Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985
Variant namesPauli Murray (1910-1985) was a lawyer, scholar, writer, educator, administrator, religious leader, civil rights and women's rights activist. She was a co-founder of the National Organization for Women (NOW) and the first black woman to be ordained as an Episcopal minister. She spent much of her life in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and Washington, D.C.
From the description of Proud shoes : the story of an American family : typescript, 1956 / by Pauli Murray. (New York Public Library). WorldCat record id: 122626035
Pauli Murray (1910-1985) lawyer, educator, author, and first black woman to be ordained an Episcopal minister (Hunter College, A.B.; Howard University, L.L.B.; Yale University J.S.D.) has been a leader in the field of human rights. She taught at Benedict College in N.C., at Brandeis University and taught law in Ghana, 1960-1961. She is the author of a family memoir, Proud Shoes, and a personal memoir, Song in a Weary Throat (1987).
From the description of Papers, 1971-1972 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007807
African American lawyer, educator, author, and civil rights activist.
From the description of Papers, 1943-1944. (Moorland-Spingarn Resource Center). WorldCat record id: 70941190
Pauli Murray, lawyer, educator, author, and first black woman to be ordained an Episcopal minister (Hunter College, A.B.; Howard University, L.L.B.; Yale University, J.S.D.) was a leader in the field of human rights. She taught at Benedict College in North Carolina, at Brandeis University, and taught law in Ghana, 1960-1961. She was the author of a family memoir, Proud Shoes (1956), and a personal memoir, Song in a Weary Throat (1987). While working towards her master of laws degree at Boalt Hall School of Law in Berkeley, California, Murray had a difficult relationship with her thesis advisor, Barbara N. Armstrong.
From the description of Inscription of Pauli Murray, 1970. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 629696799
Lawyer, civil rights activist, poet, teacher, and the first African-American woman to be ordained into the Anglican Communion, U.S.A.
From the description of Letter : to Family and friends, 1976 Dec. 21. (Duke University Library). WorldCat record id: 28533944
Pauli Murray (1910-1985), lawyer, educator, and first black woman to be ordained an Episcopal minister (Hunter College, A.B.; Howard University, L.L.B.; Yale University, J.S.D.), has been a leader in the field of human rights. She taught at Benedict College in N.C., at Brandeis University , and taught law in Ghana, 1960-1961. She is the author of a family memoir, Proud Shoes, and a personal memoir, Song in a Weary Throat (1987).
From the description of Papers, 1977, 1981. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007808
Pauli Murray (1910-1985), lawyer, educator, and first black woman to be ordained an Episcopal minister (Hunter College, A.B.; Howard University, L.L.B.; Yale University, J.S.D.), has been a leader in the field of human rights. She taught at Benedict College (N.C.), at Brandeis University, and taught law in Ghana, 1960-1961. She is the author of a family memoir, Proud Shoes, and a personal memoir, Song in a Weary Throat (1987). She was a friend of Ruth Friedland, who lived in New Haven, Conn., and who was her typist while Murray was working on her dissertation.
From the description of Papers, 1965-1971 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 122506729
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series IV, 1926-1985 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232008667
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series I, 1827-1985 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232008664
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series II, 1935-1984 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232008665
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series III, 1855-1985 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232008666
African American activist Pauli Murray was born Anna Pauline Murray in Baltimore, Md., to Agnes Fitzgerald and William Henry Murray. She was raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal aunt, Pauline Fitzgerald Dame, who later legally adopted her. She was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
After graduating from Hunter College (1933), Murray held a variety of jobs; employers included the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. She entered Howard University Law School in the fall of 1941, graduated in 1944, and completed graduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley. In the late 1940s she opened a law office in New York City, where she worked until she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison in 1956.
In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School. A writer, she published a book of poetry, Dark Testament and Other Poems (1970), and four other books: States' Laws on Race and Color (1951), Proud Shoes: The Story of an American Family (1956), The Government and Constitution of Ghana (1961), and an autobiography, Song in a Weary Throat, published posthumously in 1987. She also wrote numerous newspaper and journal articles.
In the early 1970s, Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; in 1976 she received a Master of Divinity degree from General Theological Seminary in New York City. She was the first African American woman to be ordained an Episcopal priest; her ordination took place in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as Priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md.
From the description of Papers, 1827-1985 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232006752
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series VI, 1941-1983 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232008668
African American activist Murray was born in Baltimore, Md., and raised in Durham, N.C., by her maternal grandparents and an aunt. In the 1930s she attended college and worked for the Works Progress Administration and the Workers' Defense League. In the 1940s she attended law school and opened her own law office in New York City. In 1956 she was hired as an associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison. In the 1960s Murray was a university professor and administrator in the United States and in Ghana, served on a study committee for the President's Commission on the Status of Women, and earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School.
In the early 1970s Murray had a calling to the Episcopal priesthood; she was ordained in National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977. Before her retirement in 1984, she served as priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C., and at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore, Md. She was also the author of a book of poetry and four nonfiction books, as well as numerous articles.
Murray was married briefly in the 1930s, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
From the description of Papers: Series V, 1939-1985 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 122336410
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1910 Nov. 21:
Born in Baltimore, Md. -
1933:
Received A.B., Hunter College, New York. -
1933 -1934 :Field representative, National Urban League. -
1935 -1939 :Teacher, Works Project Administration. -
1938:
Applied unsuccessfully for admission to the University of North Carolina Graduate School. -
1943 -1944 :Student leader of student sit-ins at Howard University, Washington, D.C. -
1944:
Received L.L.B., cum laude, Howard University, Washington, D.C. -
1945:
Received L.L.M., University of California at Berkeley. -
1946:
Deputy Attorney General, Department of Justice, Sacramento, California. -
1948:
Admitted to New York Bar and admitted to practice in the Supreme Court. -
1948 -1960 :Engaged in private law practice. -
1951:
Published State Laws on Race and Color. -
1956:
Published Proud Shoes. -
1960 -1961 :Senior lecturer, Ghana Law School, Acra. -
1961:
Published Government of Ghana. -
1962 -1963 :Member of the Civil and Political Rights Committee of the President's Committee on the Status of Women. -
1962 -1965 :Member of faculty of Yale Law School. -
1965:
Received J.S.D. degree from Yale University Law School. -
1966 -1967 :Consultant, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. -
1967 -1968 :Vice President for Educational Plans and Programs and Professor of Political Science, Benedict College, S. C. -
1968 -1968 Present :Professor of Law and Politics, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts. -
1970:
Published Dark Testament and other Poems.
From the guide to the Pauli Murray Papers, 1943-1944, (Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University)
Pauli Murray was born Anna Pauline Murray on November 20, 1910, in Baltimore, Md., to the middle-class African American family of nurse Agnes Fitzgerald and high school teacher and principal William Henry Murray. Over the course of her life, PM's experiences and interests would lead her to many places (California, New York City, Massachusetts, Sweden, and Ghana) and through many careers: worker's rights and education, civil rights and women's rights activism, writing, the law, college teaching and administration, and the Episcopal priesthood. PM was married briefly in the 1930's, but her most important and lasting relationships were with women. She died of pancreatic cancer on July 1, 1985 in the house she owned with a lifelong friend, Maida Springer Kemp, in Pittsburgh, Pa.
When PM was three and a half years old her mother died of a cerebral hemorrhage, and the little girl was sent to Durham, N.C., to live with her maternal grandparents, Cornelia Smith and Robert G. Fitzgerald, and her aunt, Pauline Fitzgerald Dame (after whom PM had been named), who later legally adopted her. The importance of education was stressed in the Fitzgerald household, and PM grew up loving, and excelling at, academic challenge. Coming of age in the South instilled in her a hatred of racial discrimination, particularly Jim Crow segregation, evils that she combated for much of her life.
After graduating from high school, PM moved to New York City to attend Hunter College. Though struggling financially, she graduated in 1933, and held a variety of jobs in New York, among them teaching in a Remedial Reading Project and a Workers' Education Project for the Works Progress Administration. When the demise of the WPA seemed imminent, and job prospects looked bleak for anyone without an advanced degree, PM decided that she should pursue graduate study. Her growing interest in race relations led to her decision to apply to the Sociology Department at the all-white University of North Carolina. After being refused entry because of her race, PM contacted the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for legal counsel, but the organization refused to take her case because of a technicality. Discouraged, PM gave up the idea of school and began once again to look for employment.
When she began her job with the Workers' Defense League in 1939, her knowledge of Jim Crow and other forms of discrimination proved useful. She became involved with the case of Odell Waller, an African American sharecropper who had killed his white landlord in self-defense during a dispute over his crops. Waller had been sentenced to death in the electric chair, after being convicted of murder by an all-white jury. PM was sent out to lecture about the case, to raise funds for an appeal of the conviction, and to establish a local defence committee in each city and town in which she spoke. Despite PM's many lecture and fund-raising tours, some with Waller's foster mother, Annie, the WDL was not able to win an appeal on Waller's behalf; he was put to death on July 2, 1942. PM's unsuccessful efforts to combat the poll tax, combined with her arrest for violating segregation laws in Virginia while working on the Waller case, ignited her interest in civil rights law. She entered Howard University Law School in the fall of 1941.
Academic training by such brilliant and influential African Americans as William H. Hastie, Leon A. Ransom, and Spottswood W. Robinson III served as excellent preparation for PM's students activities with the Howard chapter of the NAACP, especially the student's non-violent, direct action sit-in campaigns to desegregate downtown Washington lunch counters. Upon graduating from Howard, PM attempted to enroll to Harvard Law School for graduate study. Again her efforts were thwarted by discrimination: Harvard did not admit women. This experience awakened PM's feminist consciousness.
After attending school and working briefly in California, PM returned to New York to open her own law office, when she remained untill she was hired as associate attorney in the law offices of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, and Garrison in 1956. She worked there until she accepted a position teaching law in Ghana in 1960, a move that she apparently intended to be permanent.
The situation in Ghana proved disappointing, however. PM found the country's legal system cumbersome and inefficient; in addition, the lack of a legal journal or professional organization severely limited opportunities for academic discussion and growth. Furthermore, the country was in political turmoil, manifested in limits on freedom of speech and movement for foreigners and Ghanaians alike, government surveillance of PM's classes, and a grossly inadequate budget for the law school. As the year wore on, and United States relations with Ghana worsened, President Kwame Nkrumah began to perceive PM's teaching of constitutional law as a threat to his power, and she knew it was only a matter of time before she would be expelled from the country. This situation prodded her to look for opportunities to return to the U.S. as soon as possible. A little over a year after her arrival in Africa, PM arrived in New Haven, Conn., to pursue graduate studies at Yale Law School.
In the mid 1960s, PM served on the Committee on Civil and Political Rights, a study committee of the President's Commission on the Status of Women, earned a J.D.S. from Yale Law School, was a founding member of the National Organization for Women, and served as a vice-president and professor of political science at Benedict College in Columbia, S.C. In 1968 she secured a teaching position at Brandeis University (Waltham, Mass.), where she remained until the death of her close friend, Renee Barlow, in 1973.
PM, an Episcopalian, was deeply affected by the fact that, not being a priest, she had not been able to administer the last rites to her devout friend, and felt compelled to devote the remainder of her life to the church. In 1976 she received a Master of Divinity degree from General Theological Seminary in New York City. Her ordination in the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., on January 8, 1977, was the first ordination of an African American woman as an Episcopal priest. Before her retirement in 1984, she served first as a priest at the Church of the Atonement in Washington, D.C. and later at the Church of the Holy Nativity in Baltimore.
In addition to her varied employment, PM was also a writer. Her poem, "Dark Testament," was first published in 1943, and later included in her collection, Dark Testament and Other Poems (1970). She was the author of four other books: States' Law on Race and Color (1951), Proud Shoes: The story of an American Family (1956), The Constitution and Government of Ghana (1961), and an autobiography, Song in a Weary Throat (published posthumously in 1987), as well as many articles.
From the guide to the Papers, 1827-1985, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
---|---|---|---|
creatorOf | Pauli Murray Papers, 1943-1944 | Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University | |
referencedIn | Rawalt, Marguerite, 1895-. Papers, 1870s-1989 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Patricia Harris Papers, 1924-1983, (bulk 1977-1980) | Library of Congress. Manuscript Division | |
referencedIn | Sophia Smith Collection. Biography collection, 1771-1995 (bulk 1920s-70s). | Smith College, Neilson Library | |
referencedIn | Reyher, Rebecca Hourwich, 1897-1987. Papers, 1877-1988 (bulk: 1915-1970) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1870s-1989 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Harvard Law School Forums Records | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
referencedIn | National Coalition for Research on Women's Education and Development. Records, 1962-1979 (inclusive), 1969-1976 (bulk). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers of Mary O. Eastwood, (inclusive), (bulk), 1915-1983, 1961-1977 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Robert Freeman papers, 1950-1993, 1955-1963 | Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Archives Section | |
referencedIn | Biography Collection MS 393., 1771-1995, 1920-1970 | Sophia Smith Collection | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers: Series VI, 1941-1983 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers of NOW officers, 1969-1976 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Kemp, Maida Springer, 1910-. Papers, 1942-1981 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Autograph Files, 1783-1983 | Vassar College | |
referencedIn | Bunting, Mary Ingraham, 1910-. Records of the President of Radcliffe College, 1960-1972 (inclusive). | Radcliffe College, Archives | |
referencedIn | Papers of Bernice Resnick Sandler, 1963-2008 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers, 1971-1972 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Paul A. Freund papers | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Inscription of Pauli Murray, 1970. | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Boston N.O.W. Records, 1967-1990 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Proud shoes : the story of an American family : typescript, 1956 / by Pauli Murray. | New York Public Library System, NYPL | |
creatorOf | Frank, Walter, 1882-1969. Papers of Walter Frank [manuscript], 1866-1970 (bulk 1925-1970). | University of Virginia. Library | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1892-1990 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | ILGWU Communications Department Biography Files, | Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives | |
referencedIn | Fitzgerald family. Fitzgerald family papers, 1864-1954. | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | |
referencedIn | Lloyd K. (Lloyd Kirkham) Garrison papers, 1893-1990 | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers, 1965-1971 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1940-1946. | University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library | |
creatorOf | Milgram, Morris 1916, Morris Milgram papers 1923-1994, undated | Historical Society of Pennsylvania | |
referencedIn | Freeman, Robert Turner, 1918-2001. Robert Freeman papers, 1950-1993 (bulk 1955-1963) | New York Public Library System, NYPL | |
creatorOf | Negro Peoples Committee. Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1939. | University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library | |
referencedIn | Heide, Wilma Scott, 1921-1985. Papers, 1968-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1884-1998 (inclusive), 1929-1988 (bulk) | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Records of the Women's Equity Action League, 1966-1979 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Polier, Justine Wise, 1903-1987. Papers, 1892-1990 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Correspondence, 1939-1962. | New York State Historical Documents Inventory | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers, 1977, 1981. | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Records, 1967-1990 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Alexander, Dolores. Papers, 1960-1973 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Conroy, Lynne. Papers, 1978-1980 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Lerner, Gerda, 1920-2013. Papers, 1950-1995 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Hastie, William. William Hastie papers. 1916-1976. | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
referencedIn | Pollock, Mordeca Jane, 1941-. Papers of NOW officers, 1969-1976 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | East, Catherine Shipe. Papers of Catherine Shipe East. 1941-1995 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Letter : to Family and friends, 1976 Dec. 21. | Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library | |
referencedIn | Harvard Law School Forum. Dare we not discriminate [sound recording]/ Harvard Law School Forum. | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers, 1827-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Richard Gaither Walser Papers, 1918-1988 | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection | |
referencedIn | Records of the Project on the Status and Education of Women (Association of American Colleges), (inclusive), (bulk), 1969-1991, 1971-1985 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Sarah-Patton Boyle Papers, ca. 1938-1988 | University of Virginia. Library. Special Collections Dept. | |
referencedIn | Records, 1962 (1969-1976) 1979 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1968-1985 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Rupp, Leila J., 1950-. Audiotape collection of Leila J. Rupp and Verta A. Taylor, 1979-1983. | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers of Pauli Murray, 1827-1985 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Eastwood, Mary O., 1930-. Papers, 1915-1982 (inclusive), 1945-1982 (bulk). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Helen Drusilla Lockwood papers, 1883-1971. | New York State Historical Documents Inventory | |
creatorOf | On the Road with Charles Kuralt: Pauli Murray, 1977. | Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1870s-1989 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1925-1972 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Martin B. Duberman papers, 1917-1992 | New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers: Series III, 1855-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Eleanor Roosevelt oral history project, 1977-1980. | New York State Historical Documents Inventory | |
referencedIn | Sampson, Edith S. (Edith Spurlock), 1901?-1979. Papers, 1927-1979 (inclusive) 1934-1979 (bulk). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers, 1943-1944. | Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University | |
referencedIn | West, Dorothy, 1909-. Papers, 1914-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers: Series II, 1935-1984 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Amberson, William Ruthrauff, b. 1894. William Ruthrauff Amberson papers, 1919-1968; 1971 [manuscript]. | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers: Series I, 1827-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Peterson, Esther, 1906-1997. Papers, 1884-1998 (inclusive), 1929-1998 (bulk). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Smith, Lillian Eugenia, 1897-1966. Papers, 1915-1972, bulk 1935-1966. | University of Florida | |
creatorOf | Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906-. Papers of Sarah-Patton Boyle 1938-1988 (bulk 1944-1975). | University of Virginia. Library | |
referencedIn | Records of the President of Radcliffe College, 1960-1972 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Arthur E. Sutherland papers | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
referencedIn | Lerner, Gerda, 1920-2013. Papers, 1950-1995 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1927-1979 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Lerner, Gerda, 1920-2013. Papers, 1950-1995 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Martin B. Duberman papers, 1917-1992 | New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division | |
referencedIn | Alexander, Dolores, 1931-2008. NOW officer papers, 1960-1973 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1942-1981 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Papers of Pauli Murray, 1827-1985 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Frank, Adelaide Schulkind. Papers, 1925-1972 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Papers of Pauli Murray, 1827-1985: Series IV, 1926-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
creatorOf | Garrison, Lloyd K. (Lloyd Kirkham), 1897-1991. Papers, 1893-1990 | Harvard Law School Library Langdell Hall Cambridge, MA 02138 | |
creatorOf | Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906-. Papers of Sarah-Patton Boyle, 1949-1970. | University of Virginia. Library | |
creatorOf | Murray, Pauli, 1910-1985. Papers: Series V, 1939-1985 (inclusive). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Miller, Alice P. Papers, 1957-1978 (inclusive), 1976-78 (bulk). | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America | |
referencedIn | Papers, 1883-1971, 1908-1971 (bulk) | New York State Historical Documents Inventory | |
referencedIn | Records, 1967-1990 | Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
---|---|---|
correspondedWith | Abzug, Bella | person |
correspondedWith | Adelene McBean | person |
correspondedWith | Adelmond, Charlotte | person |
associatedWith | Aileen C. Hernandez | person |
associatedWith | Alexander, Dolores. | person |
associatedWith | Alfreda James | person |
associatedWith | Amberson, William Ruthrauff, b. 1894. | person |
associatedWith | American Civil Liberties Union | corporateBody |
associatedWith | American Civil Liberties Union. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Anderson, Marian | person |
associatedWith | Armstrong, Barbara Nachtrieb, b. 1890. | person |
correspondedWith | Arturo H. Smith | person |
correspondedWith | Baah, Kwaku | person |
associatedWith | Baah, Kwaku. | person |
associatedWith | Baldwin, James, 1924- | person |
associatedWith | Baldwin, James, 1924-1987. | person |
associatedWith | Barlow, Irene, 1914-1973 | person |
associatedWith | Barlow, Irene, 1914-1973. | person |
correspondedWith | Bates, Daisy | person |
associatedWith | Benedict College | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Benet, Stephen Vincent | person |
associatedWith | Benét, Stephen Vincent, 1898-1943. | person |
associatedWith | Benét, Stephen Vincent, 1898-1943 | person |
correspondedWith | Berman, Harold J. | person |
correspondedWith | Bernice Resnick Sandler | person |
correspondedWith | Bigelow, Page Smith | person |
associatedWith | Bigelow, Page Smith. | person |
associatedWith | Bontemps, Arna Wendell, 1902-1073. | person |
associatedWith | Bontemps, Arna Wendell, 1902-1973 | person |
associatedWith | Boston N.O.W. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Boyle, Sarah-Patton, 1906- | person |
associatedWith | Brandeis University | corporateBody |
employeeOf | Brandeis University | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Brooke, Edward W. | person |
correspondedWith | Brown, Ida | person |
associatedWith | Buck, Pearl S. (Pearl Sydenstricker), 1892-1973 | person |
associatedWith | Buck, Pearl S. (Pearl Sydenstricker), 1892-1973. | person |
associatedWith | Bunting, Mary Ingraham, 1910- | person |
associatedWith | Bunting, Mary Ingraham, 1910- | person |
correspondedWith | Burrows, Vinnie | person |
associatedWith | Casey Miller | person |
associatedWith | Catherine East, 1916-1996 | person |
correspondedWith | Chandra, Sunil | person |
associatedWith | Charles Morton Dame | person |
correspondedWith | Chute, Joy | person |
correspondedWith | Clarence E. Scott | person |
associatedWith | Conroy, Lynne. | person |
associatedWith | Cooper, Felix | person |
correspondedWith | Curry, Lilly | person |
correspondedWith | Curtis, Helen | person |
associatedWith | Cynthia Neverdon-Norton | person |
associatedWith | Dame, Morton | person |
associatedWith | Dame, Pauline Fitzgerald | person |
associatedWith | Dame, Pauline Fitzgerald. | person |
associatedWith | Delta Sigma Theta Sorority | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Dolores Alexander | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Domingo, Wilfred | person |
correspondedWith | Donald A. Small | person |
correspondedWith | Donna Shalala | person |
associatedWith | Dorothy Kenyon | person |
associatedWith | Duberman, Martin B. | person |
associatedWith | Eastwood, Mary O., 1930- | person |
correspondedWith | Edward A. Cole | person |
correspondedWith | Edward F. Chayter | person |
correspondedWith | Edward K. Welsh | person |
associatedWith | Elizabeth Fitzgerald | person |
associatedWith | Emerson, Ruth | person |
associatedWith | Emerson, Ruth. | person |
associatedWith | Emerson, Thomas Irwin, 1907- | person |
associatedWith | Emerson, Thomas I. (Thomas Irwin), 1907-1991. | person |
associatedWith | Episcopal Church | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Episcopal Women's Caucus | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Episcopal Women's Caucus. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | ESTHER (EGGERTSEN) PETERSON, 1906-1997 | person |
correspondedWith | Farber, Beth | person |
correspondedWith | Farians, Elizabeth | person |
associatedWith | Fitzgerald family | family |
associatedWith | Fitzgerald family. | family |
associatedWith | Fitzgerald family. | family |
associatedWith | Fitzgerald, Robert, 1840-1919. | person |
correspondedWith | Foss, Sonja K. | person |
associatedWith | Fox, Muriel | person |
associatedWith | Frank, Adelaide Schulkind. | person |
associatedWith | Frank, Walter, 1882-1969. | person |
associatedWith | Freeman, Robert Turner, 1918-2001. | person |
associatedWith | Friedan, Betty | person |
associatedWith | Friedland, Ruth. | person |
correspondedWith | Fuentes, Sonia Pressman | person |
associatedWith | Fuentes, Sonia Pressman. | person |
associatedWith | Fuller, Richard | person |
associatedWith | Garrison, Lloyd K. | person |
associatedWith | Garrison, Lloyd K. | person |
associatedWith | General Theological Seminary (New York, N.Y.) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | General Theological Seminary (New York, N.Y.) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | GERDA LERNER, 1920- | person |
correspondedWith | Goldstein, Ruth | person |
associatedWith | Goldstein, Ruth M. | person |
associatedWith | Goldstein, Ruth M. | person |
associatedWith | Gooch, Wanda | person |
correspondedWith | Granger, Lester | person |
correspondedWith | Grevenberg, Beatrice Hammon | person |
associatedWith | Hacker, Helen M. | person |
correspondedWith | Harold O. Cox | person |
associatedWith | Harper, Fowler | person |
correspondedWith | Harris, Patricia, 1924-1985. | person |
associatedWith | Harvard Law School Forum. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Hastie, William. | person |
associatedWith | Hastie, William, 1904-1976 | person |
associatedWith | Hastie, William, 1904-1976. | person |
correspondedWith | Hedgeman, Anna Arnold | person |
associatedWith | Heide, Wilma Scott, 1921-1985. | person |
correspondedWith | Herbert Garfinkel | person |
correspondedWith | Herson, Stella K. | person |
correspondedWith | Hinshaw, Margaret | person |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | Howard University | corporateBody |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | Howard University | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Hughes Langston, 1902-1967 | person |
associatedWith | Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967. | person |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | Hunter College | corporateBody |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | Hunter College | corporateBody |
associatedWith | International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Isaacs, Harold R. | person |
correspondedWith | Jefferson, Louise E. | person |
correspondedWith | Jenks, Sallie Porter | person |
associatedWith | Jerr, Bill | person |
associatedWith | Jerr, William A. | person |
associatedWith | Jerr, William A. | person |
correspondedWith | John Ethophilus Gratten Small | person |
associatedWith | John F. Kennedy | person |
correspondedWith | Jones, Hector | person |
correspondedWith | Jones, Joy Lawson | person |
correspondedWith | Joseph R. Dickerson | person |
associatedWith | JUSTINE (WISE) POLIER, 1903-1987 | person |
correspondedWith | Kalashinikoff, Elizabeth Lawrence | person |
associatedWith | Kalashnikoff, Elizabeth Lawrence | person |
associatedWith | Kalashnikoff, Elizabeth Lawrence. | person |
correspondedWith | Kelly, Mary | person |
associatedWith | Kemp, James H. | person |
correspondedWith | Kemp, Maida Springer | person |
associatedWith | Kemp, Maida Springer. | person |
correspondedWith | Koontz, Elizabeth Duncan | person |
correspondedWith | Leonard, Angela | person |
associatedWith | Lerner, Gerda, 1920- | person |
correspondedWith | Lewis H. Murray | person |
associatedWith | Lewis M. Steele | person |
associatedWith | Lockwood, Helen Drusilla, 1891-1971. | person |
correspondedWith | Lynette G. Pitter | person |
associatedWith | MacDowell Colony | corporateBody |
associatedWith | MacDowell Colony. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Mackay, Violet | person |
associatedWith | MAIDA (STEWART) SPRINGER KEMP, 1910- | person |
correspondedWith | Marguerite J. Tillar | person |
correspondedWith | Marguerite Rawalt, 1895- | person |
associatedWith | Marie Fitzgerald Jeffers | person |
associatedWith | Marshall, Thurgood, 1908-1993 | person |
correspondedWith | Mary Daly | person |
correspondedWith | Mary Grace McFeely | person |
correspondedWith | Mary Louise Stewart | person |
associatedWith | Mary Ruffin Smith | person |
correspondedWith | McDonald, Henry J. | person |
correspondedWith | McIntyre, Mary Louise | person |
associatedWith | Means, Gardiner C. (Gardiner Coit), 1896-1988. | person |
associatedWith | Means, Gardiner Coit, 1896- | person |
correspondedWith | Melvin C. Chestnut | person |
associatedWith | Mildred Murray Fearing | person |
associatedWith | Milgram, Morris, 1916- | person |
associatedWith | Milgram, Morris, 1916- | person |
associatedWith | Miller, Alice P. | person |
correspondedWith | Miller, Catherine | person |
correspondedWith | Mondale, Walter | person |
correspondedWith | Moorman, Natalie | person |
associatedWith | Mordeca Jane Pollock, 1941- | person |
correspondedWith | Morris, Mary Lee (Fisher) | person |
associatedWith | Murray family | family |
associatedWith | Murray family. | family |
associatedWith | Murray, Grace | person |
associatedWith | Murray Pauli, 1910- | person |
associatedWith | Myers, Lena Wright | person |
associatedWith | National Association for the Advancement of Colored People | corporateBody |
associatedWith | National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | National Civil Rights Committee (U.S.). Howard University Chapter. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | National Coalition for Research on Women's Education and Development. | corporateBody |
founderOf | National Organization for Women. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Negro Peoples Committee. | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Nelson, David | person |
correspondedWith | Parker, Mabel | person |
associatedWith | Paul A. Freund | person |
associatedWith | Pauli Murray, 1910-1985 | person |
associatedWith | Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton, & Garrison. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Peterson, Esther, 1906-1997. | person |
associatedWith | Polier, Justine Wise, 1903-1987. | person |
correspondedWith | Pollock, Jane | person |
associatedWith | Pollock, Mordeca Jane, 1941- | person |
correspondedWith | Powell, B. Ruth | person |
associatedWith | Powell, Ruth B. | person |
associatedWith | Powell, Ruth B. | person |
correspondedWith | Project on the Status and Education of Women (Association of American Colleges) | person |
associatedWith | Protestant Episcopal Theological Seminary in Virginia (Alexandria, Va.) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Protestant Episcopal Theological Seminary in Virginia(Alexandria, Va.) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Rawalt, Marguerite, 1895- | person |
associatedWith | Rayford Ellis | person |
correspondedWith | Rebecca Hourwich Reyher | person |
associatedWith | Reyneau, Betsy Graves | person |
correspondedWith | Reynolds, Ruth | person |
associatedWith | Richard Burton Fitzgerald | person |
correspondedWith | Rickhab Chand Bohra | person |
correspondedWith | Rightor, Henry H., Jr. | person |
correspondedWith | Rinehardt, Mary Ellen T. | person |
associatedWith | Roberta A. Fitzgerald | person |
associatedWith | Robert G. Fitzgerald | person |
correspondedWith | Robertson, Jay | person |
associatedWith | Robert Williams Matter | person |
associatedWith | Robinson, Jackie, 1919-1972 | person |
associatedWith | Robinson, Jackie, 1919-1972. | person |
correspondedWith | Rodman, Wilmot | person |
associatedWith | Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962 | person |
associatedWith | Roosevelt, Eleanor, 1884-1962. | person |
associatedWith | Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945 | person |
associatedWith | Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945. | person |
associatedWith | Rupp, Leila J., 1950- | person |
correspondedWith | Rustin, Bayard | person |
correspondedWith | Ruth Goldstein | person |
correspondedWith | Sampson, Edith | person |
associatedWith | Sampson, Edith S. (Edith Spurlock), 1901?-1979. | person |
associatedWith | Sampson, Edith Spurlock, 1901-1979 | person |
correspondedWith | Sandler, Bernice | person |
associatedWith | Sarah Ann Williams Fitzgerald | person |
correspondedWith | Schindler-Rainman, Eva | person |
correspondedWith | Shirley Ruth Kirschner | person |
correspondedWith | Short, Grace | person |
associatedWith | Sidney Smith | person |
associatedWith | Simchak, Morag MacLeod | person |
associatedWith | Smith family | family |
associatedWith | Smith family. | family |
associatedWith | Smith Lillian Eugenia, 1897-1966 | person |
associatedWith | Smith, Lillian Eugenia, 1897-1966. | person |
correspondedWith | Smith, Verna | person |
associatedWith | Snelling, Paula | person |
associatedWith | Snelling, Paula. | person |
correspondedWith | Springer, Eric | person |
correspondedWith | Steele, Anna | person |
associatedWith | Stepanovich, Doris Sawyer | person |
correspondedWith | Steven, Rosetta | person |
correspondedWith | Stevenson, Adlai | person |
associatedWith | Stevenson, Adlai E. (Adlai Ewing), 1900-1965 | person |
associatedWith | Stevenson, Adlai E. (Adlai Ewing), 1900-1965. | person |
correspondedWith | Stevens, Thelma | person |
correspondedWith | Stone, Camdace | person |
correspondedWith | Stone, Constance E. | person |
correspondedWith | Sutherland, Arthur E., 1902-1973 | person |
associatedWith | Swift, Kate | person |
correspondedWith | Taylor, Isabel | person |
correspondedWith | Trice, Josephine | person |
correspondedWith | Tweed, Harrison | person |
correspondedWith | United Religious Interfaith League | corporateBody |
associatedWith | United States | corporateBody |
associatedWith | United States. Committee on Fair Employment Practice. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | United States. President's Commission on the Status of Women. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | United States. Works Progress Administration. | corporateBody |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | University of California, Berkeley | corporateBody |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | University of California, Berkeley | corporateBody |
associatedWith | University of North Carolina (1793-1962) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | University of North Carolina, 1793-1962 | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Untermeyer, Jean Starr | person |
correspondedWith | Urith B. Josiah | person |
associatedWith | Vassar College. | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Vereen, Daphne | person |
correspondedWith | Vohryzek, Laura Francesca | person |
correspondedWith | Walker, Mozelle | person |
associatedWith | Waller, Odell | person |
associatedWith | Waller, Odell. | person |
correspondedWith | Walls, Wuanda | person |
associatedWith | Walser, Richard Gaither, 1908- | person |
correspondedWith | Ware, Carolina F. | person |
associatedWith | Ware, Caroline Farrar, 1899- | person |
associatedWith | Ware, Caroline Farrar, 1899- | person |
associatedWith | Washington Cathedral. | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Weinberg, Clara | person |
associatedWith | West, Dorothy, 1909- | person |
correspondedWith | Whaley, Elmer | person |
correspondedWith | Whaley, Herman | person |
correspondedWith | Wilkins, Roy. | person |
associatedWith | William H. Brown III | person |
associatedWith | William Murray, Jr. | person |
associatedWith | Wilma Scott Heide, 1921-1985 | person |
correspondedWith | Wilson, Margaret Bush | person |
correspondedWith | Wolf, Max | person |
associatedWith | Women's Equity Action League | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Women's Equity Action League | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Woodburn, Betty | person |
memberOf | Workers' Defense League | corporateBody |
memberOf | Workers' Defense League. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | World Council of Churches | corporateBody |
associatedWith | World Council of Churches. | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Worthy, N. Beatrice | person |
alumnusOrAlumnaOf | Yale Law School | corporateBody |
correspondedWith | Yardumian, Mona | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Baltimore | MD | US | |
Pittsburg | PA | US |
Subject |
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American literature |
Education |
African American civil rights workers |
African American civil rights workers |
African American clergy |
African American college administrators |
African American universities and colleges |
African American college students |
African American college teachers |
African American Episcopalians |
African American families |
African American lawyers |
African American poets |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African Americans |
African American single people |
African American student movements |
African American teachers |
African American women |
African American women |
African American women authors |
African American women clergy |
African American women poets |
Afro |
American |
Associations, institutions, etc. |
Women authors |
Autobiographies |
Black theology |
Civil rights |
Civil rights demonstrations |
Civil rights workers |
Constitutional law |
Episcopalians |
Equal rights amendments |
Femininity |
Feminism |
Feminists |
Feminist theology |
Friendship |
Gender identity |
Ghanian students |
Japanese Americans |
Law |
Lawyers |
Minority women |
Nonviolence |
Ordination of women |
Passive resistance |
Poll tax |
Race discrimination |
Racism |
Segregation in higher education |
Segregation in transportation |
Sermons, American |
Sermons, American |
Sex differences (Psychology) |
Single women |
Universities and colleges, Black |
Women |
Women |
Women |
Women |
Women |
Women |
Women civil rights workers |
Women clergy |
Women college administrators |
Women lawyers |
Women's rights |
Occupation |
---|
African American women civil rights workers |
Authors |
Clergy |
College administrators |
Lawyers |
Poets |
Activity |
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Person
Birth 1910-11-20
Death 1985-07-01
Americans
English