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Nabb Center Finding Aid Portal

Items with subject 'Racism'

Showing results 25–36 of 51

Having Fun on the Run Postcards

by Curt Teich & Company (1942)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This set of 18 postcard views entitled "Having Fun on the Run" were created in 1942 by Curt Teich Company. The postcard, which would have been sent by someone on vacation, includes several racist and sexist depictions in its illustrations.

Associated Subjects: Graphic Arts • Postcards • Racism • Sexism • Voyages and Travel
Identifier: SC2014.046
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Joseph Hopwood collection

by Hopwood, Joseph E. (1993)

1 folder (0.01 linear feet)

The Joseph Hopwood collection contains an authored work by Joseph E. Hopwood titled "A Note on the Socio-Cultural History of the Black Communities of Wetipquin and Tyaskin."

Associated Subjects: Racism
Identifier: 2006.161
Repository: Local History Archives
Attachment: No attachment

Joseph Moore collection

by Moore, Joseph (1849, 2006)

10 boxes,  1 oversize folder (13 linear feet)

Joseph Moore, a Berlin, Worcester County, Maryland attorney, devoted the better part of 20-plus years to researching and writing on the trial and outcome of the murder of Green Davis and his family by Euel Lee aka Orphan Jones, 1863-2006. The series of documents culminated in the publication, “Murder on Maryland’s Eastern Shore: Race, politics, and the Case of Orphan Jones”. Records document the proceedings of the events surrounding the Davis family murders. Presentments and court materials by Lee’s attorney Bernard Ades with corresponding newspaper accounts reflect the legal proceedings of confessed murderer Euel Lee / Orphan Jones, and his ultimate death by lynching in the Baltimore County Jail, 1933. Records within this set also reflect Moore’s vested interest in Worcester County history, including the Henry and Dirickson families, as well as the Civil War, specifically Purnell’s Legion, and the freedmen of color who served for the Union and Confederate Armies. Photostatic copies of manumissions, and general enrollment records for the duration of the war, as well as an original receipt for enslaved persons in 1863, reveal Moore’s commitment to Worcester County, Maryland.

Identifier: 1998.096
Repository: Local History Archives
Attachment: No attachment

Lift Every Voice Project

by Wicomico Public Libraries (circa 2020)

1 box (0.25 linear feet)

The "Lift Every Voice" project was aimed to engage local teens with older local members of the African American community who could provide memories and recollections of race relations and racial injustice in Salisbury and Delmarva. Along with these interviews, participating teens would meet in a community poetry workshop to create a community poem from the content of their interviews.

Associated Subjects: African American History • Desegregation • Racism • Segregation
Identifier: LEV
Repository: Local History Archives
Attachment: No attachment

Lynching Postcard (Dallas, Texas)

by Unknown (1910)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This postcard depicts the lynching of 65-year-old Allen Brooks on Dallas’ Main Street on March 3, 1910. The postcard is addressed to a woman by the name Sarah Gay in Stockton, California.

Associated Subjects: Lynching • Postcards • Racism
Identifier: SC2014.066
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Martin and Wright Store Ledger (Martinsburg, (West) Virginia)

by Unknown (1835 – 1837)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

The Martin and Wright Store Ledger documents the financial transactions of the Martinsburg, (West) Virginia general store between 1835 and 1837. At the time, Berkeley County was part of the state of Virginia and many of the homes held slaves. Domestic and imported items purchased from or bartered with the store included daily goods like eggs, coffee, sundries, as well as other items such as coffins, tobacco, and cholera syrup.

Associated Subjects: Accounting Records • Business • Country Life • Economics • Racism
Identifier: SC2013.110
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Millwood Plantation Journal (Old Long Field, Maryland)

by Barrett Family (1863 – 1865)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This journal was used both as a diary and as a business ledger for a plantation known as Millwood, located in Old Long Field, Prince George's County, Maryland (present day Forestville), between 1863 and 1865. The journal was printed by J.W. Randolph in Richmond, Virginia and was intended as to be a "Plantation and Farm Instruction, Regulation, Record, Inventory, and Account Book For the Use of the Manager on the Estate." The journal begins with 20 pages of printed text that describes how to run a successful plantation including tables, data, and diagrams, as well as a section on the "Treatment of Negroes." Following the printed section are sporadic daily entries written by two different authors, likely from the Barrett family, who recorded the operations of the plantation, family events, and brief comments on the American Civil War between 1863 and 1864. There is also one page that lists six slaves in the inventory: Tom, Jim, John, Gill, Sarah, and Phebe. The transcribed journal is attached.

Identifier: SC2016.080
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: View Attachment

Mississippi Cotton Plantation Photograph

by Unknown (1909)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This stereoview photograph depicts African American individuals picking cotton on a Mississippi plantation. Text on the verso describes the process of cotton picking.

Associated Subjects: Photography • Racism • Farm Life • African American History
Identifier: SC2016.116
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Native American Trade Cards

by Unknown (circa 1880s)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

These three trade cards for circa 1880s products show racist depictions of Native American people.

Associated Subjects: Postcards • Racism
Identifier: SC2013.073
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Negro Minstrels Booklet

by T.S. Denison & Company (publisher)Townsend, Charles (1891)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This booklet, entitled Negro Minstrels with End Men's Jokes, Gags, Speeches, Etc., was written by Charles Townsend and published by T.S. Denison & Company in 1891. It contains a brief history of minstrelsy, lessons on organizing a minstrel, and scripts for performances.

Associated Subjects: Racism • Programs
Identifier: SC2017.011c
Repository: Special Collections
Attachment: No attachment

Pamphlet entitled Whence Did The Negro Originate

by Unknown (1910)

1 folder (0.1 linear feet)

This pamphlet--Whence Did The Negro Originate--was written in 1910 by the Rev. N. J. Tilghman, who was born in Salisbury, Maryland and lived in Palatka, Florida. The pamphlet details the racist theory that Black people became a separate race after the biblical Cain married an ape.

Associated Subjects: Racism • Religion
Identifier: 2020.014
Repository: Local History Archives
Attachment: No attachment

Phineas Gordy Schoolbook Collection

by Butler, Paul (1911 – 1915)

1 box (0.5 linear feet)

The Phineas Gordy Papers document the attendance and grade efforts from the students under Gordy from 1911 to 1915 (with one item possibly dating 1929-1931). Phineas Gordy was the founder of the African American school in Salisbury Maryland. It includes details concerning everyday life with the students and the student’s name, grade scores, age, and what grade year they were enrolled in. This collection offers pictures of Gordy and one of his all boys class. This collection consists of photocopies of the original documents.

Associated Subjects: Deshields Family • African American History • Racism
Identifier: 2010.065
Repository: Local History Archives
Attachment: No attachment