Congress of Racial Equality
Variant namesHistory notes:
CORE is this group's acronym.
From the description of Papers. 1941-67. (Ascension Parish School). WorldCat record id: 18976236
Organized ca. 1942 by an interracial group of University of Chicago students and theological seminary students, and by members of the Fellowship of Reconciliation (U.S.); purpose was to eliminate all racial segregation and discrimination by means of interracial, direct nonviolent action; by 1966, CORE's official policy shifted to Black power and Black separatism while rejecting the former principles of non-violence.
From the description of Collected records, 1942-1972. (Swarthmore College, Peace Collection). WorldCat record id: 42415763
In 1942, the Fellowship of Reconciliation developed an interracial civil rights organization committed to nonviolent direct action and adopted the name Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). CORE established chapters in northern and western states throughout the 1940s, focusing primarily on desegregation of public facilities. During the 1950s, CORE groups formed in the southern and border states with primarily Black membership. By 1966, CORE's official policy shifted to Black power and Black separatism while rejecting the former principles of non-violence.
From the description of Bookkeeping files, 1953-1954, 1962-1966. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 38476575
From the description of Congress of Racial Equality records, 1944-1968. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 38476540
In 1942, the Fellowship of Reconciliation developed an interracial civil rights organization committed to nonviolent direct action and adopted the name Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). CORE established chapters in northern and western states throughout the 1940s, focusing primarily on desegregation of public facilities. During the 1950s, CORE groups formed in the southern and border states with primarily Black membership. By 1966, CORE's official policy shifted to Black power and Black separatism while rejecting the former principles of non-violence.
George Wiley (1931-1973), educator and CORE Associate National Director from 1965-1966.
From the description of Associate National Director George Wiley files, 1962-1966 (bulk 1965). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 38476572
In 1942, the Fellowship of Reconciliation developed an interracial civil rights organization committed to nonviolent direct action and adopted the name Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). CORE established chapters in northern and western states throughout the 1940s, focusing primarily on desegregation of public facilities. During the 1950s, CORE groups formed in the southern and border states with primarily Black membership. By 1966, CORE's official policy shifted to Black power and Black separatism while rejecting the former principles of non-violence.
Floyd McKissick (1922-1991), lawyer, minister, civil rights activist and Congress of Racial Equality National Director from 1966-1968.
From the description of National Director Floyd McKissick files, 1960-1968. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 38476571
In 1942, the Fellowship of Reconciliation developed an interracial civil rights organization committed to nonviolent direct action and adopted the name Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). CORE established chapters in northern and western states throughout the 1940s, focusing primarily on desegregation of public facilities. During the 1950s, CORE groups formed in the southern and border states with primarily Black membership. By 1966, CORE's official policy shifted to Black power and Black separatism while rejecting the former principles of non-violence.
James Farmer (1920- ), National Director of CORE from 1961-1966.
From the description of National Director James Farmer files, 1960-1966. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 38476541
Arnold (Arnie) Stanley Goldwag was born on January 18, 1938. A resident of Brooklyn, Goldwag attended Brooklyn College beginning in 1955 where he held leadership positions in a range of organizations, including social fraternities, student government, and student rights groups. He left Brooklyn College about 1961 without graduating, though he was readmitted in 1966 and graduated in 1968.
While still at Brooklyn College in the late 1950s, Goldwag became involved in the activities of the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), starting with distributing fliers urging a boycott of Woolworth's. His role in the chapter expanded quickly, and in the years of Goldwag's active participation in CORE (1960-1965), he held leadership positions, principally as the Community Relations Director. In this position, Goldwag was responsible for press relations, publicity, and coordination with communities and demonstrators on the organization's direct actions. Over the course of his tenure in Brooklyn CORE, Goldwag participated in a number of actions, both locally, such as the 1963 Board of Education sit-in, and nationally, such as in Cambridge, Maryland, where Goldwag was involved in CORE's effort to desegregate public facilities. Goldwag's activism led to several arrests and a 13 month prison sentence in 1964; he served one month of the sentence in Rikers Island penitentiary.
Founded in Chicago in 1942, CORE was centered on the principles of interracial, nonviolent direct action. Local chapters that affiliated with national CORE had a great deal of autonomy of action. Within this structure, Brooklyn CORE emerged in the early 1960s as one of the most radical CORE chapters, focusing on the living conditions of poor African-Americans in Bedford-Stuyvesant and employing increasingly aggressive confrontational tactics. It was during this surging radical activism in Brooklyn CORE that Goldwag was a central figure in the chapter and in its many civil rights actions. Indeed, Goldwag was a principal creator of one of Brooklyn CORE's most controversial actions, the Stall-In at the opening of the 1964 World's Fair. This action, which called for the deliberate blockage of automobile traffic headed to the Fair in order to call attention to discrimination against African-Americans, led to the suspension of the chapter by CORE.
Subsequent to his days with CORE, which ended in 1965, and his 1968 graduation from Brooklyn College, Goldwag went to work for the New York City Human Resources Administration as a contract manager for home care programs. In the 1990s he went on leave to work for his union (Social Service Employees Union Local 371) as Health and Safety Coordinator. In the 1990s and 2000s, Goldwag was actively engaged in ensuring that the civil rights movement was remembered, and its continued struggle recognized. He participated in a number of conferences and oral histories, and opened his files to researchers. Arnie Goldwag died on August 9, 2008.
From the guide to the Arnie Goldwag Brooklyn Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) collection, Bulk, 1961-1971, 1943-2007, (Brooklyn Historical Society)
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.
From the guide to the Downtown CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) Records, 1963-1967, (Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archive)
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Subjects:
- Education
- African Americans
- Teachers
- Black nationalism
- Black power
- Civil disobedience
- Civil rights
- Civil rights demonstrations
- Civil rights movement
- Civil rights movements
- Civil rights workers
- Collective bargaining
- De facto school segregation
- Demonstrations
- Discrimination in employment
- Discrimination in employment
- Discrimination in housing
- Discrimination in public accommodation
- Discrimination in public accommodations
- Freedom of movement
- Freedom rides
- Fund raising
- Government, Resistance to
- March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Washington, D.C., 1963
- Minorities
- Nonviolence
- Passive resistance
- Police
- Police patrol
- Prisons
- Race discrimination
- Reformatories for women
- Reformatories for women
- Rent strikes
- Restaurants
- Reunions
- Riots
- School integration
- Social integration
- Tenants' associations
- Voter registration
- Discrimination in employment
- Reformatories for women
Occupations:
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.) (as recorded)
- Minnesota (as recorded)
- New York (N.Y.) (as recorded)
- Minnesota--Minneapolis (as recorded)
- Mississippi (as recorded)
- Mississippi (as recorded)
- United States (as recorded)
- New York (N.Y.) |x History |v Archival resources (as recorded)
- New York (as recorded)
- New York (as recorded)
- New York (N.Y.) (as recorded)
- New York (N.Y.) (as recorded)
- Bedford-Stuyvesant (New York, N.Y.) (as recorded)
- Harlem (New York, N.Y.) (as recorded)
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.) |x History |v Archival resources. (as recorded)
- Baltimore (Md.) (as recorded)
- New York (as recorded)
- Mississippi (as recorded)
- New York (N.Y.) (as recorded)