64549969http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66m3wtjrevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
EnglishVIAFrevised2015-09-20machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-17T14:21:00machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-17T14:21:00humanSystem Service (system@localhost)revised2017-08-17T08:11:14humanDina Herbert (dina.herbert@nara.gov)User published constellationrevised2017-08-17T08:46:46humanDina Herbert (dina.herbert@nara.gov)User published constellationrevised2017-09-12T10:38:43humanDina Herbert (dina.herbert@nara.gov)User published constellationcreated2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonYoung, Whitney M. Whitney M. Young papers.presumedYoung, Whitney M.presumedYoung, Whitney Moore, 1921-1971.presumedYoung, WhitneypresumedYoung, Whitney M., JrpresumedYoung, Whitney M. 1921-1971presumedWhitney M. Young, Jr.presumedYoung, Whitney, 1922-1971.presumedYoung, Whitney Moore (Jr.) 1921-1971presumedYoung, Whitney Moore, 1921-presumedYoung, Whitney M. 1922-1971.presumed1921-07-311971-03-11EnglishAfrican AmericansCharitiesCivil rightsPublic welfareSocial problemsSocial serviceSociology, UrbanUnited StatesAmericansJournalistsSociologists
Sociologist.
Whitney Moore Young, Jr. (1921-1971) was Executive Director of the National Urban League, 1961-1971.
From the description of Papers, 1960-1977. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 122443095Atlanta Urban League.Baldwin, William H. (William Henry), b. 1891.Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.Gardner, John W. (John William), 1912-2002.Gollin, Albert EGollin, Albert E.Gordon, Hugh L., 1922-Horne, Frank Smith, 1899-1974.Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978.Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973.Kemp, Maida Springer, 1910-Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968.King, Coretta Scott, 1927-2006.King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968.MAIDA (STEWART) SPRINGER KEMP, 1910-Manhattan College. Peace Studies Institute.March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom (1963 : Washington, D.C.)Mays, Victor, 1927-McCoy, Charles Brelsford, 1909-1995.McKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-McPheeters, Annie L.,Metcalf, George R., 1914-Miller, Loren.National Urban League.National Urban League. Southern Regional Office.Popular Publications, Inc.Rabin, Jack, 1945-Reid, Ogden R. (Ogden Rogers), 1925-Rosenthal, A. M. (Abraham Michael), 1922-2006Shaw University. Office of the President.Shick, Tom W.United Church Board for Homeland Ministries. Race Relations Dept (1943-1970)Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981.Young, Margaret Buchner, 1921-Young, Whitney M.Baldwin, William H. (William Henry), b. 1891. Papers, 1886-1980.Baldwin, William H. (William Henry), b. 1891.Baldwin, Ruth Standish.Baldwin, William H., Jr.Papers, 1886-1980.0.4 c.f. (1 archives box) and.20 reels of microfilm (35 mm.); plus.additions of 0.1 c.f. and.63 photographs.Papers of William H. Baldwin, a noted public relations counsel, consisting of material on both his professional career and his personal interest in various social welfare organizations. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper ProjectBureau of Social Science Research files, 1962-1970Gollin, Albert EBureau of Social Science Research files 1962-197012.4 lin. ft. (29 archival boxes)The Bureau of Social Science Research Files collection are comprised of materials from the two sociological studies for which Albert Gollin was the principal investigator; the March on Washington (l963) and the Poor People's Campaign (l968). In addition to material generated by the BSSR in their study and analysis of these events, the collection contains documents from both the March on Washington and the Poor People's Campaign that Gollin and his team gathered for their studies.Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Archives SectionNational Urban League. Records of the National Urban League, 1910-1986 (bulk 1930-1979).National Urban League Records 1900-1988 (bulk 1930-1979)616,000 items; 2,002 containers; 821 linear feet; 18 microfilm reelsCivil rights organization. Correspondence, minutes of meetings, speeches, reports, surveys, statistical data, financial and legal records, scrapbooks, printed material, and other records relating to the programs and policies of the league and its affiliates.EnglishLibrary of Congress. Manuscript Division Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C. [Leaders marching from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial]Records of the U.S. Information Agency. 1900 - 2003. Miscellaneous Subjects, Staff and Stringer Photographs. 1961 - 1974. Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C. [Leaders marching from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial]National Archives at College ParkNational Urban League. Southern Regional Office. Records, 1900-1988 (bulk 1943-1978).National Urban League. Southern Regional Office.Jackson, Nelson C.Thomas, Jesse O., b. 1885.Records, 1900-1988 (bulk 1943-1978).149.2 linear ft.Correspondence, memoranda, notes, reports, surveys, minutes of meetings, speeches and articles, financial records, printed material, photographs, and other records of the Southern Regional Office and regional affiliates. Pertains chiefly to the founding and organization of the office, relations with affiliate offices and the national office, and work of the office in relation to economic and social concerns of African Americans in the South. Topics include the League's adoption program; the Atlanta School of Social Work; boycotts of retail merchants; business and employment opportunities; civil rights; community development; crime; disaster relief; education; health; housing; manual and vocational training programs; continued migration to the northern states; relief for African Americans during the Depression; activities of segregationist organizations; minority recruitment by the U.S. Navy; voter education; the return of African American veterans following World War II; and women's issues. Officials of the Southern Regional Office represented include Harry L. Alston, William Y. Bell, Jr., Clarence D. Coleman, Nelson C. Jackson, Vernon E. Jordan, Franklin O. Nichols, Mahlon T. Puryear, Clarence Thomas, and Jesse O. Thomas. Includes personal papers of office directors, Jesse O. Thomas and Nelson C. Jackson. Correspondents include Claude Barnett, Mary McLeod Bethune, Lester B. Granger, George Edmund Haynes, T. Arnold Hill, Albon L. Holsey, John Hope, Eugene Kinckle Jones, J.R.E. Lee, Benjamin Elijah Mays, Robert Russa Moton, Alvin J. Neely, Guichard Parris, Charles C. Spaulding, Ann Tanneyhill, Forrester B. Washington, L. Hollingsworth Wood, Monroe Nathan Work, and Whitney M. Young. Library of CongressManhattan College. Peace Studies Institute. Records, 1966-1983.Manhattan College. Peace Studies Institute.Records, 1966-1983..6 cubic ft.Peace Studies Institute records, including correspondence, 1966-1973; annual reports, 1966-1967; releases and newsletters, 1966-1967; and miscellaneous files of circulars, announcements, minutes, brochures, and correspondence, 1968-1978. Also, programs, correspondence, announcements concerning convocations, 1968-1983, including letters by Nelson Rockefeller, Whitney M. Young Jr., and Theodore Kheel on honorary degrees, 1968. Campbell University, Wiggins Memorial LibraryShaw University. Office of the President. James E. Cheek records, 1958-1969 (bulk 1966-1968).Shaw University. Office of the President.Cheek, James E.James E. Cheek records, 1958-1969 (bulk 1966-1968).40 linear ft.Records of James Edward Cheek (b. 1932), seventh president of Shaw University. Shaw University, James E. Cheek Learning Resources CenterAtlanta Urban League. Executive Director Grace Towns Hamilton administrative files, 1942-1961, 1967.Atlanta Urban League.Hamilton, Grace Towns, 1907-Executive Director Grace Towns Hamilton administrative files, 1942-1961, 1967.22.1 linear ft.The series consists of administrative files of Atlanta Urban League Executive Director Grace Towns Hamilton from 1942-1961, 1967. The files include correspondence and administrative files consisting of correspondence, minutes, printed materials, and reports relating to Hamilton's activities inside and outside the League. Much of the correspondence relates to affairs of the Atlanta Urban League and includes such correspondents as Morris B Abram, James P. Brawley, William B. Hartsfield, Thurgood Marshall, and Whitney M. Young. Among materials in the administrative files are correspondence and reports relating to the building of the Hughes Spalding Pavillion at Grady Memorial Hospital; activities of the Metropolitan Atlanta Community Services; and files on organizations closely allied to the League, such as the Atlanta Negro Voters League, the B'nai B'rith Anti-defamation League, and the American Civil Liberties Union. There are also records pertaining to Hamilton's involvement with the Southern Regional Council, the Fulton-DeKalb Hospital Authority, the Executive Council of the Atlanta Community Chest, and the Gate City Day Nursery Association. The collection documents the League's efforts to seek better housing facilities, education, and health services for African Americans in Atlanta. Atlanta University Center, Robert W. Woodruff LibraryMcPheeters, Annie L.,. Annie L. McPheeters oral history interview, 1992 June 8.McPheeters, Annie L.,Annie L. McPheeters oral history interview, 1992 June 8.3 audiotapes ; cassette.Transcript (67 p.)The collection consists of an oral history interview with Annie L. McPheeters on June 8, 1992 in which she discusses why she became a librarian; library's 1930 adult education program; John Wesley Dobbs; black libraries provide information for political, civic and voters leagues; Dr. Clarence A. Bacote; Reverend William Holmes Borders; Warren Cochran of the YMCA; libraries' role at Voter League meetings; Negro Women's Voters League and Ruby Blackburn; League of Women Voters; women's groups and voter education; the Hungry Club; Hallie Beecham Brooks; voter registration efforts in 1946; All Citizens Group; library desegregation; Friends of the Library; Atlanta Council on Human Relations; Whitney Young; Am Vets; John C. Settelmayer; Mayor Hartsfield; "Freedom Riders"; Julian Bond; Auburn Library black history collection; SNCC; Utopian Literary Club; school desegregation; McPheeters' attitude toward political participation away from the library; Sibley Commission; Mrs. Mexico Mickleberry and Margaret Davis Bowen; the cultural and intellectual role played by black libraries before desegregation; origins of the Metropolitan Atlanta Association for the Blind; Martin Luther King, Jr. and Maynard Jackson as youths at the library; black women move out into the community; Nina King; Chautauqua Literary Club; Atlanta Life Insurance Company; the Atlanta Daily World; Atlanta Housing Authority; McPheeters's reaction to feminism; McPheeters compiles indexes of/for black community. Georgia State UniversityPapers, 1942-1981MAIDA (STEWART) SPRINGER KEMP, 1910-Papers, 1942-19812 file boxesCorrespondence, speeches, reports, etc., of Maida (Stewart) Springer Kemp, trade union activist.Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in AmericaNational Urban League. Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1939-1976.National Urban League.Citron, Samuel J.Granger, Lester B. 1896-1976.Kheel, Theodore Woodrow.King, Fred L.Jordon, Vernon E. 1935-McGannon, Donald Henry, 1920-Moore, Leon.Poindexter, Barbara.Richmond, Frederick W.Roosevelt, John A. 1916-1981.Schulte, David A.Segal, Martin Eli, 1916-Shinn, Richard R.Snyder, John I.Wood, L. Hollingsworth 1874-1956.Young, Whitney M.Friends of the Jewish Theatre for Children.Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1939-1976.44 items (58 l.)University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt LibraryBrotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters records, 1920-1968 (bulk 1950-1968).Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Records 1920-1968 (bulk 1950-1968)41,000 items; 144 containers; 70 linear feetPart I consists of general correspondence, subject files, and personal papers of the brotherhood's founder, A. Philip Randolph, documenting the growth and functions of the union. The Subject File contains a large quantity of material on the growth and functions of the union from 1940 to 1968 and includes agreements reached between the brotherhood and the nation's major railroad lines. Included also is material exchanged between the local unions and the brotherhood's headquarters, as well as files relating to biennial conventions, financial matters, and the ladies auxiliary. There are no records relating to Randolph's creation of the union in 1925 or to the brotherhood's subsequent struggles for existence while organizing various union locals.
Part II consists of correspondence and subject files of brotherhood officials Benjamin F. McLaurin (international field organizer), A. Philip Randolph (founder and president), and Ashley L. Totten (secretary-treasurer), and other subject files, financial records, and miscellaneous records. The Subject File in Part II contains additional agreements between the brotherhood and the railroad companies, but most of the files concern the participation of the union in railway and labor organizations. The most informative material relating to the organizing activities of the union can be found in the files pertaining to the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen. These activities were carried out under the auspices of the Provisional Committee To Organize Colored Locomotive Firemen. The records document the struggles of African-American firemen to retain their jobs and seniority rights with the railroad companies while seeking to be represented by a labor union. Briefs of legal cases brought by the brotherhood on behalf of the African-American firemen are also included in the files. Some of the material in the files relating to Canada also touches on the organizing activities of the brotherhood.EnglishLibrary of Congress. Manuscript DivisionGollin, Albert E. Bureau of Social Science Research files, 1962-1970.Gollin, Albert E.Bureau of Social Science Research (Washington, D.C.)Bureau of Social Science Research files, 1962-1970.12.4 lin. ft. (29 archival boxes)The Bureau of Social Science Research Files collection are comprised of materials from the two sociological studies for which Albert Gollin was the principal investigator; the March on Washington (l963) and the Poor People's Campaign (l968). In addition to material generated by the BSSR in their study and analysis of these events, the collection contains documents from both the March on Washington and the Poor People's Campaign that Gollin and his team gathered for their studies. The March on Washington series has been divided into three sub-series: Study, Reference and Survey. Included are planning documents on Gollin's organization of the study of the March; reference material used to analyze it and previous marches; survey instruments and questionnaires; interview guidelines and transcripts; media-related materials such as newspaper clippings and television program transcripts; and reference material for the final report. Of interest are transcripts of interviews with James Farmer, Dr. Anna Arnold Hedgeman, John Lewis, Cleveland Robinson, Bayard Rustin and Whitney Young. The Poor People's Campaign (PPC) series documents the active planning for the PPC beginning in early l968 and intensifying in May of that year. The series is arranged into four sub-series: Study, Survey, Reference and Media. The Study sub-series encompasses the BSSR's study of the campaign, reports and other writings, and studies of civil disobedience. Gollin's involvement with SCLC's administration of the PPC is evident in the files and documents included here. The Survey sub-series includes codebooks, survey instruments, and interview guidelines. There are transcripts of interviews conducted by BSSR staff and volunteers with participants as well as caravan reports from participant-observers who travelled with the caravans. The Reference sub-series contains documents related to the lobbying efforts of the organizers of the PPC and shows the role of the national and local organizations that collaborated with the PPC. The Media sub-series includes articles and reports on the civil rights movement, as well as newspaper clippings and periodicals, 1963-1970, containing articles about both the March on Washington and the Poor People's Campaign in black and mainline publications. New York Public Library System, NYPLOgden Rogers Reid papers, 1925-1982Reid, Ogden R. (Ogden Rogers), 1925-Ogden Rogers Reid papers 1925-1982315.25 linear feet (426 boxes, 1 folio)The papers consist of correspondence, student papers, writings, speeches, subject files, congressional papers, clippings, photographs and miscellanea documenting the personal life and professional career of Ogden Rogers Reid. Among the subjects documented in the papers are Reid's student years at Yale University, his central role with the New York Herald Tribune, and his activities as ambassador to Israel and as a United States congressman. Files relating to his newspaper career include correspondence, writings, and speeches pertaining to many national and international individuals, topics, and events of interest.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesRabin, Jack, 1945-. Jack Rabin collection on Alabama civil rights and southern activists, 1941-2004 (bulk 1956-1974).Rabin, Jack, 1945-Jack Rabin collection on Alabama civil rights and southern activists, 1941-2004 (bulk 1956-1974).3.15 cubic feet and 371 items.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. Pennsylvania State University LibrariesShick, Tom W. Collected Papers, 1966-1976.Shick, Tom W.Collected Papers, 1966-1976.0.2 c.f. (1 archives box)Papers concerning civil rights and black history collected during the 1960s and 1970s by Shick, a professor in the Afro-American Studies Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Included are files on the alleged conspiracy to assassinate Roy Wilkins and Whitney Young in Jamaica, New York in 1967; the 1972 Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana; the Institute of the Black World; Nairobi College, an alternative school in California; Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) position papers, primarily letters and statements by James Forman on the relationship between the black American movement and Africa, 1966-1967; near-print material on the Soledad Brothers and the Venceremos Brigade; and the campaign of Warren Widener for mayor of Berkeley, California. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper ProjectGordon, Hugh L., 1922-. Gordon, Kruse, Wentzel Collection 1951-2010 1966-1989Gordon, Hugh L., 1922-Austin, Lois.Beebe, Leo C.Dukes, Ofield, 1932-Feild, John G., 1922-2006.Hamall, T. K. (Tom K.)Kruse, J. Joseph (James Joseph), 1932-Lockwood, Howard C.Taylor, Hobart, 1920-Troutman, Robert B. (Robert Battey), 1918-Young, Whitney M.Gordon, Kruse, Wentzel Collection 1951-2010 1966-198915 boxes (16 cubic ft.)Hugh Gordon assembled the collection over a period of years as the resource for a book project. As part of the donor agreement with the Archives, Gordon requested that the collection be named for himself, J. Joseph (James Joseph) Kruse, and Fred R. Wentzel. It consists of ten series, which represent accessions from different sources. The Lois Austin Photographs (1957-2004) series consists of original and reproduction photographs of Robert B. Troutman, his wife, Lois, and their home. Gordon collected the originals from Lois Austin and made a set of digital print copies. The Leo C. Beebe Papers reproductions (1968) series includes transcripts of interviews with Beebe, Bill King, and Frank Snyder concerning their experiences with the National Alliance of Business. The transcripts are photocopies of originals in the Leo C. Beebe Papers at Rowan University. The Ofield Dukes Papers reproductions (1965-2007) series contains photocopies of original documents and digital image reproductions of photographs relating to Dukes' activities with the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity, Gordon borrowed the originals from Dukes and made copies to include in the collection. The Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum reproductions (1961-1984) series includes photocopies of original documents requested by Gordon from the LBJ Library and Museum. The documents relate to the Plans for Progress program and are arranged according to the title given on the reproduction request form. Included are items regarding John G. Feild, the Executive Director of the President's Commission on Equal Employment Opportunity from 1961 to 1963, and Leo C. Beebe. The John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum reproductions (1967-2006) series contains digital and print reproductions of photographs held by the Kennedy Presidential Library, as well as a photocopy of an original interview transcript with John G. Feild. The photographic reproductions were requested by Gordon. They consist of a series of photographs of the signing of the first Plans for Progress pact featuring Lockheed Chairman Courtlandt Gross, President John F. Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon Johnson, and Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg on May 25, 1961. The bulk of the J. Joseph (James Joseph) Kruse Papers (1961-2008) series consists of photocopies of original documents from the files of J. Joseph Kruse. Gordon borrowed and photocopied the originals. The documents were generated during Kruse's tenure on the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity from 1961 to 1963. They relate to Kruse's activities with the Plans for Progress program. Of interest to researchers are materials created by Robert B. Troutman, who instituted the Plans for Progress program. It also contains a series of affidavits relating to the 1961 discrimination complaint brought against the Lockheed-Georgia Company by the NAACP. The series is arranged by format and activity and contains a small number of original documents. The Howard C. Lockwood Papers (1956-2009) series contains original documents and photographs from the files of Howard C. Lockwood. They related to Lockwood's tenure as a loaned executive to the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity from 1963 to 1964, as well as his efforts regarding fair employment testing. Gordon collected the original documents directly from Lockwood. The series is arranged by format. Of interest to researchers are original photographs that feature committee members meeting with Hobart Taylor, Executive Vice Chairman of the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity. The Hobart Taylor Papers reproductions (1962-1982) series is made up of photocopies of original documents from the Hobart Taylor Papers at the Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan. The copies were requested by Gordon and relate to Taylor's position as Executive Vice Chairman of the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity. The arrangement of the photocopies mirrors that of the finding aid, which is also included. The Research materials (1955-2008) series includes a variety of sources, including books, clippings, and sound recordings, as well as subject files made up of photocopied articles and book chapters and web printouts. The materials were acquired by Gordon to provide background information, as well as to suggest writing projects and funding. The series is arranged by format. Kennesaw State University, Horace W. Sturgis LibraryPresident's Daily Diary Entry, March 14, 1965President's Daily Diary. 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969. President's Daily Diary. 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969. President's Daily Diary Entry, March 14, 1965Lyndon Baines Johnson LibraryMetcalf, George R., 1914-. George R. Metcalf papers, 1956-1971.Metcalf, George R., 1914-George R. Metcalf papers 1956-19712 lin. ft.Writer, New York State senator (1951-1965), former president of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing. Collection comprises research material for Metcalf's two books, BLACK PROFILES (13 biographies of prominent African Americans living and deceased), and UP FROM WITHIN: TODAY'S BLACK LEADERS (a biographical sequence of emerging black personalities and their contributions to the "black revolution" in America). Material consists of clippings, correspondence, typescripts, transcribed interviews, notes and miscellaneous printed material, and one taped interview with Metcalf on a variety of topics including urban rehabilitation. Material in collection is about Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Roy Wilkins, Shirley Chisolm, W.E.B. Du Bois, Rosa Parks, Thurgood Marshall, Medgar Evers, Jackie Robinson, Eldridge Cleaver, Whitney Young, Jr., Harriet Tubman, Edward Brooke, Julian Bond, James H. Meredith, Andrew Brimmer, and others.Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Archives SectionYoung, Whitney M. Papers, 1960-1977.Young, Whitney M.Papers, 1960-1977.ca. 109,300 items (299 boxes, 9 v., 60 oversize items)Correspondence, speeches, reports, testimony, press releases, and articles of Young. The files document Young's leadership in many social welfare and urban sociology organizations, as well as his activities as a columnist and speaker. Cataloged correspondents include Robert F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Hubert H. Humphrey, Martin Luther King, Coretta Scott King, Roy Wilkins, and John W. Gardner. Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University LibrariesMiller, Loren. Papers of Loren Miller, 1876-2003 (bulk dates 1932-1966)Hawkins, Augustus F.Miller, Loren.Alexander, Sadie Tanner Mossell, 1898-1989.Bowron, Fletcher, 1887-1968.Bradley, Tom, 1917-1998.Brown, Edmund G. (Edmund Gerald), 1905-1996.Colley, Nathaniel Sextus, 1918-.Granger, Lester B. (Lester Blackwell), 1896-1976.Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967.Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963.Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968.Marshall, Thurgood, 1908-1993.Moon, Henry Lee, 1901-.Mosk, Stanley, 1912-2001.White, Walter Francis, 1893-1955.Wilkins, Roy, 1901-1981.Williams, Franklin, 1917-.American Civil Liberties Union.American Federation of Labor.Congress of Industrial Organizations (U.S.)Congress of Racial Equality.Japanese American Citizens' League.League of Struggle for Negro Rights.Los Angeles Urban League.NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing.National Negro Congress.National Urban League.Papers of Loren Miller, 1876-2003 (bulk dates 1932-1966)10,454 items.72 boxes.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. Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical GardensPopular Publications, Inc. Popular Publications, Inc. records, 1910-1977, bulk (1945-1960).Popular Publications, Inc.Addullah, Achmed, 1881-Boggie, Clarence Gilmore.Davis, Robert H. 1869-1942.Gannett, Peter.Gardner, Erle Stanley, 1889-1970.Gaunt. A. B.Gibney, Albert J., 1882-1948.Houts, Marshal.Lucke, Leo F.Morley, Christopher, 1890-1957.Norton, Alden H.Paust, Gil.Schindler, Raymond C., 1883-1959.Snyder, LeMoyne, 1898-Steeger, Henry, 1903-1978.Street, Park.Swick, Jean.Thompson, Hunter S.Towne, Charles Hanson, 1877-1949.White, Kenneth Steele.Young, Whitney M.All-Fiction Field, Inc.Authors' Syndicate, Ltd.Fictioneers, Inc.Frank A. Munsey Company.George H. Doran Company.National Urban League.New Publications, Inc.Recreational Reading, Inc.Popular Publications, Inc. records, 1910-1977, bulk (1945-1960).53 linear feet (80 boxes)Collection consists of correspondence, copyright records, index card files, financial records and personal papers of Henry Steeger, and other records related to the operations of Popular Publications. New York Public Library System, NYPLWhitney M. Young, Sr. papers, 1916-1973.Whitney M. Young, Sr. papers, 1916-1973.6 videotapes.This is a collection of materials relating to Whitney M. Young, Sr., his tenure at the Lincoln Institute, his civic activities, honors, and awards, and his family. Included are scrapbooks and albums containing newsclippings, letters, programs, and articles written by Young; audio and video recordings of interviews, speeches, and ceremonies; and photographs. Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives, Kentucky Guide Project OfficeUnited Church Board for Homeland Ministries. Race Relations Dept (1943-1970). Archives. 1943-1970.United Church Board for Homeland Ministries. Race Relations Dept (1943-1970)Archives. 1943-1970.88.8 linear ft. 222 Boxes; 3 OS Boxes; 1 OS item.Established by the American Missionary Association at Fisk University. Staged annual Race Relations Institutes. Conducted community self studies of human relations and research on restrictive housing covenants and segregation in interstate transportation. The collection includes correspondence, reports, biographical data, field notes, research materials, publications of the department or its staff, photographs, survey forms, etc. generated in the course of the activities conducted by the department. [These activities were the annual Race Relations Institute, Self-Study surveys by communities, numerous other surveys and studies.] Names in the collection are those of directors of the department, Charles S. Johnson, Herman Hodge Long, and Clifton Herman Johnson. Other staff members were Carroll Barber, Vivian Henderson, John Hope, II, Grace Jones, Lewis Wade Jones, Margaret McCulloch, Hattie M. Perry, and others. Other names in the collection include Will W. Alexander, Horace Mann Bond, Julian Bond, Arna Bontemps, John A. Buggs, Frederick L. Brownlee, L. Maynard Catchings, Edwin R. Embree, John Hope Franklin, Anna Arnold Hedgeman, Charles H. Houston, Frayser T. Lane, Thurgood Marshall, Constance Baker Motley, Jesse C. Thomas, Charles H. Thompson, Galen R. Weaver, Robert C. Weaver, and Whitney M. Young, Jr. Tulane University, Amistad Research CenterNew York Times Company records. A.M. Rosenthal papers, 1955-1994, 1967-1986Rosenthal, A. M. (Abraham Michael), 1922-2006New York Times Company records. A.M. Rosenthal papers 1955-1994 1967-198654.18 linear feet; 129 boxesThe New York Times Company records: A.M. Rosenthal papers document the editorial career of Managing and Executive Editor Abraham Michael Rosenthal (1922-2006), noted for his stewardship of that newspaper during one of its most tumultuous periods, from the 1960s through the 1980s. The collection contains Rosenthal's office files from , spanning the era of his editorial tenure. Containing extensive professional correspondence, the papers illustrate the deliberations and thought processes behind the decisions made at the very top of arguably the most important newspaper in the world. New York Times The New York TimesNew York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives DivisionHorne, Frank Smith, 1899-1974. Papers. 1927-74.Horne, Frank Smith, 1899-1974.Frank S. Horne papers, 1927-197422 linear ft. ca. 30, 000.The papers of Frank Smith Horne measure approximately 22 linear feet and consist of 30,000 items dated between 1927 and 1974. Over half of the papers of the collection is personal and business correspondence. The other half consists of financial records, lists, minutes, legal documents, writings, press releases, reports, general items, newspaper clippings, and various collected publications. The papers have been arranged topically and chronologically.EnglishTulane University, Amistad Research Center March on Washington for Jobs and FreedomMarch on Washington for Jobs and FreedomThis is a program from civil rights march on Washington, DC.John F. Kennedy LibraryYoung, Margaret Buchner, 1921-. Reminiscences of Margaret Buchner Young : oral history, 1976.Young, Margaret Buchner, 1921-Barnes, Betty,Reminiscences of Margaret Buchner Young : oral history, 1976.Transcript: 110 leaves.Tape: 3 reels.Education; Young Women's Christian Association counseling; teaching at Spelman College; children's books, pamphlets on race relations; Community Action Program counseling; civil rights in Atlanta, 1954-60; Whitney Young's career: Minnesota Urban League, Dean of School of Social Work, Atlanta University, president of National Urban League, 1961-71. Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University LibrariesNational Urban League Records, 1900-1988, (bulk 1930-1979)National Urban League Records 1900-1988 (bulk 1930-1979)616,000 items; 2,002 containers; 821 linear feet; 18 microfilm reelsCivil rights organization. Correspondence, minutes of meetings, speeches, reports, surveys, statistical data, financial and legal records, scrapbooks, printed material, and other records relating to the programs and policies of the league and its affiliates.EnglishLibrary of Congress. Manuscript Division"For Freedom Now" Civil Rights Symposium"For Freedom Now" Civil Rights SymposiumNational Archives at College ParkYoung, Whitney M. Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1971.Young, Whitney M.Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1971.4 items (14 l.)University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt LibraryAtlanta Urban League. Executive Director Harold Arnold administrative files, 1964-1968.Atlanta Urban League.Arnold, Harold.Executive Director Harold Arnold administrative files, 1964-1968.7.9 linear ft.The series consists of administrative files of Atlanta Urban League Executive Director Harold Arnold from 1964-1968. The files include correspondence and administrative files which consist of reports, memoranda, brochures, and pamphlets. Of particular interest in the administrative files are records pertaining to Arnold's work with Economic Opportunity Atlanta, files relating to the Metropolitan Atlanta Community Services, and miscellaneous printed materials from state and federal government agencies. Correspondents include Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, Paul Anthony, Andrew F. Brimmer, Clarence D. Coleman, Benjamin E. Mays, Herman Sweat, and Whitney M. Young. Atlanta University Center, Robert W. Woodruff LibraryMays, Victor, 1927-. Whitney Young, Jr., crusader for equality : production material, ca. 1972.Mays, Victor, 1927-Mann, Peggy.Whitney Young, Jr., crusader for equality : production material, ca. 1972.Illustrations: 10 items.Pencil studies. A brief biography of the black crusader for civil rights who for many years was head of the National Urban League. University of Minnesota, MinneapolisFloyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980sMcKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s126.0 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 157,000 items)<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>EnglishEnglishUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical CollectionMcCoy, Charles Brelsford, 1909-1995. Papers, 1967-1974.McCoy, Charles Brelsford, 1909-1995.Papers, 1967-1974.15 linear ft.The Charles B. McCoy Papers document McCoy's tenure as president (1967-73) and chairman of the board (1971-74) of E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. The papers reflect the public role that McCoy played when he was chief executive officer at Du Pont. During these years he was active within the Business Roundtable and the collection includes policy committee minutes, as well as correspondence. Of particular interest are records of the Labor Law Study Committee. There is also substantial correspondence reflecting McCoy's involvement with the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, the Conference Board, and the Manufacturing Chemists' Association. Hagley Museum & LibraryKemp, Maida Springer, 1910-. Papers, 1942-1981 (inclusive).Kemp, Maida Springer, 1910-Papers, 1942-1981 (inclusive)..75 linear ft.Collection consists of correspondence, speeches, reports, clippings, printed material, and photographs documenting some of Kemp's trade union activity in the United States and her extensive work on behalf of the emerging trade union movement in Africa. The emphasis is on Kemp's work in Africa--in particular the Trade Union Scholarship Program for Africa, an AFL-CIO effort, and her efforts to provide assistance to union leaders, from the mid 1950s through 1980--especially in Ghana, Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda, and the Federation of Rhodesia and Nysasaland. Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America