African Americans
Found in 35 Collections and/or Records:
Anna Lively Letters, 1933-1937
Letters and postcards to Anna Lively of Louisville, Kentucky, primarily from her husband A. J. Lively, a porter with the Pullman Company, telling her about his travels, as well as discussing politics, religion, and personal health. There is also a promissory note to the Pullman Company for an advance on his salary.
Aunt Judy holding an infant, 1923 November
Civilians and military watching baseball game at Schofield Barracks, 1914-1918
This collection consists of 534 photographs from World War I, a drawing, and a short narrative.
Clipping about Langston Hughes, 1995
One book review for a volume of collected poems by American poet Langston Hughes (1901-1967) from The New York Times, February 8, 1995.
Folder 7, 1890s
Photographs depicting unidentifed people.
Folder 9, 1890s
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 13, 1890s
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 15
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 16
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 17
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 18
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 19
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 22
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 30
Photographs depicting unidentified people.
Folder 31
Photographs depicting unidentified people, church buildings, urban areas, railroad tracks, and cotton gin.
Folder 32
Photographs depicting unidentified people and places.
Folder 33
Photographs depicting unidentified people and places.
Folder 34
Photographs depicting unidentified people, factory interior, and cemetery scene.
Folder 35
Photographs depicting unidentified people, farm scene, and family portraits.
Folder 38
Photographs depicting people playing cards, portraits of unidentified people, and family portraits.
Folder 39
Photographs depicting church interior, school picnic, unidentified people, and grocery store.
Folder 41
Photographs depicting portraits of unidentified people, visit to Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, fairgrounds, school children with their teachers, canoeing, and covered bridge in Cambridgeboro, Pennsylvania.
Folder 46
Photographs are depicting school children, family portraits, and other unidentified people.
Folder 48
Photographs depicting aerial view of Wallace, Idaho, a grocery store, and unidentified people.
Folder 51
Photographs depicting unidentified people, and places.
Folder 53
Photographs are depicting a river dam, construction are, unidentified families, and a school building.
Group of people looking at a document, 1956 February
Photographs of Autherine Lucy attending The University of Alabama in February 1956. Lucy was the first African American student admitted to the school. University administrators expelled her after a few tumultuous days on campus.
Mary L. Scott Letters and Artwork - Letters, 1923-1948, 1923-1948
Mary L. Scott Letters and Artwork - Painting
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Ford Letters, 1889-1893
Two letters written to Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Ford, from Mrs. Ford's mother and another friend, filled with typical gossip, with one letter describing the rumor regarding an African American man at a local woman's house.
Paul Laurence Dunbar Letter, 1905 April 15
Poet Paul Laurence Dunbar writes from Dayton, Ohio, to Mr. Earl N. Hale, in Dayton, Ohio, in response to Hale's request for an autograph. Dunbar writes of a recent illness but expresses much pleasure at recovery and the opportunity to provide the autograph to Hale.
Small group of people looking at a document, 1956 February
Photographs of Autherine Lucy attending The University of Alabama in February 1956. Lucy was the first African American student admitted to the school. University administrators expelled her after a few tumultuous days on campus.
Two men in suits standing out outside, circa 1915
This collection consists of 534 photographs from World War I, a drawing, and a short narrative.
Two young boys and an African American woman, perhaps their nanny, in a wooded area, 1920s
This collection consists of eighty-one black and white photographs depicting scenes from Seneca, Westminster, and Charleston, South Carolina. This collection also depicts members of an unidentified family, possibly from South Carolina.
William C. Castleman Letter, 1928-01-18
Letter from William C. Castleman of Sparta, Kentucky, to Lura C. Backer of Verona, Kentucky, telling her how much he misses her and loves her.