http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf309nb0bw No online items INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION Processed by Victoria Yturralde; machine-readable finding aid created by Jim Sylva Department of Special Collections General Library University of California at Davis Davis, CA 95616-5292 Phone: (530) 752-1621 Fax: (530) 754-5758 Email: [email protected] © 1995 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN D-207 1 AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION Collection number: D-207 Department of Special Collections General Library University of California, Davis Davis, California Contact Information Department of Special Collections General Library University of California at Davis Davis, CA 95616-5292 Phone: (530) 752-1621 Fax: (530) 754-5758 Email: [email protected] Processed by: Victoria Yturralde Date Completed: September 1995 Encoded by: Jim Sylva © 1995 Descriptive Summary Title: THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION Date (inclusive): Collection number: D-207 Origination: Extent: 7 linear feet in 7 archive boxes Repository: University of California, Davis. General Library. Dept. of Special Collections. Davis, California Shelf location: For current information on the location of these materials, please consult the Special Collections Department. Language: English. Provenance The African American History Collection was created as a subject collection nearly 30 years ago, beginning with a block purchase from Walter Goldwater in New York in 1967. Materials have been added in the form of donations and purchases since that time. Access Collection is open for research. Publication Rights The Library can only claim physical ownership of the African American History Collection. Users are responsible for satisfying any claimants of literary property. Preferred Citation [Identification of item] THE AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION, D-207, Department of Special Collections, General Library, University of California, Davis. Scope and Content INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN D-207 2 AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION The African American History Collection consists primarily of 19th and 20th century pamphlets with an emphasis on racial justice and political action. From anti-slavery tracts to civil rights leaflets, the materials in this collection reveal a nation's moral and legal struggle for equality, and document the effects of inequity on individuals and society as a whole. The collection's concentration of theme and variety of perspective make it a unique and valuable resource for social and political historians. The bulk of the pamphlets cover three general time frames. Civil War era materials comprise a strong collection of speeches by senators and congressmen against various aspects of emancipation. Also strongly represented are materials relating to the political movements of the 1930's and 1940's, generally Communist and Socialist, and the attempts to unite individuals in an organized force for change. The third group of materials relates largely to civil rights issues of the 1950's and 1960's, including voter registration, desegregation, and black power. With few exceptions, the materials in this collection present the literature of change and growth. Box 1 Box 1, Folder 1 Allen, J.S. American Negro.New York: International Pamphlets, 1932. Box 1, Folder 2 Allen, James S. Marshall Plan--recovery or war?New York: New Century Publishers, 1948. Box 1, Folder 3 Allen, James S. Negro liberation.New York: International Publishers, 1938. Box 1, Folder 4 Allen, James S. Smash the Scottsboro lynch verdict.New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1933. Box 1, Folder 5 Allen, Robert L. Dialectics of Black power.Boston: New England Free Press, 1968. Box 1, Folder 6 AFL-CIO, Industrial Union Department. Tent City..."Home of the Brave"Washington, D.C.: Industrial Union Department, AFL-CIO, [196-?]. Box 1, Folder 7 American Civil Liberties Union. Testing whether that nation: 41st annual report.New York: American Civil Liberties Union, 1961. Box 1, Folder 8 American Civil Liberties Union. The stakes grow higher: 44th annual report.New York: American Civil Liberties Union, 1964. Box 1, Folder 9 American National Red Cross. The final report of the Colored Advisory Commission appointed to cooperate with the American National Red Cross and the President's Committee on Relief Work in the Mississippi Valley Flood Disaster of 1927. Washington, D.C.: American National Red Cross, 1929. Box 1, Folder 10 American Reform Tract and Book Society. The law and the testimony concerning slavery.Cincinnati: American Reform Tract and Book Society, [185-]. Box 1, Folder 11 American Reform Tract and Book Society. On slavery.Cincinnati: American Reform Tract and Book Society, [185-]. Box 1, Folder 12 American Society of African Culture. The American Negro writer and his roots: selected papers from the First Conference of Negro Writers, March, 1959.New York: American Society of African Culture, 1960. Box 1, Folder 13 American Tract Society. Cain and Patsy: the Gospel preached to the poor, a story of slave life.Boston: American Tract Society, 1860. Box 1, Folder 14 American Tract Society. Speeches of Chief Justice Williams, Judge Parsons, and Ex-Governor Ellsworth: delivered in the Center Church, Hartford, Conn. at the anniversary of the Hartford Branch of the American Tract Society, Jan. 9, 1859. Hartford, Conn.: E. Geer, 1859. Box 1, Folder 15 American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race. Exposition of the objects and plans of the American Union for the Relief and Improvement of the Colored Race.Boston: Light and Horton, 1835. INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN D-207 3 AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION Container List Box 1, Folder 16 Ammoun, Charles D. Study of discrimination in education.New York: United Nations, 1957. Box 1, Folder 17 Aikman, William. The future of the Colored race in America.New York: A.D.F. Randolph, 1862. Box 1, Folder 18 Alpenfels, Ethel J. Sense and nonsense about race.New York: Friendship Press, 1946. Box 1, Folder 19 Ambroise, Fernand. Le General Magloire Ambroise: a-t-il ete tue ou s'est-il suicide?Port-Au-Prince, Haiti: Imprimerie Nemours Telhomme, 1937. Box 1, Folder 20 American Anti-Slavery Society. Slavery and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1859. Box 1, Folder 21 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Relation of the "American Board" to slavery.[S.l.]: [s.n.], [186-]. Box 1, Folder 22 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Report of the Committee on Anti-Slavery Memorials.Boston: T.R. Marvin, 1845. Box 1, Folder 23 American Church Institute for Negroes. Down where the need is greatest: a record in the field of Negro education.New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [193-?]. Box 1, Folder 24 American Church Institute for Negroes. The rebirth of an ancient race.New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [193-?]. Box 1, Folder 25 American Church Institute for Negroes. Report from May 1, 1938 to May 31, 1940.New York: Church Missions House, [194-]. Box 1, Folder 26 American Church Institute for Negroes. Annual report for 1929.New York: Church Missions House, [1930?]. Box 1, Folder 27 American Church Institute for Negroes. Report for 1933.New York: Church Missions House, [1934?]. Box 1, Folder 28 Alston, Christopher C. Henry Ford and the Negro people.Washington, D.C.: National Negro Congress, 1940. Note 2 copies Box 1, Folder 29 Abram, Morris B., and Alexander F. Miller. How to stop violence! Intimidation! in your community.Atlanta: Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, 1949. Box 1, Folder 30 African and Afro-American Cultural Exhibit Association. Glimpse into blackness.El Cerrito, Calif.: Artline Printing, [197-?]. Box 1, Folder 31 African Institution. Foreign slave trade. Abstract of the information recently laid on the table of the House of Commons on the subject of the slave trade. London: Ellerton and Henderson, 1821. Box 1, Folder 32 African Methodist Episcopal Church. Junior manual of the Allen C.E. League of the African M.E. Church for the Officers and Committees.Nashville: Allen C.E. League, 1925. Box 1, Folder 33 African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. Minutes of the 57th annual session of the New Jersey Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.[Charlotte, N.C.]: A.M.E. Zion Publishing House, [1930]. Box 1, Folder 34 Allen, George. Report on slavery read to the Worcester Central Association, March 2, 1847.Boston: Wm. Crosby & H.P. Nichols, 1847. Box 1, Folder 35 Leys, John K., et. al. Along the darkies' narrow way.[New Jersey]: [s.n.], [18--]. INVENTORY OF THE AFRICAN D-207 4 AMERICAN HISTORY COLLECTION Container List Box 1, Folder 36 American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. The Fugitive Slave Bill: its history and unconstitutionality; with an account of the seizure and enslavement of James Hamlet, and his subsequent restoration to liberty. New York: W. Harned, 1850. Box 1, Folder 37 American Church Institute for Negroes. Negro education in wartime.New York: American Church Institute for Negroes, [1942?]. Box 1, Folder 38 American Church Institute for Negroes. Our Church Industrial High Schools for Negroes.New York: Church Missions House, [1922?]. Box 1, Folder 39 American Church Institute for Negroes. Report from January 1, 1936 to May 1, 1938.New York: Church Missions House, [1938?]. Box 1, Folder 40 Ancient United Order of Sons and Daughters Brothers and Sisters of Moses. Regulations for conducting business, and form of initiation of the first or white degree of the A.U.O. of S. and D.B. and S. of Moses. Baltimore: Guide Printing Co., 1910. Box 1, Folder 41 Anderson, Charles. The cause of the war: who brought it on, and for what purpose?New York: Wm. Bryant & Co., 1863. Box 1, Folder 42 Andrew, John A. Speeches of John A. Andrew at Hingham and Boston, together with his testimony before the Harper's Ferry Committee of the Senate, in relation to John Brown.
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