Kitabı oku: «Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives», sayfa 48
List of collections:
http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/
http://crdl.usg.edu/collections/?Welcome
Finding aids:
http://crdl.usg.edu/
http://crdl.usg.edu/export/html/usm/crmda/crdl_usm_crmda_eej010.html
[0572] Civil Rights During the Eisenhower Administration, Part 1: White House Central Files. Series A: School Desegregation (Bethesda, MD, A UPA Collection from LexisNexis, 2006) [microfilm]
Description: The documents reproduced in this publication are from the Papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower in the custody of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, National Archives and Records Administration. Contains material on the crisis in Little Rock, Arkansas, where Governor Orval E. Faubus ordered the Arkansas National Guard to prevent nine black children from entering Central High School; the Faubus decision to close Little Rock public schools in the fall of 1958, rather than allow them to integrate, as well as their reopening and permanent integration in 1959. Also contains material on the integration in 1956 of Clinton High School in Clinton, Tennessee, including the deployment of National Guard troops, the tactics and arrest of agitator Frederick J. Kasper, and the stabilizing actions of principal D. J. Brittain, Jr. Correspondents include Bruce Alger, Byron De La Beckwith, Tom P. Brady, Virginius Dabney, Everett M. Dirksen, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Milton S. Eisenhower, Orval E. Faubus, W. C. George, G. T. Gillespie, Marvin Griffin, Roy V. Harris, David Lawrence, Noah M. Mason, Theodore R. McKeldin, Westbrook Pegler, Leander H. Perez, Samuel B. Pettengill, Carleton Putnam, Maxwell M. Rabb, Fred Schwarz, W. J. Simmons, Dan Smoot, John Sparkman, John Stennis, Herman E. Talmadge, Henry J. Taylor, Strom Thurmond, Kenneth D. Wells, and J. Arthur Younger. Topics include alleged biblical support for segregation; American States' Rights Association; anti-Semitism; anti-integration actions; D. J. Brittain, Jr.; Brown v. Board of Education; Central High School (Little Rock, Arkansas); church bombings; Citizens Councils of America; citizens' councils; Clinton, Tennessee; Communism; desegregation; Orval E. Faubus; House Un-American Activities Committee; integration; Frederick J. Kasper; Ku Klux Klan; Little Rock, Ark., crisis; lynching; miscegenation as "un-American"; mixed marriage ban; NAACP as Communist front; Westbrook Pegler; Carleton Putnam; racial violence; racial discrimination; school desegregation; school bombing; segregation; "Southern Manifesto" (March 12, 1956), opposing desegregation; states' rights; States' Rights Council of Georgia; John Stennis; and Horace V. Wells.
Finding aids:
http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/101150.pdf
http://www.roosevelt.nl/sites/zl-roosevelt/files/civil_rights_during_the_eisenhower_administration_part_1__
white_house_central_files_series_a__school_deegregation.pdf
[0573] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 1: The White House Central Files and Staff Files and the President's Office Files. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Frederick, Maryland, University Publications of America, Inc., 1986) [microfilm]
Description: Part 1 of Civil Rights during the Kennedy Administration is drawn from three major record groups found at the John F. Kennedy Library: the White House Central Files (in particular, the Subject File), the White House Staff Files, and the President's Office Files. Names and subjects include anti-poll tax amendments, anti-Semitism, Ross R. Barnett, bombings, civil rights legislation, civil rights, Communism, desegregation, discrimination, Orval E. Faubus, Senator Philip A. Hart, J. Edgar Hoover, integration, Jim Crowism, Curtis E. LeMay, massive resistance, Benjamin Muse, poll tax, pro-segregation groups, race relations, racism, reverse Freedom Riders, school integration, segregated schools, segregation, Senator John Sparkman, Senator Strom Thurmond, University of Mississippi integration, George C. Wallace, and White Citizens' Councils.
Finding aid:
http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/1348_CivRtsKennedyPt_1.pdf
[0574] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 2: The Papers of Burke Marshall, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Frederick, Maryland, University Publications of America, Inc., 1986) [microfilm]
Description: Files on Governor Ross Barnett; Citizens Councils of Louisiana; civil rights; Communist Party (U.S.); desegregation; discrimination; Highlander Folk School; integration; Ku Klux Klan; Lester Maddox; James Meredith; Mississippi File—"Ole Miss" integration; Benjamin Muse; poll tax legislation; poll tax; Racial violence; United States v. Association of Citizens Councils of Louisiana; and Governor George Wallace.
Finding aid:
http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/1350_CivilRtsJFKAdminPt2.pdf
[0575] Civil Rights During the Kennedy Administration, 1961-1963. Part 3: The Civil Rights Files of Lee C. White. A collection from the holdings of The John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts (Bethesda, MD, A UPA Collection from LexisNexis, 2007) [microfilm]
Description: The documents in this microfilm collection were filmed from the Papers of John F. Kennedy, Presidential Papers, White House Staff Files: Lee C. White, at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston, Massachusetts. Subjects include Anti-Poll Tax Amendments; Anticommunism; Christian Crusade; civil rights; Communism and communist parties; Barry Goldwater; John Birch Society; poll tax; racial discrimination; segregation; and states' rights.
Finding aid:
http://cisupa.proquest.com/ksc_assets/catalog/101773.pdf
[0576] Civil Rights Greensboro [digital collection]
Location: Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries, 222B Jackson Library, P.O. Box 26170, Greensboro, NC 27402
Description: Civil Rights Greensboro provides access to archival resources documenting the modern civil rights era in Greensboro, North Carolina, from the 1940s to the early 1980s. Historical materials include correspondence, reports, speeches, photographs, newspaper clippings, and oral histories held at five cultural heritage institutions in North Carolina. Clippings and other materials on the Greensboro Massacre, 1979; American Nazi Party; Harold A. Covington; Ku Klux Klan; and segregation.
Finding aids:
http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/CivilRights
http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/search/collection/CivilRights
http://libcdm1.uncg.edu/cdm/ref/collection/CivilRights/id/2024
[0577] Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive [digital collection]
Location: The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive, Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5053
Description: The Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive includes a selection of digitized photographs, letters, diaries, oral history transcripts, finding aids for manuscript collections, and other documents. Among the 2233 items are the following: a list of the Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission Schedule of payments to the White Citizens Council forum between the years 1960 and 1965; a press release from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, May 26, 1964, identifying organizations involved in statewide opposition to civil rights workers and the Freedom Summer 1964 project, including the Association of Tenth Amendment Conservatives (ATAC), based in Cleveland, Mississippi; the White Citizens councils; the Association for the Preservation of the White Race (APWR); and the Ku Klux Klan; a letter from William J. Simmons to Erle Johnston, Jr., November 18, 1987; photographs of Thomas P. Brady and William J. Simmons; and the following pamphlets: A Review of Black Monday, by Judge Tom P. Brady, October 28, 1954, which stresses the need for segregation among the races to protect the United States from decline as a civilization; A Christian view on segregation, by Rev. G. T. Gillespie, November 4, 1954, in which Gillespie states that racial separation is the way to support racial harmony. He says that Soviet Communists are behind the Civil Rights movement, because they want to break down the barriers between races so that racial amalgamation will occur. He contends that school integration will lead to intermarriage, and he cites Biblical and pseudoscientific reasons that segregation must continue. He also quotes Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Booker T. Washington; Conflicting views on segregation (circa 1955), a pamphlet containing a series of letters from Dr. Dotson McGinnis Nelson, President of Mississippi College, who believes in the segregation of the white and Negro races, and from Tom, an alumnus of the College, who believes in the contrary views; Ugly truth about the NAACP, an address by Attorney General Eugene Cook of Georgia before the 55th Annual Convention of the Peace Officers Association of Georgia, printed by the Citizens' Council, circa 1955, in which Cook alleges that the people who direct and subsidize the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) have records of affinity for, affiliation with, and participation in Communist, Communist-front subversive organizations, activities, and causes; "We've reached era of judicial tyranny," an address by James O. Eastland, December 1, 1955, in which Eastland defends states' rights and segregation in schools, proclaims the integration efforts of such organizations as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Council of Churches of Christ, and the Rockefeller Foundation are Communist-inspired organizations, which use the national media to foster their views; Interposition: The Barrier Against Tyranny, Speech of Representative John Bell Williams, January 25, 1956, in which Williams maintains the states have the right to declare a decision of the federal government, such as the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision, as illegal, invalid, and of no force and effect; Mixed schools and mixed blood, by Herbert Ravenel Sass (1956); Segregation and the South, Address by Judge Tom P. Brady, October 4, 1957, which presents the southern rationale for segregation, and describes African Americans as having an inherent deficiency in mental ability, and a natural indolence; Mid-west hears the South's story: An address by William J. Simmons, February 3, 1958, in which Simmons discusses segregation in the South, compares it to segregation in the Mid-west and in the North, argues segregation is a constitutionally protected right, and maintains the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Urban League are Communist-dominated organizations; South's Just Cause, by W. M. Caskey, April 22, 1961, which presents a defense of States' Rights, and argues the states have a legal right to continue the segregationist way of life; Race relations and civil rights: a southern point of view, an address by William J. Simmons, February 28, 1963, which stresses segregation is a successful system, because it is based on the realization that the races get along best when they are not forced to mingle socially; and A Jewish view on segregation, circa 1950-1960s [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1948]. [Harry P. Gamble, Sr.], Segregation of the White Race must Be Preserved (New Orleans, La., Society for the Preservation of State Government and Racial Integrity, June 1955) [online at http://digilib.usm.edu/cdm/compoundobject/collection/manu/id/1785/rec/1].
Finding aid:
http://digilib.usm.edu/crmda.php
[0578] Civil Rights miscellaneous collection, 1937-1969 and undated, MSS. 500
Location: Manuscripts Division, Special Collections, Mississippi State University Library, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408
Description: Broadsides, leaflets, circulars, publications, comics, and other materials documenting Anti-Communism, anti-Semitism, anti-left-wing activities, segregationism, and the American Eugenics Party in the United States.
Websites with information:
http://library.msstate.edu/specialcollections/manuscripts/fulllist.php
http://www.lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/civilrights/
http://lib.msstate.edu/specialcollections/collections/manuscripts/afam/
[0579] Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina from the 1950s to the 1970s [digital collection]
Location: State Archives of North Carolina, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, N.C. 27601
Description: This digital collection contains materials related to the Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina from the 1950s to the 1970s, including letters, speeches, reports, booklets, photographs, news clippings, court records, and proposed legislation. Topics covered include school desegregation and busing, voting rights, and civil rights protests and demonstrations. Includes N.C. House Bills (1955-1956) which tried to preserve racial segregation in public schools even after the Supreme Court's decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education; North Carolina's Public Schools Face a Crisis (Governor's Committee for the Public School Amendment, 1956), a brochure encouraging North Carolina voters to vote for a constitutional amendment to suspend public schools in order to prevent forced integration; Address by Governor Luther H. Hodges of North Carolina on State-Wide Radio-Television Network, August 8, 1955, on the topic of public schools and segregation, expressing his views opposing racial integration; The Segregation Problem in the Public Schools of North Carolina, Summary of Statements and Actions by Governor Luther H. Hodges, March 25, 1956 (1956); and Assorted Clippings on School Segregation, 1950s -1960s.
Websites with information:
http://ncarchives.wordpress.com/2014/02/05/civil-rights-movement-digital-collection/
Finding aids:
http://digital.ncdcr.gov/cdm/home/collections/civil-rights
http://digital.ncdcr.gov/cdm/search/collection/p16062coll17/display/200/order/date/ad/asc
[0580] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks. Alabama events, 1950-1969 [digital collection]
Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794
Description: Over the years Birmingham Public librarians collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama and arranged them in eight scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, and the Montgomery Advertiser. Topics covered include bus segregation ordered halted by Interstate Commerce Commission; Montgomery bus boycott; attempts at school desegregation; Supreme Court rules bus segregation is unconstitutional; and George Wallace defiance.
Websites with information:
http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/05/alabama-civil-rights-1950-1969.html
Finding aid:
http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20Rights%20Movement%
20scrapbooks.%20Alabama%20events/field/title/mode/all/conn/and/cosuppress/
[0581] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks. Mississippi events, 1948-1968 [digital collection]
Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794
Description: Over the years Birmingham Public librarians collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi and arranged them in three scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, and the Montgomery Advertiser. Topics covered include Governor Ross Barnett bars James H. Meredith from "Ole Miss" and University of Mississippi rioting.
Websites with information:
http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/05/mississippi-civil-rights-1948-1968.html
Finding aid:
http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20Rights%20Moveme
nt%20scrapbooks.%20Mississippi%20events%20volume/field/title/mode/exact/conn/and/cosuppress/
[0582] Civil Rights Movement scrapbooks, National events, 1945-1969 [digital collection]
Location: Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, Birmingham, AL 35203-2794
Description: Over the years librarians of the Birmingham Public Library collected newspaper articles about the Civil Rights Movement and arranged them in twelve scrapbooks. The articles were clipped from several newspapers including The Birmingham News, Birmingham Post-Herald, Montgomery Advertiser, and The Tuscaloosa News. Topics covered include Georgia "White Supremacy" Bill; Truman Civil Rights proposals; Southern reaction to Truman proposals; MacArthur speech to Congress; Eisenhower State of the Union Address; racial violence in Tennessee; Kentucky racial problems; bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama ends; Texas defies integration plans; Florida, Louisiana, Arkansas vow to continue segregation; civil rights bill approved; Georgia defies federal integration policy; Little Rock, Arkansas asks halt to integration; Virginia and Arkansas to defy integration; Governor John Patterson of Alabama warns Congress on civil rights; Atlanta, Georgia ordered to form integration plan; racial violence in Little Rock, Arkansas; peaceful integration in North Carolina and Virginia; New Orleans, Louisiana defies integration; racial violence in Greenville, South Carolina; Jacksonville, Florida racial violence; racial violence in New Orleans, Louisiana; Freedom Riders assailed by MacDonald Gallion; U.S. Marshals ordered into Alabama; Freedom Riders linked to Communist Cuba; "Reverse Freedom Riders"; Albany, Georgia racial violence; school desegregation continues throughout the South; federal judge orders University of Mississippi to admit James H. Meredith; Civil Rights Bill of 1963; civil rights murder case in Mississippi [Byron de la Beckwith]; Lester Maddox cafeteria goes out of business; and Birmingham, Alabama bombings.
Websites with information:
http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010_04_01_archive.html
http://bpldigital.blogspot.com/2010/04/united-states-civil-rights-1947-1969.html
http://www.bplonline.org/virtual/ContentDMSubjectBrowse.aspx?subject=African%20Americans--Civil%20Ri
ghts--United%20States
Finding aid:
http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/cdm/search/collection/BPLSB02/searchterm/Civil%20rights%20movement%2
0scrapbooks.%20national%20events%20volume/field/title/mode/all/conn/and/order/date/ad/f/cosuppress/
[0583] The Civil Rights Oral History Project Collection, 2002- [oral history; partly digital collection]
Location: Special Collections Division, Nashville Public Library, 615 Church Street, Nashville, TN 37219
Description: The collection includes audiocassettes, videocassettes, and transcripts of oral history interviews conducted by library staff and volunteers. Interviewees are civil rights veterans, educators, community members, journalist, police officers, observers, students, church leaders, and activists recalling events related to the civil rights movement in Nashville and the nation during the 1950s and 1960s. There are one hundred and twenty interviews and seventy-nine of these are transcribed. Includes a recorded interview with Bobby Cain, one of the "Clinton 12," and the first student to desegregate public schools in the South.
Websites with information:
http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/his_spcoll_coll_findingaids.asp
http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/findingaids/special_Collections_Division_Finding_Aid_Civil_Right
s_Collec.pdf
Finding aid:
http://www.library.nashville.org/localhistory/findingaids/Special_Collections_Division_Finding_Aid_CROHP.pdf
Finding aids to Nashville Public Library Digital Collection with excerpts of oral history interviews:
http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/nr
http://digital.library.nashville.org/cdm/search/collection/nr
[0583a] Kit Clardy Papers, 1950-1954, c.00278
Location: University Archives & Historical Collections, Michigan State University, Conrad Hall, 888 Wilson Road, Rm. 101, East Lansing, MI 48824-1327
Description: Kit Clardy (1892-1961), an East Lansing lawyer, was elected to represent Michigan's 6th district in Congress in 1952, serving one term. During his term, Clardy served on the House Un-American Activities Committee, concentrating his efforts on removing all Communist influences from American life. He brought a sub-committee to Michigan to investigate Communist activities in the state, particularly in the labor unions. This collection contains campaign literature, letters to constituents, newspaper clippings, and weekly "Washington Reports", which described Clardy's work to his constituents.
Websites with information:
http://archives.msu.edu/documents/LocalHistory.pdf
http://archives.msu.edu/documents/East_Lansing.pdf
http://archives.msu.edu/collections/documents/resourcelist.pdf
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000416
https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/850933234
http://www.worldcat.org/title/kit-clardy-papers-1950-1954/oclc/850933234
Finding aid:
http://archives.msu.edu/findaid/c278.html
[0583b] Adèle Goodman Clark papers, 1849-1978, M 9 [partly digital collection]
Location: Special Collections and Archives, James Branch Cabell Library, Box 842003, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23284-2003
Description: Adèle Goodman Clark (1882-1983) was a founding member of the Virginia suffrage movement and a prominent supporter of the arts in Virginia. The collection contains correspondence, reports, memoranda and publications reflecting the sentiments and political positions of both the pro- and anti- suffrage movement from 1913 until the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920. Series III: Equal Suffrage League of Virginia (ESLV), 1892-1926. Subseries E: Topical File, undated, 1892-1920, contains printed literature documenting the anti-suffrage movement, including copies of Woman Patriot, 1919-1920.
Websites with information:
https://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaead/vivaeadbrowse
Finding aid:
http://ead.lib.virginia.edu/vivaxtf/view?docId=vcu-cab/vircu00102.xml
Finding aid to digital collection:
Social Welfare History Image Portal (Ephemera from Women's Suffrage, Temperance, Civil Rights and Other Social Movements):
Copies of Diagram Showing Percentage of Increased Vote in New York with Woman Suffrage. Rural Representation Loses With Women Voting (New York: Women Voters' Anti-Suffrage Party, n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; The Dark and Dangerous Side of Woman Suffrage (New York: Women Voters' Anti-Suffrage Party, n.d.) [anti-suffrage publication]; The Red Behind the Yellow, Socialists Working for Suffrage (New York: New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, 1915) [anti-suffrage handbill]; Beware! Men of the South (n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; H. P. Petersen, Anti Suffrage Bill. By Woman, was Eden lost, and man cursed (n.d.) [anti-suffrage handbill]; and George Creel, "What Have Women Done With the Vote?" (Century Magazine (March 1914), reprinted in pamphlet form by the National American Woman Suffrage Association).
http://images.socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/
[0584] Carter Blue Clark Printed materials, 1922-1974
Location: Western History Collections, University of Oklahoma Libraries, 401 West Brooks Street, Norman, OK 73019
Description: Carter Blue Clark (1946- ) is an historian. Photocopies of articles (1923-1927) from Ku Klux Klan journals such as Kourier Magazine and Imperial Night-Hawk, including many with articles about the Klan in Oklahoma; newspaper articles (1922-1924) on the Klan in Oklahoma; papers (1923-1924) relating to Oklahoma Governor John C. Walton and the Klan; Klan pamphlets and handbooks (1920s) and interview transcripts (1972-1974) with Ira M. Finley, Albert S. Giles, and Leon Hirsch regarding the Klan in Oklahoma. Includes "The Klan's Mission--Americanism," The Kourier Magazine, Vol. 1, no. 12, November 1925, pp. 8-12; "Address by Dr. H.W. Evans," The Kourier Magazine, Vol. 2, no. 1, December 1925, pp. 3-4; "Dr. Evans, Imperial Wizard, Defines Klan Principles and Outlines Klan Activities," The Imperial Night-Hawk, Vol. 1, no. 43, January 23, 1924, pp. 2-3, 6-7; "The Meaning of 100% Americanism," The Imperial Night-Hawk, Vol. 2, no. 5, April 30, 1924, pp. 2-3; and Kloran. White Book, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
Reference:
Guide to manuscripts in the Western History Collections of the University of Oklahoma, compiled by Kristina L. Southwell (Norman, University of Oklahoma Press, 2002).
Websites with information:
http://libraries.ou.edu/locations/docs/westhist/pdf/
http://guides.ou.edu/westernhistory
Finding aid:
http://libraries.ou.edu/locations/docs/westhist/pdf/ClarkCarterBlue.pdf
[0584a] Ed Clark papers, 1972-1994, Coll. 2002C2
Location: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6010
Description: Ed Clark (1930- ) was the Libertarian Party candidate for governor of California in 1978 and for president of the United States in 1980. His papers, which primarily document these two campaigns, include correspondence, speeches and writings, press releases, clippings, election campaign literature, polling data, minutes, financial records, video tapes, sound recordings, and photographs. The series California gubernatorial campaign of 1978 file 1972-1981, contains correspondence with Charles Koch, copies of Libertarian Party News newspapers, and subject files on Gay rights and Proposition 13. The series United States presidential campaign of 1980 file 1975-1982, contains correspondence with Milton Friedman, Roger MacBride, and Murray Rothbard. The series Libertarian Party file 1972-1988, contains a copy of the Libertarian Party platform, 1972.
Reference:
Nancy MacLean, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017).
Finding aid:
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt5779r70z/entire_text/
[0585] Fred G. Clark Papers, 1921-89
Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488
Description: Clark (1890-1973) was a businessman, educator, and founder and chairman, American Economic Foundation and the Young Crusaders, an anti-Prohibition organization that later became an antiracketeering group; moderator of the National Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) radio program Wake Up America, 1939-46; author of four books on economics. The papers consist of correspondence, publications, and photographs that document the activities of the American Economic Foundation, as well as other facets of his life including his long friendship with Herbert Hoover. Files on American Economic Foundation, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Arthur O. Dahlberg, John Chamberlain, Dwight Eisenhower, The Freeman, Barry Goldwater, Herbert Hoover, Edward F. Hutton, Carl H. Mote, J. Howard Pew, Robert A. Taft, Henry J. Taylor, and A.C. Wedemeyer.
Websites with information:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html
Finding aids:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/clark.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/clark.htm
[0586] The Papers of Grenville Clark, 1636-1972, ML-7
Location: Rauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College, 6065 Webster Hall, Hanover, NH 03755-3519
Description: Grenville Clark (1882-1967) was a Wall Street lawyer and the author of the book World Peace Through World Law. Clark opposed Roosevelt's attempt to "pack" the Supreme Court in 1937. Series II. Plattsburg: Military Training Camps Association; Correspondence, Finances, and Publicity, 1914-1963, contains a file on John Jay Chapman. Series V. National Economy League, has files on Warren R. Austin, William E. Borah, H. Styles Bridges, Harry F. Byrd, James F. Byrnes, Arthur Capper, Robert B. Dresser, Carter Glass, Merwin K. Hart, Herbert Hoover, Raymond Moley, George Van Horn Moseley, Wright Patman, Edgar M. Queeny, Archibald B. Roosevelt, and James P. Warburg. Series VI. Civil Rights Work, has files on Charles Beard, Homer E. Capehart, Kenneth Colegrove, Everett Dirksen, Foundation Freedoms, Frank E. Gannett, Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Alger Hiss, William F. Knowland, William Langer, Owen Lattimore, Joseph McCarthy, George Van Horn Moseley, Richard M. Nixon, Edward A. Rumely, Richard B. Russell, John J. Sparkman, Dorothy Thompson, and Alexander Wiley. Series 13. World Peace Through World Law, 1934-1971, contains files on Bernard Iddings Bell, Imperial Policy Group and Walter H. Judd. Series XXVII. Miscellaneous Correspondence, has files on Warren R. Austin, H. Styles Bridges, Robert B. Dresser, Ralph M. Easley, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Foreign Policy Association, Ulysses S. Grant, 3rd, Joseph C. Grew, Merwin K. Hart, Herbert Hoover, Alf M. Landon, Henry Cabot Lodge, Pat McCarran, George Van Horn Moseley, Karl E. Mundt, Archibald B. Roosevelt, Leverett Saltonstall, George Santayana, The Awakener [Joseph P. Kamp], James P. Warburg, and Owen Wister.
Reference:
A microfiche inventory of the papers of Grenville Clark as preserved within the library of Dartmouth College / with a biographical introduction "Grenville Clark (1882-1967)," by J. Garry Clifford ([Hanover? N.H., Dartmouth College Library, 1974?]).
Websites with information:
http://ead.dartmouth.edu/html/index_cd.html
