmore College. Peace Collection.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sweet, Wester.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tamiment Library.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tucson Commission on Human Relations
United States. Fair Employment Practices Committee.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6p34stv
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Fair Employment Practices Committee.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Vanguard League (Columbus, Ohio)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Waite, Edward F. (Edward Foote), 1860-1958.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wiley, George, 1931-1973.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Yates, William.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Youth Against War & Fascism.
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- Constellation Relation
- Zippert, John, 1945-
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- Constellation Relation
- Zippert, John S.
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- Constellation Relation
- Chicago Theological Seminary.
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- Constellation Relation
- Chicago Urban League.
Coordinating Council of Community Organizations (Chicago, Ill.)
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- Constellation Relation
- Coordinating Council of Community Organizations (Chicago, Ill.)
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- Constellation Relation
- Daley, Richard J., 1902-1976.
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- Constellation Relation
- Dirksen, Everet McKinley, 1896-1969.
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- Constellation Relation
- Douglas, Paul Howard, 1892-1976.
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- Constellation Relation
- Kennedy, Edward M. 1932-2009
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- Constellation Relation
- Terry, Peggy, 1921-2004.
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- Constellation Relation
- Willis, Benjamin C.
Education
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- Subject
- Education
Teachers
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- Teachers
Black nationalism
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- Black nationalism
Black power
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- Black power
Civil disobedience
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- Subject
- Civil disobedience
Civil rights demonstrations
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- Subject
- Civil rights demonstrations
Civil rights movement
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- Subject
- Civil rights movement
Civil rights movements
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- Subject
- Civil rights movements
Collective bargaining
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- Collective bargaining
De facto school segregation
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- De facto school segregation
Demonstrations
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- Demonstrations
Discrimination in employment
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- Discrimination in employment
Discrimination in public accommodation
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- Discrimination in public accommodation
Discrimination in public accommodations
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- Discrimination in public accommodations
Freedom of movement
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- Freedom of movement
Freedom rides
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- Freedom rides
Fund raising
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- Fund raising
Government, Resistance to
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March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Washington, D.C., 1963
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- March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Washington, D.C., 1963
Minorities
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- Minorities
Nonviolence
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- Nonviolence
Passive resistance
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- Passive resistance
Police
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Police patrol
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Prisons
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Race discrimination
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- Race discrimination
Reformatories for women
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- Reformatories for women
Reformatories for women
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- Reformatories for women
Rent strikes
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Restaurants
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Reunions
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Riots
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School integration
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Social integration
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- Social integration
Tenants' associations
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- Tenants' associations
Voter registration
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- Voter registration
African Americans
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Civil rights
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- Civil rights
Civil rights workers
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Discrimination in employment
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Discrimination in housing
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Civil right movements
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Discrimination in education
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Public schools
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- Illinois--Chicago
Illinois--Chicago
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- Chicago (Ill.)
Chicago (Ill.)
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- Place
- Illinois--Chicago
Illinois--Chicago
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- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 396