TABLE OF CONTENTS

Overview of Collection

Biographical/Historical Sketch

Scope and Content Note

Arrangement of Collection

Topics Covered

Administrative Information

Container List

Oxford & University

Mississippi

Non-Mississippi

Oversize



Inventory of the Race Relations Collection

The University of Mississippi
J.D. Williams Library, Archives & Special Collections

Presented online by the Mississippi Digital Library

Overview of Collection

Repository: The University of Mississippi, J.D. Williams Library, Archives & Special Collections

Collector: University of Mississippi

Collection Number: 76-15

Title: Race Relations Collection

Dates: 1885-1894, 1937-2004, undated

Quantity: 5.48 cubic ft.

Abstract: Printed material and manuscripts that document race relations, civil rights, black power, white supremacist groups, and multiculturalism in the United States, particularly in Mississippi and at the University of Mississippi. Includes information about the enrollment of James Meredith at Ole Miss, as well as other documents related to the civil rights movement in Mississippi.


Biographical/Historical Sketch

From slavery and Reconstruction to Jim Crow, from the civil rights movement to the present day, Mississippi has been a focal point in the history of American race relations. The disenfranchisement of African Americans in Mississippi and other states in the American South consistently met with resistance. Throughout the Jim Crow era, a small group of black citizens waged campaigns against lynching, electoral disenfranchisement, and segregation in education and public accommodations. These efforts grew following World War II, when large numbers of returning black veterans joined the movement to win at home the liberty they had defended overseas. In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision ending de jure segregation in public schools touched off a wave of pro-and anti-integration activism. Groups such as the Citizens' Council formed and spread across the South to fight for the preservation of segregation, while in 1960 a sit-in movement led by black college students was born, using non-violent direct action to accelerate the implementation of civil rights. The town of Oxford, Mississippi, and The University of Mississippi played an important role in this history when the era of integration in Mississippi began in 1962 with the enrollment of James H. Meredith, the University's first African American student.

In the early 1960s, civil rights groups such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and the Southern Christian Leadership Council began massive efforts across the South to win voting rights, eventually leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The struggle to implement the Brown decision, as well as these newly-enacted laws, continued well into the late 1960s and 1970s, with the election of black representatives and widespread desegregation of public schools. The federal government's anti-poverty programs created opportunities for addressing the poverty affecting much of the black community, providing funding for Head Start and economic development. In the late 1960s, the Black Power movement arose in cities north and south among young African Americans frustrated by the slow pace of change. While the civil rights movement led to significant transformations in race relations, opponents of civil rights have continued to make their voices heard. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s and up to the present day, there continue to be debates over issues such as affirmative action, public school funding, reparations for slavery, black nationalism, white supremacy, welfare and government relief programs, and multiculturalism.

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Scope and Content Note

The Race Relations Collection consists of printed material and manuscripts that document race relations, civil rights, black power, white supremacist groups, and multiculturalism throughout the United States from the late nineteenth century to the present day. The bulk of material focuses on The University of Mississippi and the state of Mississippi from the 1950s to 1980s. Formats represented in the collection include newspapers, newsletters, broadsides, reports, memoranda, pamphlets, publications, articles, reprints, programs, and ephemera. In addition, there are a limited number of manuscripts and letters.

Box 1 contains material from 1956 to 1989 documenting race relations in Oxford and at The University of Mississippi. Topics covered include pro-and anti-integration viewpoints, the enrollment of James Meredith, black student demonstrations, the Black Student Union, and segregation in fraternities and sororities.

Boxes 2, 3, and 9 cover race relations and civil rights in the state of Mississippi from 1948 to 1988, plus three items from 1885, 1894, and 1937. Topics and organizations covered include Senator James O. Eastland, Friends of Segregated Public Schools, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Emmett Till, Judge Thomas P. Brady, Clennon King, Governor John Bell Williams, Byron de la Beckwith, the Republican Party of Mississippi, Mississippi Action for Community Education, private academies, and other subjects related to integration. In addition to these printed materials, there are two nineteenth-century manuscripts, an 1885 manuscript of a poem by N. H. Ensley of Alcorn College and an 1894 letter discussing Ida B. Wells, and a set of postcards featuring African American images from 1937.

Boxes 4 and 5 contain materials from 1948 to 1995 addressing civil rights, race and religion, anti-communism, black power, and integration across the country, with an emphasis on southern states. Organizations represented include the Citizens' Council of Memphis, the Southern National Party, the Republic of New Africa, the Southern Regional Council, and civil rights groups in South Carolina and Tennessee.

Boxes 6, 7, and 8 contain oversize materials that pertain to race relations at The University of Mississippi, in the state of Mississippi, and other parts of the country from 1952 to 1994. Box 6 consists of broadsides, posters, and newspapers related to various organizations, including copies of the Confederate Underground from the 1990s. Boxes 7 and 8 contain a range of local and regional newspapers, most published by groups dedicated to civil rights, white power, or southern nationalism.

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Arrangement of the Collection

The collection is divided into four parts:

Local-Oxford/University (Box 1)

State (Boxes 2-3, 9)

Non-Mississippi (Boxes 4-5)

Oversize (Boxes 6-8)

The majority of items are arranged in rough chronological order.

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Topics Covered

Meredith, James
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
University of Mississippi – History
African Americans – Civil rights
Civil rights demonstrations
Civil rights movements – History
Race relations
School integration
White supremacy movements
Oxford (Miss.)

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Administrative Information

Provenance:

Items in this collection were acquired and organized circa 1976. In 1995, material from the Knox Collection (79-1), housed in the Department of Archives and Special Collections at The University of Mississippi, was added to this collection. Additional material continues to be added by Archives staff.

Restrictions on Use:

This collection is protected from unauthorized copying by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code).

Preferred Citation Method:

Archives & Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi

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Container List

 

Oxford & University

Box Folder
1 1 List of pro-integration books purchased by University of Mississippi library, 23 August 1956
2 Newspapers and newsclippings
The Nigble Papers, 17 February 1866 [sic] (2 copies)
The Nigble Papers, 17 February 1956 (2 copies)
The Nigble Papers, 18 May 1956
Misc. pages and mimeograph letter from "Critic" to "Dear Editor [Daily Mississippian]", undated
3 Mississippi Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 125 invoking the doctrine of interposition, March 1956
4 William Strickland's military pass for University, 5 October 1962
(This item previously accessioned as 93-31.)
5 The Ole Miss Coloring Book, circa 1962
(2 copies previously accessioned as 00-201 and 88-73.)
6 University of Mississippi Liberty Bulletin, Fall 1962 (5 copies)
7 The Ru Anthem, 15 May 1963 (2 copies)
8 Memoranda
(These items previously accessioned as 00-442.)
J. D. Williams to Faculty, Staff and Students of the University of Mississippi, re: enrollment of James Meredith, 30 January 1963
J. D. Williams to Faculty Staff and Students of the University of Mississippi, re: atmosphere on campus, 25 February 1963
9 Mississippi Summer Project running summary of incidents, circa 1964
10 The Rebel Underground inventory of issues
(These items previously accessioned as 90-46.)
11 The Rebel Underground
Volume 1, No. 2
Volume 2, No. 4 (2 copies)
Volume 3, No. 1 (2 copies)
Volume 3, No. 2
Volume 13, No. 3
12 The Rebel Underground
Volume 1, No. 1 (5 copies)
Volume 1, No. 2 (2 copies)
Volume 1, No. 3
Volume 1, No. 4
Volume 1, No. 5
Volume 2, No. 4 (3 copies)
Volume 2, No. 7
Volume 3, No. 1 (9 copies)
Volume 3, No. 2 (7 copies)
Volume 3, No. 4 (7 copies)
Volume 3, No. 5 (4 copies)
Volume 3, No. 6 (2 copies)
Volume 13, No. 3 (7 copies)
February 12, 1962
January 1963 (3 copies)
April 20, 1964 (4 copies)
November 1965 (2 copies)
13 Reprint of article from Commercial Appeal, "Voice from Pulpit Probes Conscience of Mississippi" re: Duncan Gray, Jr., 8 October 1962
14 descant, Volume 1, No. 1, 30 April 1968
(This item previously accessioned as 95-14.)
15 descant, Volume 1, No. 2, 6 May 1968
(This item previously accessioned as 95-14.)
16 descant, Volume 1, No. 3, 13 May 1968
(This item previously accessioned as 95-14.)
17 Memorandum from Porter Fortune to University of Mississippi Faculty, Staff and Students re: Black Student demonstration, 2 March 1970
(This item previously accessioned as 00-441.)
18 Untitled University of Mississippi African-American student publication, November 1970 and December 1970 (2 copies)
19 Soul Force, Volume 1, No __, 1970
20 The Ole Missy, Volume 1, No. 1, April Fool's 1970 (2 copies)
21 Broadside from white University of Mississippi students to African-American students requesting a forum, c. 1970
22 The Monday Report, Chancellor's response to issues raised by the Black Student Union, April 1983
(This item was previously accessioned as 00-189.)
23 Broadside regarding segregation and the University of Mississippi greek system, circa 1988
24 The Civil Rights Movement and the Law program, 31 March-2 April 1989
25 Louis Farrakhan broadsides
a. Check 'Dis Out
(Previously accessioned as 94-69.)
b. Attention to the Black Woman
(Previously accessioned as 94-70.)
c. In the Name...
(Previously accessioned as 94-32.)
d. Advancement Through Knowledge of Self
(Previously accessioned as 94-32.)
e. Video Night
(Previously accessioned as 95-32.)
26 Racist ephemera from University of Mississippi, undated
(This item previously accessioned as 00-420.)
27 Strategy for the Students at Oxford broadside, undated
(This item previously accessioned as 00-200.)
28 National Association for the Advancement of Pore White Trash letterhead, undated
29 List of books purchased by the Stokes-Phelps Fund for the University of Mississippi library, 1956
(This item previously accessioned as 00-760.)
30 Program commemorating the 20th Anniversary of the Admission of Black Students to UM, 1982 (2 copies)
(This item previously accessioned as 00-175.)
31 Program from Black History Week, 1977
32 Wisconsin Alumnus with article on Jim Silver and integration of University of Mississippi, April 1964
33 Proceedings from Law Symposium regarding the 20th Anniversary of the Admission of African-American students, March 1983
34 Soul Force (Oxford, Mississippi), 9 December 1971
35 "Integration at Ole Miss," Ebony, May 1966

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Mississippi

Box Folder
2 1 James O. Eastland material
(These items previously accessioned as 00-342.)
a. "The Barter of Our Heritage", 9 February 1948
b. "The Miracle of Water", 22 April 1954
c. "The Supreme Court, Segregation and the South", 27 May 1954
d. Flyer from NAACP quoting Eastland, 12 August 1955 (3 copies)
e. "The Supreme Court's 'Modern Scientific Authorities' in the Segregation Cases", 26 May 1955 (2 copies)
f. News and Views ("Wolf Pack is Now After Eastland"), April 1956
g. Pamphlet, "James O. Eastland for U. S. Senator", 1966
h. T. L. S. James O. Eastland to "Dear Educator", 31 October 1966
i. Pamphlet, "Re-elect Senator Jim Eastland", undated
j. Broadside "Special Note to All MBA Members", undated
k. Eastland Report, c.1973-1974 (5 issues)
l. "Let's Look at 'Big Jim's' Record", undated
2 Dr. Albert Sidney Johnson, "The Confederate Cause Yesterday and Today", 1951
(This item previously accessioned as 00-220.)
3 The Eagle Eye (Jackson, Mississippi)
18 September 1954 (3 copies)
25 September 1954
2 October 1954 (4 copies)
16 October 1954 (11 copies)
31 March 1956
T. L. (carbon) J. S. Hartin to Arrington W. High re: Eagle Eye, 6 November 1954
4 Various material from Friends of Segregated Public Schools, Wiggins, Mississippi, circa 1954
5 "M is for Mississippi and Murder," published by the N. A. A. C. P. with T. N. S. from Roy Wilkins, president of the NAACP, 1955 (2 copies)
6 T. L. S. (xerography) Crane Wilbur to Sam and Dave re: movie about Emmett Till, 2 July 1956
7 Report to the People: A Summary of Articles Written by New England Editors after a Tour of Mississippi, circa 1956 (2 copies-see also catalogued copy)
8 Pamphlet, Judge Tom P. Brady, "Segregation and the South", 4 October 1957
9 "A Positive Program for the South," compilation of editorial by J. Oliver Emmerich, 1957
10 Resolution from American Legion Post No. 63, Macon, Mississippi regarding racial integration of Veterans Hospitals, 1957
11 Report from the House of Representatives, Subcommittee No. 5 of the Committee on the Judiciary, regarding civil rights, 1957
12 Clennon King, "I Speak as a Southern Negro," reprinted from the American Mercury, January 1958 (2 copies)
13 Pamphlet, John Bell Williams "Interposition: the Neglected Weapon", 23 April 1959
14 Hazel Brannon Smith, "A Plea for Tolerance-The High Wall Around Mississippi-It Must Not be Built", 29 October 1959 (reprint of article; folio cut)
15 Byron de la Beckwith material
a. Subscription form for The Southern Review and campaign contribution form, undated
b. T. L. S. Byron de la Beckwith re: contributions to legal fund, undated
c. T. L. S. (mimeograph) Byron de la Beckwith to "Dear Fellow Episcopalian", 10 April 1959
d. T. L. S. T. A. Barrentine and J. T. Thomas, White Citizens' Legal Fund, to "Dear Friend", undated
e. Open letter from a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Housewife to Jackson Police and the FBI, re: assassination of Medgar Evers, 12 June 1963
16 Republican Party of Mississippi pamphlets
(These items previously accessioned as 00-314.)
a. Platform, 11 June 1960
b. Platform, 30 May 1964
c. Prentiss Walker report from Washington, undated
17 "A Southern Observance," parody of Ross Barnett, circa 1962
18 Dan Smoot Report, with article on "The Mississippi Tragedy", 8 October 1962
19 Richard Rubin, A State in Agony: Three Views of Integration at the University of Mississippi, 1961-1962, Senior Thesis, University of Pennsylvania, 1988
(This item previously accessioned as 91-92.)
20 Soldiers of America broadside, circa 1962
21 Report on Mississippi by the Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U. S. Commission on Civil Rights, January 1963
22 Mississippians Unite! broadside, circa 1963
23 "Oxford, U. S. A.," advertisement for showing of film, 24 April, [1963], 26 & 27 April, [1963]
24 Ode to Medgar Evers, c. 1963
25 The Rebel Underground (Millsaps Division)
Volume 1, No. 1 (2 copies)
Volume 1, No. 2
26 Calvin Trillin, "Letter from Jackson," New Yorker, 29 August 1964 (2 copies)
27 Look, with article "Mississippi: The Attack on Bigotry", 8 September 1964
28 Mississippi Freedom Candidate biographies, c. 1964
29 Dan Smoot Report, with article "Civil Rights or Civil Wars", 22 February 1965
Box Folder
3 1 N. A. A. C. P. in Mississippi material
2 Various racist newsletters, 1965-1969
a. Delta Discussion
b. Nocturnal Messenger
c. Truth Bulletin
3 Miscellaneous material from the Christian Conservative Communique, Jackson, Mississippi, 1966
(Previously accessioned as 92-38.)
4 Sidney Goldstein, "A Footnote on Mississippi," reprint of article from Negro Educational Review, 1966
5 Broadside for conservative rally, Pearl High School, 2 June 1968
6 Miscellaneous material from Americans for the Preservation of the White Race, circa 1968
(Previously accessioned as 92-38.)
7 Text of televised John Bell Williams speech regarding Jackson State University riot, 4 June 1970
8 Ephemera
a. Charles Evers for Senator bumper stickers (2)
b. Ross with Ross [Barnett] bumper sticker
c. Roll with Ross pin, undated
9 State Sovereignty Commission
a. Pamphlet, undated
b. Pamphlet "Russia, Communism and Race", undated
10 Miscellaneous flyers
a. "The Black Star Spangled Banner", undated
b. "The South Will Rise Again", undated
c. N. A. A. C. P. application, undated
11 Anti-integration attack on liberal ministers from C. D. Smith, Dumas, Mississippi, undated
12 Mississippi Action for Community Education (MACE) xerographies of pamphlet and typed reports, n. d.
(Previously accessioned as 00-621.)
13 Sons of Confederate Veterans pamphlet, undated
(Previously accessioned as 00-240.)
14 "Freedom on My Mind," script for 90 minute documentary on Mississippi Freedom Summer Project of 1964, undated
(Previously accessioned as 90-64.)
15 Jimmy Swan for Governor pamphlet, undated
16 "School Tomorrow," pamphlet advertising Pillow Academy, Greenwood, Mississippi, undated
(Previously accessioned as 00-041.)
17 Broadside for International Committee Against Racism meeting, August 1, no year
18 Broadside "Wake Up Mississippi," regarding integration, undated
19 Excerpts from a speech by George Evans, Meridian College regarding integration, undated
20 Broadside from Parents for Segregation, undated
21 Broadside advertising The Petal Paper (parody), undated
22 Miscellaneous
23 Municipal Minutes, City of Greenwood, Leflore County, 29 May 1956
24 Jackson Veterans Administration Hospital Integration, 9 August 1956
25 This is ICS, undated
26 Southern Conference Educational Fund, Jackson, Mississippi, 28 February 1972
27 "Mississippi... Old and New," from the Southern Conference Educational Fund, circa 1971
28 Mississippi Newsletter, from Freedom Information Service, 8 November 1968
29 Handbill from Black Mississippi's Council on Higher Education
30 The Petal Papers, editorial reprints, undated
31 Negro Population statistics, Mississippi, undated
32 Mademoiselle with article "Mississippi: Teaching in a Freedom School", 1964
33 The Southeastern Librarian (Summer 1965) with article "Freedom Libraries of the Mississippi Summer Project"
34 Newsweek with article "Letters from Mississippi", 31 May 1965
35 Newsweek with article "Mississippi, Summer 1964", 13 July 1964
36 Mississippi Eyewitness re: civil rights murder of Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner, c. 1964
37 Ladies Home Journal, featuring "The Little Professor of Piney Woods", January 1964
38 "The Negro and Current Affairs," roundtable hosted by Department of Social Services, Mississippi Negro Training School, 4 November 1940
39 Press Release for M.G. Lowman r.e: Delta Ministry, 13 July 1965
40 Typed Broadside. "Black People Boycott Mississippi!!!!" [insert in Mississppi Freedom Democratic Party newsletter], April 5, 1968
41 Typed Manuscript. "Attitudes of Some of Our Leading Mississippians Toward Negro Education 1938"
42 Broadside. "Is Emmett Till Alive?" (Chicago: American Anti-Communist Militia)
Box Folder
9 1 "Dick Gregory and His Mississippi Airlift" The Realist 58, April 1965
2 Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party Material
(1) Typed copy broadside. "Fact Sheet for Mississippi Congressional Challenge" Re: procedural steps to challenge seating in US Congress of Mississippi congressmen
(2) Mimeographed booklet stapled. "Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party" (5 pages)
First page contains a letter addressed to "Dear Michigan Friend of Freedom." Booklet addresses ways in which Michigan residents could assist the MFDP.
(3) Mimeographed booklet stapled. "Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party" (26 pages)
Contemporary literature of the MFDP that contains history, statistics, and facts about the MFDP.
3 Delmar Dennis, Photocopied broadside. "The John Birch Society Is Concerned"
Contains segment "Hear DELMAR DENNIS speak on 'This is The John Birch Society."
4 Republic of New Afrika
(1) Circulating typed letter signed. Imari Aububakari Obadele, I, president of the Provisional Government of the Republic of New Afrika in Jackson, MS, Re: staffing when Obadele returns to jail; request for funds; recent conditions in Mississippi, 14 December 1976
(2) Circulating typed letter signed from Imari Abubakari Obadele, I, president of the Provisional Government of the Republic of New Afrika in Jackson, MS, Re: pardon campaign for release of RNA-11 prisoners and organization of an RNA Support Committee, 15 December 1976 (2 pages)
5 The Mendenhall Ministries (TMM)
Photocopied broadsheet. "Invest in the Future of a Child." Solicitation of funds for the Genesis One Christian School operated by The Mendenhall Ministries in Mendenhall, MS
6 Lower Mississippi Delta Development Center
(1) LMDDC News 1, November 1995
(2) Typed manuscript. "Board of Directors Lower Mississippi Delta Development Center 1995" (3 pages)
(3) Pamphlet. "African American Heritage Tourism in the Delta Region: Summary of Heritage Workshop Products" (3 copies)
(4) Typed manuscript. "Briefing Package. Lower Mississippi Delta Initiatives. Phase I Heritage Study", January 1996 (3 sheets. 2 copies)
(5) Typed manuscript. "Lower Mississippi Delta Symposium: 'Stories of the Delta'" (9 pages. 2 copies)
(6) Typed manuscript. "Lower Mississippi Delta Symposium: 'Stories of the Delta'" Re: agenda and program (3 pages. 2 copies)
7 Black Caucus of the Mississippi Library Association
Program. "Black Caucus of the Mississippi Library Association Eighth Annual Luncheon: 'Technological Changes in the 21st Century Library,'" Jackson, MS, 28 October 2000
8 African Americana Postcards
(1) Postcards. Ten postcards with African American images mailed from Meridian, MS from August through October 1937 to a Mrs. Elizabeth Lambert and Mr. LeRoy Lambert of Zieglerville, PA
On the verso six postcards is a serial story entitled "Sunny South" which required all six postcards laid side-by-side in order to read.
(2) Postcards. Seven postcards with African American images
No postmarks or writing on the verso.
9 Meridian Public Libraries Bookmark
Bookmark for Meridian Public Libraries which contains the addresses and hours for the Main Library and the "Colored Branch"
10 Reparations
Invitation by the Mississippi Humanities Council & Delta State University to attend the Judge William C. Keady Distinguished Lecture VI by Dr. Paul Finkelman entitled "'A Covenant with Death': The Proslavery Constitution and Its Implications for Reparations", February 10, 2003 (Envelope)
11 Medgar Evers Lecture Series
(1) Program. "The Medgar Evers Lecture Series Inaugural Lecture", March 17, 2003 (7 copies)
(2) Postcard/invitation to Medgar Evers Lecture Series, March 17, 2003
(3) "Manning Marable: First Medgar Evers Lecture Series March 17 at Millsaps" Mississippi History Newsletter 45 (March 2003): 1, 2003
12 Memorial Services for Mississippi Martyrs
Program. "Memorial Services. In Tribute to Mississippi Martyrs and Deceased NAACP Members. 60th Annual Convention National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Friday, July 4, 1969. Jackson, Mississippi"
13 Mississippi Civil Rights Oral Histories
Postcard. "The Mississippi Civil Rights Movement: An Online Bibliography of Oral Histories." University of Southern Mississippi, 2000
14 Schwerner, Chaney, and Goodman
Program. "Waiting for Justice." Re: memorial services for Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner, and James Chaney on 22 June 2003 in Philadelphia, MS (3 copies)
15 "Unsettling Memories" Conference
Postcard. Invitation to Jackson State University conference "Unsettling Memories: Culture and Trauma in the Deep South", June 16-21, 2004
16 Medgar Wiley Evers Commemoration
Program. "Medgar Wiley Evers Forty-Year Commemoration. June 10, 2003 7:00 p.m. East Central Community College. Decatur, MS" (3 copies)
17 5 th Annual Tougaloo History Conference
Program. "Tougaloo College. The Fifth Annual Tougaloo History Conference. Health Care in the African American Community Since the Civil Rights Conference", February 12-13, 2003
18 Drew, MS Schoolhouse
Pamphlet. "The Little Red Schoolhouse: A Restoration Project," Holly Grove Community Development Corporation, 2003
19 Southern Catalyst Network
Pamphlet. "Southern Catalyst Network: Countering Prejudice and Hate in the South", no date
20 The Eagle Eye/The Woman's Voice
Typed, mimeographed newsletter. The Eagle Eye/The Woman's Voice: America's Greatest Newspaper Bombarding Segregation and Discrimination Vol. 11, No. 36, 20 August 1955
Printed in Jackson, MS. Re: gubenatorial campaign in MS; murder of Lormant Smith in Brookhaven, MS; Citizens' Councils; T.R.M. Howard of Mound Bayou elected president of the National Negro Medical Association; "negro womanhood."
21 Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum
Pamphlet. "Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum: Cultural Center of African American History" (Holly Springs, MS)
22 Contemporary Letter Discussing Ida B. Wells
Handwritten letter signed. L.S. Bradley of Shelby, MS to Ross L. King of Syracuse, NY, Re: lynchings; negative characterizations of Ida B. Wells; cotton; diamondback hide and deer horns, 19 September 1894 (Envelope)
23 N.H. Ensley Poem
Handwritten manuscript of a poem by N.H. Ensley of Alcorn College, June 1st, 1885
The first line reads "I was a three-fold slave."
24 Wanted: Eulogies for a Martyr
Broadside. "Wanted: Eulogies for a Martyr" (NY: National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), Re: murder of Medgar Evers, c.1963
25 Small archive of Civil Rights material, with several Mississippi-related items
(1) Pamphlet. "Integration Movement at Work: Marks, Winona, Grenada, Cleveland, Ruleville, Drew, Canton, Somerville, Fitzgerald, Selma-How Operation Freedom Helps," Cincinnati, OH: Operation Freedom, 1968
(2) Pamphlet. "A Straigtforward Letter from Norman Thomas to You and Other People Who Want to Do Something about Racial Justice," Scholarship, Education and Defense Fund for Racial Equality, c.1967
(3) Handwritten, typed, and mimeographed broadside. "Black Out Downtown Canton," Canton, MS, Re: African American response to Canton riot during 1966 Meredith March, 1966
(4) Typed manuscript. "Brutality in Jackson -- June 18, 1965." Re: arrest and brutality against civil rights marchers in Jackson, MS, 1965 (4 pages)
(5) Marvin Rich, "Civil Rights Progress Out of the Spotlight" [reprint from The Reporter] Re: voter registrations, political workshops, self-help groups, welfare, and housing, 7 March 1968
(6) Typed, mimeographed manuscript. "Subsidies for the Wealthy -- July 1968." Re: farm subsidies for wealthy plantations in Sunflower County and elsewhere; Poor Peoples March on Washington, July 1968 (7 pages)
(7) Typed, circular letter. Roy Wilkins, president of NAACP, to "Dear Friend." Re: mourning Martin Luther King, Jr., 23 September 1968
(8) Pamphlet. "He Had a Dream: Martin Luther King, Jr. 1929-1968" (NAACP Special Contribution Fund)
(9) Broadsheet. "Senator McGovern's Record on America's Minorities"
(10) Newspaper clipping. "Dr. Spock Says: 'Vote Dick Gregory! for President'"
(11) Typed, mimeographed newsletter. NFC News 2, Niagara Frontier Chapter, New York Civil Liberties Union in Buffalo, NY, October 1967

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Non-Mississippi

Box Folder
4 1 Pamphlet: Thurman Sensing, "The Real Question About Integration," distributed by the Southern States Industrial Council, Nashville, Tennessee, c. 1954
2 Pamphlet: Here's Proof of the Red Pro-Negro Plot Against South & USA, distributed by the Grass Roots League, Inc., Charleston, South Carolina, circa 1954
3 Anti-integration broadsheet quoting Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson, distributed by Marvin Mobley, Decatur Georgia, circa 1954
4 Broadside featuring Alfred E. Neuman (MAD Magazine) "Applicant for the Next Vacancy on the U. S. Supreme Court", undated
5 Typescript of article by Thomas Waring, "The Southern Case Against Desegregation," reprinted from Harper's Magazine, 1955
6 Reprint of article by Frank P. Graham, "The Need for Both Wisdom and Good Faith," Virginia Quarterly Review, 1955 (3 copies)
7 The White Sentinel, St. Louis, Missouri, May, 1955, May, October and November 1955
8 Broadsheet listing the subversive affiliations of Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. from Grass Roots League, Charleston, South Carolina, 1955
9 Anti-N. A. A. C. P. material
a. Pamphlet: Communism and the NAACP, distributed by the Georgia Commission on Education, volumes 1 and 2, undated
b. Pamphlet: The NAACP Legislative Scoreboard, undated
c. Broadside "Join the NAACP Today", undated (2 copies)
d. Broadsheet "The Story of the NAACP", undated
10 Reprint from Congressional Record of speech by Hon. Paul H. Douglas, "The Southern Regional Council", 1957 (3 copies)
11 Pamphlet: "Resolution Requesting the Impeachment of Six Members of the U. S. Supreme Court," distributed by the Georgia Commission on Education, 22 February 1957
12 Reprint from Human Events of article by Morley Cassidy, "The Most Explosive Race Problem is in the North", 9 November 1957
13 Pamphlets on Civil Rights Movement in Tennessee
a. Report on Nashville, 1960
b. A Chronology of Negotiations Leading to Lunch Counter Desegregation in Knoxville, Tennessee, 1960
14 Southern Regional Council report on "Lunch Counter Desegregation in Corpus Christi, Galveston and San Antonio, Texas", 1960
15 Southern Regional Council report on "Toward a Solution of the Sit-In Controversy", 1960
16 Southern Regional Council report on "The Student Protest Movement", Winter 1960
17 Material regarding Christianity and Race
a. "Bishops Speak on Race," The Methodist Review, January 1964 (4 copies)
b. Social Action Newsletter, June 1960
18 Escambia County (South Carolina) primary ballot with white supremacy logo, 3 May 1960
(Previously accessioned as 86-6.)
19 "Preliminary Report of Atrocities Committed Against Congolese Army Against White Population of Republic of the Congo," distributed by the Belgian Government Information Center, 1960
20 The Negro and Employment Opportunities in the South, published by the Southern Regional Council, 1961 (2 copies)
21 Works by Carleton Putnam
(Previously accessioned as 92-38.)
a. Race and Reason: A Yankee View, 1961
b. "The Road to Reversal", 1962
c. Review of Race and Reason by Southern Regional Council, 1962
d. "These are the Guilty", 1963 (2 copies)
e. Framework for Love: A Study in Racial Realities, 1964
f. "The Cause of the Race Crisis", 1975
g. "Recommended Reading", undated
h. Race: 11 Questions and 11 Answers, undated
i. Literary Offerings, undated
22 The Crusader of Florida, December 1962 (2 copies)
23 Report from the Southern Regional Council on "The Challenge of Desegregation for the American Police Executive", 1962
24 "Freedom Bus" broadsheet, circa 1963 (2 copies)
25 Robert Rankin, "The Impact of Civil Rights Upon Twentieth Century Federalism," issued by Department of Political Science, University of Illinois, 1963
26 The Crusader, published in Cuba with handwritten message on front "This leaflet being distributed by the SNCC and COFO workers among U. S. Negroes", May-June 1964
27 "A Conversation-Jobs, Machines and People," from the Southern Student Organizing Committee, 1964
28 Miscellaneous periodicals with articles regarding race
a. The Reporter, 21 May 1964
b. Change (Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions), May 1965
29 N. A. A. C. P. material
a. NAACP Christmas Seals with Cover letter, 1955
b. Reprint from Congressional Record of speech by Hon. Paul H. Douglas, "Is the NAACP Communist or Subversive", 1958
c. Reprint of article from Memphis Press Scimitar, "1963 Seen as Deadline for Racial Settlement", 18 May 1959
d. The Crisis, August-September 1965
e. Pamphlet, "The Truth versus Ugly Lies about the NAACP", undated
f. Pamphlet, "7 Steps to Political Freedom", undated
g. Pamphlet, "We Never Claimed it to be Authentic", undated (2 copies)
h. Pamphlet "The Church and Voter Registration", undated
30 Form letter from Martin Luther King, Jr. soliciting support for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, November 1965
31 Miscellaneous clipping regarding race, 1966
(Previously accessioned as 87-10.)
32 Press release from Voter Education Project, Southern Regional Council, "What Happened in the South", 1966
33 Report from the Sam Adams Committee of Public Safety, Chicago, circa 1966
34 Pamphlet from the Racial Preservation Society, circa 1966
35 Broadside from Student Coordinating Committee "Break the Chains", circa 1969
Box Folder
5 1 Clippings/reprints of article regarding Southern National Party and other nationalist groups, 1970s
(Previously accessioned as 79-30.)
2 Hunger U. S. A. Revisited: A Report by the Citizens' Board of Inquiry into Hunger and Malnutrition in the United States, published by the Southern Regional Council, circa 1970
3 Material regarding the Republic of New Africa, 1972
(Previously accessioned as 87-21.)
4 Greater Memphis Citizens Council newsletter The New Order
(Previously accessioned as 79-30.)
Volume 1, No. 1, November 1, 1974
Volume 1, No. 2, December 1, 1974
Volume 1, No. 3, January 1, 1975
Volume 1, No. 5, February 15, 1975
Volume 1, No. 6, March 7, 1975
5 Black History Playing Card Deck, 1977
(Previously accessioned as 91-30.)
6 Nationalist Party publications distributed by the Southern National Party
(Previously accessioned as 79-30.)
a. The Raven's Call, Alaskans for Independence, November 1978 and February 1979
b. English National Party Policy, undated
c. National Vanguard, March 1979
d. Front Line (Australia and New Zealand), December 1978
7 Southern National Party Question and Answer Sheets, circa 1979
8 The South Forever!: A Compilation of Four Speeches on the Subject of Southern Nationalism, by Elmore Douglass Greaves and Robert E. Lee McCampbell, 1979 (2 copies)
(Previously accessioned as 79-30.)
9 Southern National Party Political Questionnaire, 1979