Kitabı oku: «Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives», sayfa 19

Yazı tipi:

Websites with information:

http://uca.edu/archives/manuscript-collections/

Finding aid:

http://uca.edu/archives/m95-03-arkansas-womens-project-collection/

[0189] Richard K. Armey Collection, 1939-2002 (bulk 1985-2002)

Location: Congressional Archives, Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center, University of Oklahoma, 630 Parrington Oval, Room 101, Norman, OK 73019

Description: Richard Keith "Dick" Armey (1940- ) was a U.S. Representative from Texas' 26th congressional district (1985-2003) and House Majority Leader (1995-2003). Series 1: Clippings, 1983-2002, includes materials from national and Texas newspapers on a variety of topics, including abortion, anti-Semitism, burned black churches, conservatism, Contract with America, Contras in Nicaragua, Tom DeLay, Newt Gingrich, gun control, homosexuality, Jack Kemp, morality, prayer in schools, printed transcript of Rush Limbaugh interview with Richard K. Armey, racism, religious right, and school vouchers. Series 5: Schedules, 1985-2002, includes topics such as abortion, Conservative Opportunity Society, March for Life, National Right to Work Committee. Correspondents include American Security Council, Americans United for Life, Bill Archer, Cass Ballenger, Haley Barbour, Patrick J. Buchanan, William F. Buckley, Jr., George W. Bush, Cato Institute, Concerned Women for America, Conservative Digest, Philip M. Crane, Tom DeLay, Robert K. Dornan, Jack Fields, Newt Gingrich, Phil Gramm, Jesse Helms, Heritage Foundation, Jack Kemp, Trent Lott, National Religious Broadcasters, National Taxpayers Union, Oliver North, Pat Robertson, Karl Rove, Phyllis Schlafly (president of Eagle Forum), Strom Thurmond, Paul M. Weyrich, George F. Will, and Young America's Foundation. Series 12: Legislative, 1985-2002, contains files on abortion, freedom of access to clinic entrances, partial birth abortion ban, and The House Republican Plan for a Better America.

Websites with information:

http://www.ou.edu/special/albertctr/archives/collect.htm

Finding aids:

http://www.ou.edu/special/albertctr/archives/ArmeyInventory/armey.htm

http://cacarchives.ou.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=4&q=

[0190] J.A. Armfield Papers, ca. 1979-1983 [partly digital collection]

Location: Greensboro Historical Museum Archives, 130 Summit Ave., Greensboro, NC 27401

Description: The J.A. Armfield Papers consist primarily of items relating to the Greensboro Police Department, ca. 1979-1983, where Armfield was employed. Materials pertaining to the November 3, 1979, anti-Klan march that left five protestors dead comprise the bulk of the papers. Included are a police operations plan, posters, flyers, and newspaper articles.

Finding aid to digital collection:

https://library.uncg.edu/dp/crg/collection.aspx?c=69

[0191] George W. Armstrong Papers, 1891-1976, bulk 1914-1954, AR335

Location: Special Collections Division at The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, 702 Planetarium Place, Arlington, TX 76019

Description: George W. Armstrong (1866-1954) was a businessman, lawyer, and politician. Correspondence, financial records, legal documents, research notes, and publications. The George W. Armstrong Papers include his business and personal papers, 1914-1954; the papers of his wife, Mary C. Armstrong, 1949-1975; the George Van Horn Moseley Papers, 1947-1954; the Armstrong publication and pamphlet collection, 1909-1976; and posters, newspapers, and scrapbooks, 1891-1961. Armstrong's political correspondence reflects his activities with the Judge Armstrong Foundation and the Texas Educational Association, and his relationships with right-wing exponents including the Ku Klux Klan and leaders of the American anti-Semitic movement of the period, such as Gerald L. K. Smith and Elizabeth Dilling. The papers of George Van Horn Moseley, who headed the Judge Armstrong Foundation, 1949-1954, consist of his correspondence with Armstrong and others during this time and other records pertaining to the business of the foundation and the Texas Education Association. The Armstrong publication and pamphlet collection includes writings by Armstrong and others, research material, and correspondence. The last series contains notebooks, clippings, and flyers related to Armstrong's early political and business activities in Tarrant County; clippings of articles by Armstrong; ledgers from the Mississippi plantations; and newspapers, political posters, books, and pamphlets which reflect Armstrong's political philosophy. Series I. George W. Armstrong Correspondence and Papers, 1914-1954, contains correspondence with Marilyn R. Allen; Mrs. Ed C. Alumbaugh; American Gentile Protective Association; George W. Armstrong, Jr.; John Beaty; George S. Benson, president of Harding College in Arkansas; Grace Billings, editor of the anti-Semitic newsletter Women's Voice; Congressman Charles G. Binderup; The Britons, an English Fascist organization; Emory Burke; W. J. Cameron, editor of the Dearborn Independent; Frank W. Clark, President of the War Veterans Guardians; Upton Close (Josef Washington Hall); Calvin Coolidge; Bruce B. Corbin, an anti-Semitic Methodist minister; Fr. Charles E. Coughlin; Walter Crick, an English monetary reformer and associate of Arthur Kitson; J. S. Cullinan; Ida M. Darden, an Austin-based right-wing journalist and former associate of John H. Kirby, editor of the Southern Conservative; W. E. De Witt, of the Monetary Reform League; George Deatherage; Martin Dies; Elizabeth Dilling; Senator James O. Eastland; Economic Reform Club of England; Robert E. Edmondson, publisher of an anti-Semitic newsletter; Milton Elrod, editor of the Klansman, the official Klan paper; H. W. Evans, a national leader of the Ku Klux Klan; Farmers' Holiday Association; A. N. Field, a New Zealand anti-Semite and monetary theorist; Col. Ulrich Fleischhauer, editor of the World Service Newsletter, a Nazi publication; Frank E. Gannett of the Gannett newspapers; Senator Carter Glass; William A. Hanger, a Tarrant County State Senator and local leader of the Klan; J. V. Hardy of the Anti Al Smith Democrats; Merwin K. Hart, founder of the National Economic Council; W. H. "Coin" Harvey; Brown Harwood, a Klan leader; Senator J. Thomas Heflin; Will Hogg; Honest Money Founders; Charles B. Hudson, publisher of America In Danger!, an anti-Semitic newsletter; Harry A. Jung, editor of the American Vigilant Intelligence Federation, an anti-Semitic newsletter; Justice For Pelley Committee; Joseph Kamp; H. M. Keeling, an official of the Farmers' Holiday Association; Ann H. P. Kent, the mother of Tyler Kent; John Henry Kirby; Frederick Kister; Arthur Kitson; V. N. Kositsin, a White Russian anti-Semitic propagandist; Thomas B. Lee, a banker and amateur monetary theorist; Arnold S. Leese, an English anti-Semitic propagandist and Fascist political figure; Congressman William Lemke; Fulton Lewis; M. D. Lightfoot, Chairman of the National Constitutional Democrats Committee [anti-Smith]; Don Lohbeck; Senator Huey Long; Douglas MacArthur; Henry MacFarland; Col. W. G. MacKindric, Canadian monetary reformer, and anti-Semite; Dr. Ulrich Marquardt, an anti-Semitic propagandist; Z. E. Marvin, Dallas Klan leader; Russell Massey, a banker who wrote tracts on monetary reform; Col. Billy Mayfield, editor of Billy Mayfield's Weekly, a pro-Klan Texas newspaper; Senator Joseph McCarthy; Conde McGinley; Eugene Meyer; Alvin S. Moody, chairman of the "Hoover Democrats" and an official of the Texas Anti-Al Smith Democrats; George Van Horn Moseley; J. T. Newsom, an officer of the Farmers' Holiday Association; W. Lee O'Daniel; Willis Overholser, of the National Monetary Conference; Senator Robert Owen, President of the National Monetary Conference; Congressman Wright Patman; Adelaide Pelley Pearson, William Dudley Pelley's daughter; Westbrook Pegler; William Dudley Pelley; Pelley Publications, the propaganda organ for William Dudley Pelley's Silver Shirt fascist party; Gibbons Poteet, a Roxton, Texas, banker and monetary reformer; John E. Rankin; Milo Reno, president of the Farmers' Holiday Association; George W. Robnett (Church League of America); Col. Eugene N. Sanctuary; Fredrick H. Schmalz, an anti-Semitic propagandist; A. C. Shuler, of the Ku Klux Klan; Robert L. Slimp, a young States Rights Democrat; Gerald L. K. Smith; Jeremiah Stokes, Elizabeth Dilling's second husband; Herman Talmadge; Fr. A. W. Terminiello; the Texas Regulars, the Dixiecrat faction of the Texas Democratic party; Senator Elmer Thomas; Congressman Jacob Thorkelson; Strom Thurmond; James True, editor of the anti-Semitic newsletter Industrial Control Reports; Agnes Waters; Tom Watson; Atticus Webb, chairman of the Texas Anti-Saloon league; M. I. Woodward, an editor of the Dearborn Independent; M. B. Yeary, Secretary of the Farmer's Mercantile Association, an old Populist and monetary reform advocate; and Allen Zoll. Series II. Mary C. Armstrong Papers, 1949-1975, contains correspondence with George Armstrong, Jr.; Ida M. Darden; Mary Isham Keith Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution; Merwin K. Hart; Joseph Kamp; Liberty Lobby; Conde McGinley; George Van Horn Moseley; National Economic Council; and Gerald L. K. Smith. Series III. George Van Horn Moseley Papers, 1949-1954, contains correspondence with Marilyn R. Allen; George W. Armstrong; George W. Jr. Armstrong; American Heritage Protective Committee; H. H. Beamish; Emory Burke; Elizabeth Dilling; Ida M. Darden; James O. Eastland; William Henry MacFarland; Charles B. Hudson; Joseph Kamp; Conde McGinley; W. Lee O'Daniel; John E. Rankin; Gerald L. K. Smith; A. C. Shuler; and Strom Thurmond.

References:

A Guide to Archives and Manuscript Collections in the Special Collections Division at The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries (Arlington, Texas: UTA, 2000); History of Texas: Fort Worth and the Texas Northwest Edition, ed. Capt. B.B. Paddock (4 vols., Chicago: Lewis, 1922), v. 4, p. 726; Texans and their state, a newspaper reference work, ed. Harry T. Warner (1918), v. 1, p. 44.

Websites with information:

http://web.archive.org/web/20070420060547/http://library.uta.edu/guideToArchives/guideHist1.jsp

http://libraries.uta.edu/speccoll/findaids/guideHist1.htm#A15

https://archive.is/I3MPt#selection-1163.30-1163.39

http://libraries.uta.edu/speccoll/findaids/guideHist1.htm

Finding aid:

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utarl/02416/arl-02416.html

[0192] Charles W. Arnade Collection of Boliviana – Books and Pamphlets

Location: University of South Florida Libraries, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., LIB122, Tampa, FL 33620

Description: The Arnade Collection consists of roughly 3000 books and pamphlets, among which are publications from right wing opposition parties, including a copy of Bolivia: After three years of Revolutionary Dictatorship, by Demetrio Canelas, Head of the Bolivian Democratic Union Party [La Unión Democrática Boliviana] (November 1955), and a document in English issued in 1953 by Óscar Únzaga de la Vega, leader of the FSB [the Falange Socialista Boliviana (Bolivian Socialist Falange)].

Websites with information:

http://www.lib.usf.edu/special-collections/arnade-boliviana-books-pamphlets/

[0193] Papers of Hugh Oakeley Arnold-Forster, 1886-1910, Add MS 50275-50357

Location: Western Manuscripts collection, British Library, 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB, United Kingdom

Description: Hugh Oakeley Arnold-Forster (1855-1909) was a British politician and writer. He was among the founders of the Imperial Federation League in 1884, and became its secretary.

Catalogue description:

http://searcharchives.bl.uk

http://molcat1.bl.uk/

[0194] Harriette Simpson Arnow papers, 1907-2004, 81M2

Location: Special Collections, University of Kentucky Libraries, Margaret I. King Building, Lexington, Kentucky 40506-0039

Description: Harriette Simpson Arnow (1908-1986) was a novelist and historian. The papers include photographs, speeches, and materials documenting Arnow's political interests such as the House Un-American Activities Committee, the Vietnam War, and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Series II. Correspondence, 1918-1986. v. General Correspondence, 1918-1985, includes a request from HSA to the Veterans' Action Committee of Syracuse, New York for information about its anti-Communist activities, and a letter from HSA to Michigan Senator Pat McNamara concerning Communism and fascism. Series II. Correspondence, 1918-1986. v. General Correspondence, 1918-1985. B. Bickhoff and Gomon Correspondence, 1955-1985. b. Josephine Gomon, 1955-1977, discusses such topics as Chiang Kai-Shek, foreign policy, Henry Ford, Richard Nixon, Communism, John Birch Society, and integrated bussing. Series VII. Subject Files. i. Authors, contains files on T.S. Eliot, Granville Hicks, and Ezra Pound. Series VII. Subject Files. ii. Political, contains files on Anti-Communist and HUAC clippings, 1950-1953, 1954-1960, and undated; A Quarter-Century of Un-Americana, 1963; Common Sense, Anti-Communist newsletter, October 1957 to February 1960; Communist Activities among Aliens and National Groups, circa 1952; and Guide to Subversive Organizations and Publications.

Finding aids:

http://kdl.kyvl.org/catalog/xt7d7w674d0t/guide

https://nyx.uky.edu/fa/findingaid/?id=xt7d7w674d0t

[0194a] Nachlass Dr. Rudolf Aschenauer, 1940-1983, N 642

Location: Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv, Wiesentalstraße 10, 79115 Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

Description: Rudolf Aschenauer (1913-1983) was a defense attorney for Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg.

Reference:

Le stragi nazifasciste in Toscana 1943-45. 4. Guida archivistica alla memoria. Gli archivi tedeschi. A cura di Carlo Gentile. Prefazione di Enzo Collotti (Roma: Carocci editore, Regione Toscana - Giunta Regionale, 2005), p. 52.

Websites with information:

http://www.nachlassdatenbank.de/viewsingle.php?category=A&person_id=402&asset_id=371&sid=747c10595

70148baa70b2

https://www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de/item/5JEGMCKZJRAKHBLROWS7RXPJKVCYA2WK

https://invenio.bundesarchiv.de/basys2-invenio/main.xhtml

[0195] John M. Ashbrook Diaries, 1952-1982, MS 1168 mf

Location: Center for Archival Collections, William T. Jerome Library, 5th Floor, University Libraries, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403

Description: Daily entries, personal and professional, of a U.S. Congressman, representing the 17th Ohio Congressional District (1960-1982).

Permission required from Ashland University for any copies of the microfilm other than paper.

Websites with information:

http://ul2.bgsu.edu/finding_aids/items/browse?tag=Political&collection=23&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CTitle

http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/library/cac/bib/page39361.html

Finding aid:

http://ul2.bgsu.edu/finding_aids/items/show/1385

[0196] John M. Ashbrook political collection

Location: Ashland University Archives, 401 College Avenue, Ashland, Ohio 44805

Description: John Ashbrook's congressional office records. Ashbrook served as a Republican representative from Ohio from 1961 until his death in 1982. The collection includes files on the American Conservative Union, Americans for Constitutional Action, Conservatives, Communism, Fringe Groups, John Birch Society, HUAC House Committee on Un-American Activities, and Otto Otepka.

Websites with information:

http://www.auarchives.com/John%20M.%20Ashbrook.html

[0197] Papers of Wayne Ashcroft, 1939-1999 (bulk 1990s), GB 0152 MSS.412

Location: Modern Records Centre, University Library, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, United Kingdom

Description: Wayne Ashcroft (later George Ashcroft) (1977- ) was a member of the National Front when it changed its name to the National Democrats in 1995. He joined John McAuley in the breakaway group which retained the original name, becoming organiser of the Dudley and Wolverhampton Branch, the Walsall Branch and the West Midlands Region. He was also elected to the National Directorate in 1996 as organiser of the reformed Young National Front. The papers include publications and papers relating to the National Front; Young National Front; British National Party; National Democrats; other right wing publications and artefacts, 1939-1999; and newspaper cuttings, 1993-1999. MSS.412/HQ Papers relating to National Front Headquarters 1991-1998. 4. Publications 1975-[199-]. 1. Serials 1975-1998, contains copies of Britain First, Bulldog, Eastern Front, England, My Country, The Flag, The Flame, Herts, Beds & Bucks Bulldog, Lionheart, National Front News, The Nationalist, New Dawn, New Nation, Newcastle Patriot, True Brit, and Vanguard. 2. Monographs 1978-[199-], contains a copy of Attempted Murder, by Nick Griffin (N T Press, 1986). MSS.412/BNP Papers relating to British National Party 1975-1998. 4. Publications 1975-1998, contains copies of British Countryman; British Nationalist; Nationalism Today; New Frontier; Patriot; The Rune; Spearhead; BNP Book Service Catalogue [199-]; The Enemy Within: How TV brainwashes a nation [19--] By John Tyndall; No to Maastricht and No to Europe! Exploded: The myth that Britain has no future outside the EC [19--]; A New Way Forward: The political objectives of the British National Party [19--]; Activists' Handbook [19--] [online at http://www.bnp.org.uk/PDF/activists.pdf]; Spreading the Word: British National Party handbook on propaganda [19--]; Who Are the Mind-Benders? The people who rule Britain through control of the mass media [19--]; Fight Back! 1992 (BNP election manifesto); Vote for Britain 1994 (BNP election manifesto); Britain Reborn: A programme for the new century 1997 (BNP election manifesto). MSS.412/ND Papers relating to National Democrats 1995-1998. 4. Publications 1995-1997, contains copies of The Flag July/August 1995-1997 and Vanguard June 1995-1997. MSS.412/5 Other publications 1939-1999. 1. Serials arranged in alphabetical order 1976-1999, contains copies of Action; Anthology 21 1993 Issue 1 (collection of verse edited by D. Owens); The Anvil (International Third Position); Backlash; Berserker; Blitzkrieg; Blood and Honour [links with Combat 18]; British Freepress; British Oi!; British Worker; Broadsword; Candour; Choice; Choose Democracy (United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP)); Chronicle; Combat 18; Comrade (Truth at Last); Confederate Underground; Conquest (Third Position); Counter Culture (Third Way); Crusader; Eastern Eye; The European; Final Conflict; Focal Point (Focus Policy Group, chaired by David Irving); Freemasons News (Political Research Association); Gothic Ripples (Colin Jordan); Highlander; Holocaust News (Historical Review Press, which has links to David Irving); Independence (United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP)); The Individual; League Sentinel (League of St George); Mainlander; Marxism; Marxist Monthly; Middle American News; Mirth; National Socialist Worldwide Web; National Review; National Vanguard; New Order; New Ulster Defender; The Order; Private Eye; Putsch; Race Equality News; Racial Loyalty; Reader's Digest; Rebellion; Redwatch (Combat 18); Regional News; Right Now; The Scorpion; Scottish Freedom Fighter; Searchlight; South African Patriot; The Sunday Mirror; Storm; Target; The Third Way; This England; Tomorrow's Job; The Truth at Last; Ulster Sentinel; Ulster Unionist; The Voice; The Voice of St George (Third Position); The Weekly Journal; White Dragon; White Eagle; White Resistance; White Rose; White Skins: White Pride; and White Warriors. MSS.412/5/2 Monographs arranged in alphabetical order 1939-1998, contains The Biology of the Race Problem, by Wesley C. George (Historical Review Press, 1963) [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/pdf/G/Ge/George_Wesley_Critz_-_The_biology_of_the_race_problem.pdf]; Behind Communism, by Frank L. Britton; A Candidate for the Order, by Michael A. Hoffman II (New Traditional Press, USA, 1988); The Controversy of Zion, by Douglas Reed (Veritas Publishing Co Pty Ltd, Australia, 1985); Cromwell and the Jews; Deadlier than the H-Bomb, by Wing Commander Leonard Young (Inter-City Research Press, 1992); In Defence of Hilaire Belloc (Church in History Information Centre, UK); A Dog's Tale (Combat 18); Edict of Expulsion 1290 (Public Record Office, London, 1985); Enemies of the Queen, by Kitty Little (Steven Books, Middlesex, 1982); England and Europe, by John Amery (1943); Fascism in England, 1928-1940 (Final Conflict, 1997); The Grand Design, by Douglas Reed (Dolphin Press, 1977); The Hoax of the 20th Century, by Arthur R. Butz (Historical Review Press, 1977); Holocaust Denial: New Nazi lie or new Inquisition? by Alexander Baron (Anglo-Hebrew Publishing, 1994); The Holy Book of Adolf Hitler, by James Larratt Battersby (German World Church in Europe, 1952); Hunter, by Andrew Macdonald (National Vanguard Books (1994); Is the Diary of Anne Frank Genuine? by Robert Faurisson (Institute for Historical Review, 1985); IQ and Racial Differences, by Henry E. Garrett (Noontide Press and the Historical Review Press, 1980) [online at http://www.pdfarchive.info/pdf/G/Ga/Garrett_Henry_Edward_-_IQ_and_racial_differences.pdf]; Jewish Press-Control, by Arnold Leese (Stevens, Middlesex, 1939); The Longest Hatred: An examination of anti-Gentilism (Inter-City Research Press, London, 1991); Mammon Versus God, by Kitty Little (Inter-City Research Press, London, 1993); Martyrs: The Falange; Merrie England - 2000, by Colin Jordan (Gothic Ripples, Harrogate, 1993); Nationalist Doctrine, by Joe Pearce (Freedom Books, London, 1987); The New Unhappy Lords, by A. K. Chesterton (Candour Publishing, Hampshire, 1975); None Dare Call it Conspiracy, by Gary Allen (Concord Press, California, 1972); November 9th Society Organisation Book, by Terry Flynn; Otto Strasser: The German contribution to revolutionary nationalism (The Rising Press, London, 1995); Our Financial Masters, by A. Raven Thomson (Stevens Books, Middlesex); Our Jewish Aristocracy: A revelation, by Arnold Leese (Historical Reprint Series); The Political Soldier: A statement, by Derek Holland (Third Position, London, 1994); Political Soldier: Thoughts on sacrifice and struggle, by Derek Holland (Burning Books, Surrey, 1989); Race and Politics, by H. B. Isherwood (Racial Preservation Society, Warwickshire, 1978); Race and Reality: A search for solutions, by Carleton Putnam (Howard Allen, USA, 1967); Religion and the Racial Controversy, by H. B. Isherwood (Racial Preservation Society, Warwickshire, 1970); Satanism and its Allies (Final Conflict, 1998); Skrewdriver Songbook; The Turner Diaries, by Andrew Macdonald (National Vanguard Books, 1990); Usury, by Hilaire Belloc (St George Educational Trust); White Lies: Anti-Fascist action (Leeds Nationalist Council, 1995); and A World Coup d'Etat Is Planned (Inter-City Research Centre, 1984).

Finding aids:

http://mrc-catalogue.warwick.ac.uk/records/WAS

http://www.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ead/412.htm

http://web.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/ead/412.htm

http://dscalm.warwick.ac.uk/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqDb=Catalog&dsqCm

d=NaviTree.tcl&dsqField=RefNo&dsqItem=WAS

[0198] Robert T. Ashmore Papers, 1914-2002

Location: South Carolina Political Collections, Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections Library, University of South Carolina Libraries, 1322 Greene Street, Columbia, SC 29208

Description: Robert T. Ashmore (1904-1989) represented South Carolina's 4th District in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1953 to January 1969. Contains files on Civil Rights and Communism. Documents include constituent letters concerning Ashmore's claim that Communism was infiltrating the American way of life and Ashmore's attack on Protestant ministers and educators, 1958; a variety of anti-Communist propaganda distributed within the United States in the 1950s; and a 1951 House Report on the spread of Communism in the American way of life.

Websites with information:

http://library.sc.edu/p/Collections/SCPC/Collections

http://library.sc.edu/blogs/scpc/2012/03/01/scpc-research-guide-the-cold-war-part-2/

Finding aids:

http://library.sc.edu/scpc/ashmore.html

http://library.sc.edu/scpc/Ashmore.pdf

[0198a] Asian People's Anti-Communist League

Location: Wilson Center Digital Archive, One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 [digital collection]

Description: The Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League included South Korea, the Philippines, South Vietnam, and a number of other Asian countries and territories. The collection contains 58 documents on several of the early conferences convened by the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League in South Korea, the Philippines, and Vietnam and attended by delegations from across Asia.

Finding aid:

http://digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org/collection/193/asian-peoples-anti-communist-league

[0199] Asiatic Exclusion League records, 1906-1910, larc.ms.0145

Location: Labor Archives and Research Center, J. Paul Leonard Library, Room 460, San Francisco State University, 1630 Holloway Ave, San Francisco, CA 94132-1722

Description: The Asiatic Exclusion League was founded in 1905 in San Francisco, California, as the Japanese and Korean Exclusion League. In 1908 the organization changed its name to the Asiatic Exclusion League. The bulk of the Asiatic Exclusion League records consist of the minutes and proceedings of monthly meetings and the first convention of the League, spanning the years 1906-1910; the collection also contains the proceedings of the first two conventions of the Anti-Japanese Laundry League founded in 1908; the transcript of a debate at St. Ignatius College; a pamphlet by Samuel Gompers on Asian workers entitled "Meat vs. Rice"; and a detailed index to its contents. In addition to these items, photocopies of selected articles on Asian exclusion from the Labor Clarion between 1904-1915 were added to the collection in 2006.

Finding aid:

http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c89k4c1p/entire_text/

[0200] Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (ALU) Records, 1966-1989, IHRC #250

Location: Ukrainian American Collection, Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota, 311 Elmer L. Andersen Library, 222 21st Ave S, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (Soiuz Vyzvolennia Ukrainy) was founded in Germany in 1952. Since 1959, its headquarters have been in New York City, with branches in other countries. The Association is a political organization which maintains a conservative-right view and publishes occasionally the journal Misiia Ukrainy (Mission of Ukraine). Records of the Association for the Liberation of Ukraine (ALU) consist of materials pertaining to the organization's activities in the United States.

Finding aid:

http://ihrc.umn.edu/research/vitrage/all/am/ihrc250.html

[0201] Association for Voluntary Sterilization Records, 1929-1981 (bulk 1945-1977), SW 15

Location: Social Welfare History Archives, 320 Elmer L. Andersen Library, University of Minnesota, 222 21st Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN 55455

Description: The Association for Voluntary Sterilization (AVS) promoted the benefits of voluntary sterilization as a means of family planning and population control. Its predecessor, The Sterilization League of New Jersey, was formed in 1937 to promote the eugenic sterilization of the physically and developmentally disabled and persons with mental illness. Various name changes reflected the association's growing emphasis on voluntary sterilization as a means of birth control and ongoing efforts to disassociate itself from eugenic sterilization. Includes records of predecessor organizations that promoted eugenic sterilization. Contains primarily: minutes, correspondence, clippings, financial records, reports, and statistics showing sterilizations by state. Topics include: eugenic sterilization of mentally ill and developmentally disabled persons; medical, legal, and socio-economic aspects of sterilization; efforts to educate doctors, social workers, and the public about sterilization; referrals and financial assistance for individuals seeking sterilization; lawsuits against hospitals that denied sterilization procedures; regional and international voluntary sterilization programs in Appalachia and developing countries; public responses for and against sterilization; and the administration of AVS and its predecessors. Series 1.1 AVS Predecessors, 1929-1969, contains minutes and papers of the five predecessors of AVS: Sterilization League of New Jersey, Sterilization League for Human Betterment, Birthright, Human Betterment Association of America, and Human Betterment Association for Voluntary Sterilization. Subseries Sterilization League of New Jersey contains a model sterilization bill presented to the New Jersey legislature and material pertaining to Roman Catholic opposition to sterilization. Correspondents include the American Birth Control League and H. L. Mencken. Subseries Birthright includes material re the proposal of W. P. Draper to sterilize 100,000 in the South to prevent the advance of miscegeny and on the impact of the Nazi sterilization program on activities in the U.S. Among the correspondents are Sheldon Reed, director of the University of Minnesota Dight Institute, and C. M. Goethe. Series 4.3 General Correspondence, 1950-1974, contains files on Hon. James L. Buckley, Senator Everett Dirksen, Wickliffe Draper, Euthanasia Educational Fund, Inc., Euthanasia Society of America, Heredity, Human Betterment Federation, Human Betterment Foundation, Immigration, H. L. Mencken, Frederick Osborn, and the Scaife Family of Pittsburgh. Series 4.4 International Correspondence, 1951-1973, contains a file on C. M. Goethe. Series 7. Sterilization Statistics, 1935-1969, contains sterilization statistics which were gathered annually or biennially by the Human Betterment Foundation. The Foundation was established in 1928 by Ezra S. Gosney, a Pasadena philanthropist, to "foster and aid constructive and educational forces for the protection and betterment of the human family." Series 9.9 Newspaper Clippings 1945-1976, consists of newspaper clippings regarding sterilization-related subjects, including material re sterilization in Nazi Germany. The subseries Newspaper clippings: Syndicated Columnists contains clippings of columns by John Chamberlain and Paul Harvey.

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0+
Litres'teki yayın tarihi:
25 mayıs 2021
Hacim:
5250 s. 1 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9783838266053
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