African Americans.
Found in 19 Collections and/or Records:
Bibliographies: Blacks / African Americans
This collection contains news releases, reports, brochures, flyers, small published and unpublished items, and other ephemeral materials documenting the history, events, customs and social lives of peoples in the Appalachian region of the United States.
Blacks (African Americans / Affrilachians)
This collection contains news releases, reports, brochures, flyers, small published and unpublished items, and other ephemeral materials documenting the history, events, customs and social lives of peoples in the Appalachian region of the United States.
Blacks / African Americans (Box 26)
This collection contains news releases, reports, brochures, flyers, small published and unpublished items, and other ephemeral materials documenting the history, events, customs and social lives of peoples in the Appalachian region of the United States.
Celebration of Traditional Music
Records documenting the Celebration of Traditional Music, an annual event striving to represent homemade music passed on from person to person in the Appalachian Region and the musicians who play it.
Correspondence, 1893
Correspondence, 1894
Griggs Correspondence with Whitney M. Young, 1946
First African American president, led Lincoln Institute for over 40 years. Regarding education of blacks at Berea College, Mary Merrit, effect of Day Law on education opportunities of blacks in Kentucky.
Griggs Corrpespondence with Carter G. Woodson, 1946
Notes and correspondence of Katharine C. Griggs in her role as Historical Register; Researching "certain phases of Berea history" and gathering materials and historical information regarding racial relations and black students (pre-Day Law) at Berea College.
Some of the correspondence within this series is available in digital format, see list below.
Henry Allen Laine writing about the women teachers of Berea, 1926
Henry Allen Laine, a black student who became a teacher, writing about the women teachers of Berea in the late 19th century, including Mrs. Eugene Fairchild.
Jim Embry essay "Ancestral Vibrations Guide Our Connection to the Land", 2019
Unedited version of an essay submitted October 15, 2019 by Jim Embry to We Are Each Other's Harvest by Natalie Baszile published by Harper Collins April 2021. Gift of the author. Jim Embry is a native of Richmond, Kentucky. The essay discusses Jim Embry's family history, the plight of African Americans after the Civil War, the Black Chautauqua movement in Kentucky, agriculture, and food activism. It also contains numerous references to Berea College.