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GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHS File Subject Index
GENERAL PHOTOGRAPHS File Subject Index A (General) Abeokuta: the Alake of Abram, Morris B.: see A (General) Abruzzi: Duke of Absher, Franklin Roosevelt: see A (General) Adams, C.E.: see A (General) Adams, Charles, Dr. D.F., C.E., Laura Franklin Delano, Gladys, Dorothy Adams, Fred: see A (General) Adams, Frederick B. and Mrs. (Eilen W. Delano) Adams, Frederick B., Jr. Adams, William Adult Education Program Advertisements, Sears: see A (General) Advertising: Exhibits re: bill (1944) against false advertising Advertising: Seagram Distilleries Corporation Agresta, Fred Jr.: see A (General) Agriculture Agriculture: Cotton Production: Mexican Cotton Pickers Agriculture: Department of (photos by) Agriculture: Department of: Weather Bureau Agriculture: Dutchess County Agriculture: Farm Training Program Agriculture: Guayule Cultivation Agriculture: Holmes Foundry Company- Farm Plan, 1933 Agriculture: Land Sale Agriculture: Pig Slaughter Agriculture: Soil Conservation Agriculture: Surplus Commodities (Consumers' Guide) Aircraft (2) Aircraft, 1907- 1914 (2) Aircraft: Presidential Aircraft: World War II: see World War II: Aircraft Airmail Akihito, Crown Prince of Japan: Visit to Hyde Park, NY Akin, David Akiyama, Kunia: see A (General) Alabama Alaska Alaska, Matanuska Valley Albemarle Island Albert, Medora: see A (General) Albright, Catherine Isabelle: see A (General) Albright, Edward (Minister to Finland) Albright, Ethel Marie: see A (General) Albright, Joe Emma: see A (General) Alcantara, Heitormelo: see A (General) Alderson, Wrae: see A (General) Aldine, Charles: see A (General) Aldrich, Richard and Mrs. Margaret Chanler Alexander (son of Charles and Belva Alexander): see A (General) Alexander, John H. Alexitch, Vladimir Joseph Alford, Bradford: see A (General) Allen, Mrs. Idella: see A (General) 2 Allen, Mrs. Mary E.: see A (General) Allen, R.C. -
Lincoln University Herald
jt Lincoln University Herald. ~ 0 VOL.XIX. LINCOLNUNIVERSIW, PA., DECEMBER,I~I+JANUARY, 1915. No. I. d - Before going to Philadelphia, Dr. Boulden was pastor of churches in West Chester, Pa. ; r in Newark and Milton, Del. e In a private letter, he says: “My success has L, been due to my training in Lincoln University, and I have red,edicated my life to the church of my choice, the Union American M. E., and to my people.’’ -- New Buildings Needed. 1 To meet the demands of the finies and the > growth in numbers of the student body, two additional buildings are greatly needed on the c campus. A Science EIall, with modern equip- f ment, is needed to meet the needs of the Y growing number of students in this depart- V ment and the increased requirements of the 1 medical schools. The present development of the Scientific Department makes the present 1 facilities entirely inadequate. A combined Y. M. C. A. Building and t .Gymnasium has long been needed to supply r a centre for the social and religious activities t of the students, and to provide the means for , healthful exercise and physical recreation, t especially during the winter months. Lincoln , University looks to her generous friends to S Bishop P. A: Boulden, D. D. s~~pplythese needs and to provide the means 1 for further expansion and usefulness. Speaking of the recent election of Rev. P. , A. Boulden, D. D., to the Bishopric of the -- Union American M. E. Church, a Philadclphia Campus Items. paper says: “Dr. -
Banner Moments: the National Anthem in American Life
Deep Blue Deep Blue https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/documents Research Collections Library (University of Michigan Library) 2014 Banner moments: the national anthem in American life Clague, Mark https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/120293 Downloaded from Deep Blue, University of Michigan's institutional repository Banner Moments: The National Anthem in American Life 12 September – 18 December 2014 Audubon Room University of Michigan Library Ann Arbor, Michigan © 2014 University of Michigan Library (Special Collections Library) All rights reserved. Curators Mark Clague and Jamie Vander Broek acknowledge the assistance of the following in shaping and mounting this exhibit: staff members of the William L. Clements Library, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan Museum of Art, and the U-M Library, including Brooke Adams, Pablo Alvarez, Tim Archer, Marcy Bailey, Cathleen A. Baker, Kristen Castellana, Martha Conway, Roberta Frey Gilboe, Melissa Gomis, Tom Hogarth, Dave Hytinen, Gregory Kinney, Sarah Kennedy, Clayton Lewis, Karl Longstreth, Mary Morris, Kirsten Neelands, Lynne Raughley, Grace Rother, Theresa Stanko, Diana Sykes, and Tim Utter. Banner Moments: The National Anthem in American Life Unlike the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, or even the American Flag, Francis Scott Key’s song “The Star-Spangled Banner” lacks a singular icon that defines it. Rather the song must be brought to life through performance. Individuals sing the anthem into a fleeting materiality, simultaneously constructing themselves as a community while inscribing the song ever more deeply into cultural memory. The artifacts in this exhibit capture material iterations of the song and thus record the crystallization of an American national consciousness. -
| I Intending To
— our =iBr- ir=il—==1BI rJEIi —=1EI ANSWERS ABOUT NEGRO LABOR coming into locality. Our city is not overcrowded with |j==ir= time and Chicago, May 7, 1917. such labor at the present firms here General Race News Mr. George Wells Parker, Business there are a good many 1 industrious la- 1 —»>;«*■ ~~~l1 a | that could use Negro 111 ■■■ if—-1 Manager The Monitor: bor. Dear Sir—Replying to the ques- WAS I 1TTLE LIBERIA infor- SENATOR J. B. FORAKER tions in your recent inquiry, which I Trusting this will be of some DECLARES WAR fot STAUNCH FRIEND OF RACE assume you have addressed to a num- mation to you and thanking you ber of cities, Chicago offers oppor- your favor, I am very truly yours, Consul General Ernest Lyon Receives Cincinnati, O., May 10.—Formei tunities for Negro labor, as it does LAMAR T. REMAN, Word of Its Decision to Join in United States Senator Joseph Benson lor all other forms of labor. As a Director of Public Welfare. With the Allies. Foraker, who died here Thursday, matter of fact, at the present time was an earnest and insistent advocate there is going on a large importation to received of the rights of the Negro. According a cablegram of Negro labor because some of the Dr. Ernest Liberian consul During his senatorial career, he was by Lyon, larger industries have found it im- to the United States, the lit- an ardent supporter of President general possible to obtain sufficient help. tle West African has cast its Roosevelt, even when Mark Hanna republic This may or may not be a tem- id with the Allies. -
The Transnational Contexts of Early Twentieth-Century American Urban Segregation
The Transnational Contexts of Early Twentieth-Century American Urban Segregation Carl Husemoller Nightingale Journal of Social History, Volume 39, Number 3, Spring 2006, pp. 667-702 (Article) Published by Oxford University Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/jsh.2006.0008 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/195869 Access provided by University of Washington @ Seattle (12 Sep 2017 23:54 GMT) THE TRANSNATIONAL CONTEXTS OF EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICAN URBAN SEGREGATION By Carl H. Nightingale State University of New York at Buffalo “Segregation is apparent everywhere,” warned Dr. Ernest Lyon to a standing- room only congregation at Baltimore’s largely black John Wesley Methodist Episcopal Church on December 4, 1910. Cities divided by race could be found “not only in the United States, but even in Africa, the natural habitat of the black man.” Lyon could speak from experience. He had just returned from Liberia, where he had been the U.S. Resident Minister and Consul General since 1903. In his sermon he reported that in the neighboring British colony of Sierra Leone “the whites have vacated the valleys, leaving them to the blacks, while they have escaped to the mountains. This method obtains throughout that vast continent, wherever the Anglo-Saxon and Teuton are found.”1 Lyon was speaking of “Hill Station,” an all-European residential zone that British authorities developed on a small mountaintop a few miles outside Free- town, Sierra Leone’s capital, on a plan borrowed from longstanding practices in India.2 He also may have been alluding to reports of intensifying segregation in South Africa. -
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: MARYLAND
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: MARYLAND WOMEN AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF POLITICS, 1890s-1930 Diane E. Weaver, Doctor of Philosophy, 1992 Dissertation Directed by: George H. Callcott Professor Department of History This is a study of the involvement of Maryland women in politics from the 1890s to 1930. It builds on previous studies to support an expanded conceptualization of politics. Elite white activists in the late nineteenth century, building on their concern for the home, extended their interests as wives and mothers to their interests as citizens, and both reflected and shaped the rising Progressive movement in Maryland. They formed local and then statewide organizations, and they worked to replace traditional politics with activist, efficient, and expanded government . As they brought their concerns to the public agenda, they created an increased public role for themselves, choosing at the same time to work cooperatively with male leaders . Black women activists were reformers in their communities as well, and while for the most part segregated from white women's organizations, created and participated in cooperative ventures with white women . The suffrage movement in Maryland grew out of this activism and also extended it. White suffragists differed over strategy and tactics, but they maintained unity in an agenda that combined social goals with the advancement of women. World War I offered white women activists, already part of a statewide network, the opportunity to assume a greatly expanded role in the burgeoning wartime government. During the war, black women activists expanded their influence as well, but they also expanded and their independence from white women's organizations. -
W.E.B. Du Bois: a Biography
W.E.B. DU BOIS Recent Titles in Greenwood Biographies Sacagawea: A Biography April R. Summitt Yo-Yo Ma: A Biography Jim Whiting Ellen DeGeneres: A Biography Lisa Iannucci Frida Kahlo: A Biography Claudia Schaefer John McCain: A Biography Elaine S. Povich Beyonce Knowles: A Biography Janice Arenofsky Jerry Garcia: A Biography Jacqueline Edmondson Coretta Scott King: A Biography Laura T. McCarty Kanye West: A Biography Bob Schaller Peyton Manning: A Biography Lew Freedman Miley Cyrus: A Biography Kimberly Dillon Summers Ted Turner: A Biography Michael O’Connor George Clooney: A Biography Joni Hirsch Blackman Will Smith: A Biography Lisa M. Iannucci W.E.B. DU BOIS A Biography Gerald Horne GREENWOOD BIOGRAPHIES GREENWOOD PRESS An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC Copyright 2010 by Gerald Horne All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Horne, Gerald. W.E.B. Du Bois : a biography / Gerald Horne. p. cm. — (Greenwood biographies) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-313-34979-9 (hard copy : acid-free paper)— ISBN 978-0-313-34980-5 (ebook) 1. Du Bois, W.E.B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868–1963. 2. African Americans — Biography. 3. African American authors —Biography. 4. African American intellectuals—Biography. 5. African American civil rights workers —Biography. 6. Intellectuals —United States—Biography. 7. Civil rights workers —United States —Biography. -
Records of the National Negro Business League
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of Black Studies Research Sources Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections Records of the National Negro Business League Part 1: Annual Conference Proceedings and Organizational Records, 1900-1919 Part 2: Correspondence and Business Records, 1900-1923 University Publications of America A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES Microfilms from Major Archival and Manuscript Collections General Editors: John H. Bracey, Jr. and August Meier RECORDS OF THE NATIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS LEAGUE Part 1: Annual Conference Proceedings and Organizational Records, 1900-1919 Part 2: Correspondence and Business Records, 1900-1923 Edited by Kenneth Hamilton Guide compiled by Robert E. Lester A microfilm project of UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA An Imprint of CIS 4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Records of the National Negro Business League [microform] / editorial advisor, Kenneth M. Hamilton. microfilm reels — (Black studies research sources) Pt. 1 filmed from the archives of Tuskegee University; pt. 2 from a supplement to the papers of Booker T. Washington in the Library of Congress. Accompanied by a 1-volume printed reel guide compiled by Robert E. Lester, entitled: A guide to the microfilm edition of Records of the National Negro Business League. Contents: pt. 1. Annual conference proceedings and organizational records, 1900-1924 — pt. 2. Correspondence and business records, 1900-1923. ISBN 1-55655-507-5 (microfilm : pt. 1) — ISBN 1-55655-508-3 (microfilm: pt. 2) 1. National Negro Business League (U.S.)—Archives. 2. Afro- Americans—Economic conditions—Sources. 3. Afro-Americans in business—History—Sources. -
Congressional Record-Senate. M.Aroh 16
/ 106 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE. M.AROH 16, CONFIRMATIONS. Mr. BAILEY. In the other body when we wanted to meet Exeeutive nominations confirmed by the Senate March 14, 1909. before 12 o'clock we took a recess. Mr. ALLISON. The practice is different in the Senate. CONSUL-GENERAL. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing Alanson W. Edwards, of North Dakota, to be consul-general to the motion of the Senator from illinois. of the United States at Montreal, Canada. The motion was agreed to. ADMIRAL OF THE NAVY, Mr. CULLOM. I move that the Senate adjourn. Rear-Admiral George Dewey, to be Admiral of the Navy from The motion was agreed to; and {at 6 o'clock and 12 minutes the 2d day of March, 1899, in accordance with the provisions of p.m.) the Senate adjourned until to-morrow, Tuesday, March an act approved March 2, 1899. 17, 1903, at 11 o'clock a. m. INJUNCTION OF SECRECY REMOVED. NOMINATIONS. Mr. BACON submitted an amendment to the convention with Exeeutive norninations received by the Senate March 16, 1909. Colombia for the construction of the Panama Canal, from which, CONSUL-GENERAL. on his moL ')n, the injunction of secrecy was removed. Thomas Willing Peters, of the District of Columbia, now con sul at Plauen, to be consul-general of the United States at St. Gall, Switzerland, to take effect April 30, 1903, vice James T. SENATE. McCallum, resigned. MONDAY, Mwrch 16, 1903. William Shaw Bowen, of Rhode Island, to be consul-general of the United States at Guayaquil, Ecuador, vice George Sawter, Prayer by Rev. -
Our Mission Financial Statements 20 NPR Officers and Board of Directors 21
2003 Annual Report Contents Letter from the President 1 2003 Achievements 2 Our Mission Financial Statements 20 NPR Officers and Board of Directors 21 NPR’s mission is to work in partnership with member stations to create a more informed public — one NPR Foundation Board of Trustees 21 challenged and invigorated by a deeper understanding and appreciation of events, ideas, and cultures. To accomplish our mission, we produce, acquire, and distribute programming that meets the highest NPR President’s Council 21 standards of public service in journalism and cultural expression; we represent our members in matters of their mutual interest; and we provide satellite interconnection for the entire public radio system. Contributors 21 NPR Stations Delta KPRU FM103.3 Evansville WNIN FM 88.3 Muskegon WGVS AM 850 Albuquerque KUNM FM 89.9 Portsmouth WOSP FM 91.5 San Angelo KUTX FM 90.1 Denver KCFR AM 1340 Fort Wayne WBNI FM 91.3 Oscoda WCMB FM 95.7 Dulce KCIE FM 90.5 Thompson WSKV FM 89.1 San Antonio KSTX FM 89.1 Denver KUVO FM 89.3 Hagerstown WBSH FM 91.1 Rogers City WVXA FM 96.7 Gallup KGLP FM 91.7 Toledo WGTE FM 91.3 San Antonio KPAC FM 88.3 ALABAMA Denver KVOD FM 90.1 Indianapolis WFYI FM 90.1 Sault Ste. Marie WCMZ FM 98.3 Las Cruces KRWG FM 90.7 West Union WVXW FM 89.5 Spearman KTOT FM 89.5 Birmingham WBHM FM 90.3 Grand Junction KPRN FM 89.5 Lafayette WBAA AM 920 Standish WWCMFM 96.9 Magdalena KABR AM 1500 Wilberforce WCSU FM 88.9 Texarkana KTXK FM 91.5 Dothan WRWA FM 88.7 Greeley KUNC FM 91.5 Marion WBSW FM 90.9 Traverse City WICA FM 91.5 Maljamar KMTH FM 98.7 Wooster WKRW FM 89.3 Victoria KVRT FM 90.7 Gadsden WSGN FM 91.5 Ignacio KSUT FM 91.3 Muncie WBST FM 92.1 Twin Lake WBLV FM 90.3 Portales KENW FM 89.5 Yellow Springs WYSO FM 91.3 Waco KWBU FM103.3 Huntsville WJAB FM 90.9 Ignacio KUTE FM 90.1 N. -
Doster Dissertation
ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation: “TO STRIKE FOR RIGHT, TO STRIKE WITH MIGHT”: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS IN BALTIMORE, 1910–1930 Dennis Anthony Doster, Doctor of Philosophy, 2015 Directed By: Professor Elsa Barkley Brown Department of History “‘To Strike for Right, To Strike With Might’: African Americans and the Struggle for Civil Rights in Baltimore, 1910–1930” examines the nature, character and scope of early civil rights activism among African Americans in Baltimore, Maryland. Utilizing an expansive definition of “civil rights,” it explores not only voting and holding political office, access to public education, and fair housing opportunities; it also considers struggles for access to municipal and social services and struggles related to labor and employment. By placing all of these terrains of struggle under the umbrella of “civil rights,” the dissertation emphasizes the importance of these rights in relation to one another and their importance in the minds and lives of African Americans who struggled for rights in each of these categories as part of a broader struggle for equality. Baltimore has long been recognized for its civil rights activism by scholars who portray the era of the 1930s to 1950s as a kind of “golden age” of civil rights activism in the city, considering such activism to have been dormant prior to that period. The dissertation reveals an active civil rights movement in the city in the decades preceding the 1930s that was led primarily by members of the middle-class but drew widespread support and strength from members of all classes in Baltimore’s African American community. -
Document II a Year After the Massacre at Thibodaux, Blacks in Louisiana
Document II A year after the massacre at Thibodaux, blacks in Louisiana gathered to address the “reign of terror” of the Ku Klux Klan, police, and employers against African Americans. Here is their declaration. Reverend Ernest Lyon et al., Open Letter from the New Orleans Mass Meeting (August 22, 1888) To the people of the United States: We, citizens of New Orleans, as well as of neighboring parishes, from which we have been driven away without warrant or law, assembled in mass meeting at New Orleans, La., on Wednesday, August 22 [1888], at Geddes Hall, declare and assert: That a reign of terror exists in many parts of the state; that the laws are suspended and the officers of government, from the governor down, afford no protection to the lives and property of the people against armed bodies of whites, who shed innocent blood and commit deeds of savagery unsurpassed in the dark ages of mankind. For the past twelve years we have been most effectively disfranchised and robbed of our political rights. While denied the privilege in many places of voting for the party and candidates of our choice, acts of violence compel us to vote against the dictates of our conscience for the Democratic party, and the Republican ballots casted by us have been counted for the Democratic candidates. The press, the pulpit, the commercial organizations, and executive authority of the state have given both open and silent approval of all these crimes. In addition to these methods, there seems to be a deep laid scheme to reduce the Negroes of the State to a condition of abject serfdom and peonage.