Skip to main content

Home/ KY women and civil rights history/ Group items matching "_" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
1More

Hughlett Temple A.M.E. Zion Church - 1 views

  •  
    Part of the history of Louisville's fath-based communities focused on civil rights activism
1More

History of Education in Kentucky, 1939-1964 - 0 views

  •  
    published by State Department of Education, 1963
1More

African American Schools in Lexington and Fayette County, KY - Notable Kentucky African... - 0 views

  •  
    List of schools
1More

"Wade, Helen Cary Caise" Notable Kentucky African Americans Database - 0 views

  •  
    Douglass High School student took Lafayette High School history class in summer of 1955
3More

GIRL'S ACT OF FRIENDSHIP NOT FORGOTTEN BY RECIPIENT - 1 views

  •  
    This article is an interview with a schoolmate who friended Helen Caise Wade years ago.
  •  
    Hi Angela, I can't get this link to work...?
  •  
    This is the URL. http://infoweb.newsbank.com/iw-search/we/InfoWeb?p_product=AWNB&p_theme=aggregated5&p_action=doc&p_docid=0EB73DCAA87B8C60&p_docnum=3&p_queryname=5
2More

She broke a race barrier | Education | Kentucky.com - 0 views

  • described her experiences as the first black student to ever attend a white school in Lexington, and the price her family paid for helping to break the color barrier in 1955.
  • Helen Caise Wade
3More

Access World News - Document Display - 0 views

  • Helen
  • May 17, 1954 -- The U.S. Supreme Court rules that school segregation is unconstitutional. A few days later, Helen Cary Caise , a black student, enrolls at Lafayette High School.
  •  
    Timeline of black community events in Lexington and Fayette Co.
3More

STUDENTS SHOULDN'T HAVE TO FIGHT FOR RESPECT, RIGHTS - 3 views

  •  
    Article written by Helen Caise Wade
  •  
    Hi Angela - can you revise this so that the citation shows? Can't seem to make this link work...
  •  
    This is the URL. http://infoweb.newsbank.com/iw-search/we/InfoWeb?p_product=AWNB&p_theme=aggregated5&p_action=doc&f_lastaction=doc&p_docid=111D03A294DD33A8&p_docnum=2&p_queryname=4
1More

The Lost Document: Help Us Find the Declaration of Sentiments | whitehouse.gov - 0 views

  •  
    While this is a wonderful idea to find the original document, I wonder if, in this project described for the display in the Rotunda, that we're focusing too much on Seneca Falls as an origin of a political movement and not enough on the National Woman's Rights Convention held October 23-24, 1850, in Worcester, Massachusetts? on Stanton (who goes on to support white supremacy) and not enough on Lucy Stone or Paulina Kellogg Wright Davis?
1More

Oral History Association Wiki - 0 views

  •  
    includes Resources for evaluation, legal, digital and H-Oralhist listserv; links to centers and associations as well as publications
1More

Evaluation Guide - OHA Wiki - 0 views

  •  
    includes principles and standards; project guidelines, purposes and objectives; interview conduct guidelines; independent researcher guidelines; educator and student guidelines; bibliography (dated 1970s-90s)
8More

Lauren Kientz Anderson - blog post on (S-USIH) U.S. Intellectual History: "Prove it on ... - 0 views

    • Randolph Hollingsworth
       
      From H-Women (5/3/2012) From: "Lauren Kientz Anderson" Subject: Re: bourgeois vacuity In one of my previous blog posts, I wrote about the claim that the black middle class was vacuous during the 1920s. In the comments, I was challenged to update my historiography on the politics of respectability. This gave me the chance to read Erin Chapman's excellent new work, *Prove it on Me: New Negroes, Sex, and Popular Culture in the 1920s. *Her prose is gorgeous and dense. Many of the things I was feeling instinctually, she articulates with precision." Here's Chapman's challenge to Anderson.
  • two major camps. There were those who sought to modernize and professionalize established ideologies of racial advancement, solidarity, and uplift through a New Negro progressivism.... Others.. questioned, if not the very idea of racial solidarity itself, then at least the obligation of racial allegiance and respectability, and instead touted a radical individualism and independence from all but the most personal allegiances to 'art' or 'self' or some other self-generated ideal."
  • transition between the politics of respectability and New Negro Modernism
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • After reading Chapman's introduction, I can see how much the women I study straddle that line, sometimes evoking the one and sometimes evoking the other.
  • politics of respectability
  • formation of the sex-race marketplace
  • development of an intra-racial discourse of race motherhood
  • Together, they rendered black women largely invisible, their subjectivity flat and inhuman, for the greater part of that century
1More

Kentucky Newspaper Regrets Neglect of Civil Rights Movement - UCLA Center for Communica... - 0 views

  •  
    July 4, 2004 By Linda Blackford & Linda Minch, Herald-Leader Highlighting decisions by Fred Wachs and Bill Hanna on whether or not to cover the CRM in the Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader
3More

Jayme Coleman: National Visionary Leadership Project: African American History - 0 views

  • Dr. Jamye Coleman William’s teaching career spans almost fifty years, the last fourteen of which she served as the head of the Department of Communication at Tennessee State University. In 1984, she assumed the editorship of the AME Church Review, the oldest black journal in America, becoming the first woman to be elected as a major officer in the 197-year history of the AME Church.
  • Williams’ co-edited the 1970 publication, The Negro Speaks: The Rhetoric of Contemporary Black Leaders.
  • VIDEO CLIPS
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 369 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page