Photographic prints
Archival Collections and Reference Resources
- African American Odyssey (Library of Congress)
- The Civil Rights Era in the U.S. News & World Report Photographs Collection: Selected Images from the Collections of the Library of Congress (Library of Congress)
- With an Even Hand: Brown vs. Board at Fifty (Library of Congress)
- Flag, announcing lynching, flown from the window of the NAACP headquarters on 69 Fifth Ave., New York City (Photographic prints)
- A group of African-American students leaving Central High School, under trooper escort, Little Rock, Arkansas (Photographic prints)
- Hurlock, Md. elementary school (Group portraits)
- Ike with John W. Davis at the Herald Trib Forum 10/21 (Group portraits)
- James Meredith, (center) and his attorneys, Mrs. Constance Motley, (left) and Jack Greenberg, (right) paused briefly to talk with reporters in front of the Federal Courts Building in New Orleans (Black-and-white photographs)
- Louis L. Redding, left, of Wilmington, Del., and Thurgood Marshall, general counsel for NAACP, conferring at the Supreme Court, during a recess in the court's hearing on racial integration in the public schools (Group portraits)
- Miss Mary Brent, principal of Glenn School, greets pupils, both white and Negro, in a previously all-white school (Photographic prints)
- Mrs. Nettie Hunt, sitting on steps of Supreme Court, holding newspaper, explaining to her daughter Nikie the meaning of the Supreme Court's decision banning school segregation (Group portraits)
- Six-year-old Ruby Bridges, three-quarter length portrait, standing, facing front (Photographic prints)
- U.S. Supreme Court justices (Group portraits)
- University of Alabama students burn desegregation literature during demonstration in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Feb. 6 against the enrollment of Autherine Lucy, an African American student (Photographic prints)
- Waiting for courtroom seats (Photographic prints)
- White students in class at the University of Oklahoma, and G.W. McLaurin, an African American, seated in anteroom (Photographic prints)
- Woman fingerprinted. Mrs. Rosa Parks, Negro seamstress, whose refusal to move to the back of a bus touched off the bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama (Photographic prints)




