{"response":{"docs":[{"id":"ibiblio_sncc","title":"SNCC 1960-1966 : Six years of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":["ibiblio.org"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Southern States, 33.346678, -84.119434"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1960/1966"],"dcterms_description":["Web site with information about the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from its beginnings in the Greensboro-inspired sit-ins in February 1960 to its official organization in April 1960 at Raleigh, North Carolina's Shaw University through 1966 when Stokely Carmichael took over leadership from John Lewis. The site includes background information about issues important to SNCC including nonviolence, the Vietnam War, white liberalism, feminism, and black power; brief biographies of John Lewis, Julian Bond, Fannie Lou Hamer, Bob Moses, Ella Baker, and Stokely Carmichael; descriptions of major events including sit-ins, Freedom Rides, Freedom Ballot, Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, and the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom; a timeline; audio files of movement leaders speaking about their experience and Freedom Singers singing movement songs; and links to other online resources.","The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":["hhh"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.)","Civil rights movements--United States","African Americans--Civil rights","Civil rights workers--United States","African American civil rights workers","College students--United States","African American college students","Student movements--United States","African American civic leaders","Civic leaders--United States","African American clergy","Clergy--United States","African American political activists","Nonviolence--United States","Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements","United States--Race relations--History--20th century","Feminism--United States","Black power--United States","Sit-ins--Southern States","Voting--United States","Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party","March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Washington, D.C., 1963"],"dcterms_title":["SNCC 1960-1966 : Six years of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://www.ibiblio.org/sncc/index.html"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["instructional materials","black-and-white photographs","sound recordings","timelines (chronologies)","biographies"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Lewis, John, 1940-2020","Bond, Julian, 1940-","Hamer, Fannie Lou","Moses, Robert Parris","Baker, Ella, 1903-1986","Carmichael, Stokely, 1941-1998"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"wau_protests","title":"Vietnam War era ephemera collection","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":["University of Washington. Libraries. Digital Initiatives","University of Washington. Libraries"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Washington, King County, Seattle, 47.60621, -122.33207"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1960/1979"],"dcterms_description":["\"The text are selections from Vietnam War era ephemera collection of printed ephemera including pamphlets, posters, manifestos, newsletters, booklets, and open letters created by the various Seattle-area and University of Washington manifestations of American civil rights and protest movements of the late 1960's and 1970's. The material centers mainly around the Vietnam War, but includes much about feminism, racism, socialism, labor unions and the rights of farm workers, gay rights, environmental and economic boycotts of large corporations and agro-industry, prisoners' rights, and the Iranian revolution of 1979.\""],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements--Washington (State)-- Seattle","Civil rights--Washington (State)--Seattle","Student movements--Washington (State)--Seattle","Civil disobedience--Washington (State)--Seattle","Gay liberation movement--Washington (State)--Seattle","Feminism--Washington (State)--Seattle","Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Posters"],"dcterms_title":["Vietnam War era ephemera collection"],"dcterms_type":["StillImage","Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["University of Washington. Libraries. Special Collections Division"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://content.lib.washington.edu/protestsweb/"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["pamphlets","posters"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"wsu_cdbmp","title":"Catherine May Bedell Congressional papers","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Washington, 47.50012, -120.50147"],"dcterms_creator":["Bedell, Catherine May, 1914-2004"],"dc_date":["1959/1970"],"dcterms_description":["The collection consists of those papers generated and received by the office of Representative May during her six terms in the United States Congress. While the Catherine May collection covers an extensive array of public issues, the digital selections were chosen based on the following criteria: historical significance, relevance to the history of Washington, relevance to the history of women, and ability to provide access to otherwise undocumented history. Some general subject areas include (but are not limited to): Washington state agriculture, the Cold War, the Vietnam War, sex discrimination against women, anti-communist movements, women's rights, education, labor, aid, atomic energy, taxation, and womens's societies and clubs. Digitized items include: correspondence, notes, memoranda, printed materials, inter-office communications, transcripts and notes of telephone conversations, office interviews and meetings. Additionally, the entirety of Catherine May's 4th District Newsletters, and Special Reports were digitized covering an array of political issues important to May and constituents."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":["Catherine May Congressional Papers, 1959-1970, Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University, Pullman, WA"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Washington (State)--Politics and government--20th century","United States--Politics and government--1945-1989","United States--Race relations","Washington (State)--Race relations"],"dcterms_title":["Catherine May Bedell Congressional papers"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Washington State University. Library. Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://content.libraries.wsu.edu/digital/collection/cmay"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["correspondence"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Bedell, Catherine May, 1914-2004","King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968","Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"vrc_pec","title":"Edward H. Peeples Prince Edward County (Va.) public schools","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Virginia, Prince Edward County, 37.2243, -78.44108"],"dcterms_creator":["Peeples, Edward H. (Edward Harden), 1935-"],"dc_date":["1959/2003"],"dcterms_description":["During the 1950s Prince Edward County would become the focus of the public schools desegregation issue in Virginia. On 23 April 1951, African American students at Robert Russa Moton High School walked out to protest squalid conditions at the segregated site. The students' challenge to Virginia's public school segreation law eventually became one of five such complaints heard in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case. In 1954, the nine Justices ruled unanimously in favor of the students, overturning the \"Separate But Equal\" precedent established by Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. The decision also set in motion a course of \"Massive Resistance\" by segregationists and the Virginia political power structure. In Prince Edward County, rather than integrate their public schools, segregationists chose instead to close their public schools from 1959-1964. Between 1961 and 1963, Dr. Edward H. Peeples photographed over 100 images of schools in Prince Edward County. In addition to taking photographs of segregated public schools that had been in use prior to 1959, he also took images of the private schools established after the public schools did not open in 1959. These photographs are illustrative of the lack of resources provided by the state and the county for its African American students. The collection includes the digital reproductions of Dr. Peeples' original images as well as his original annotations. It also includes additional photographs taken between 1988 and 2003, digitized maps of the region, and several of Dr. Peeples' written works in order to provide context for the early 1960s images. GIS coordinates are provided for the buildings in the 1960s photographs."],"dc_format":["image/jpeg"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Schools--Virginia--Prince Edward County--History--Pictorial works","African American schools--Virginia--Prince Edward County--History--Pictorial works","African Americans--Education--Virginia--Prince Edward County--History--Pictorial works","Segregation in education--Virginia--Prince Edward County--History--Pictorial works","Education--Virginia--Prince Edward County--History--Pictorial works","Prince Edward County (Va.)--Race relations--History--Pictorial works"],"dcterms_title":["Edward H. Peeples Prince Edward County (Va.) public schools"],"dcterms_type":["StillImage","Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["James Branch Cabell Library. Special Collections and Archives"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://digital.library.vcu.edu/islandora/object/vcu:pec"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["photographs"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"tmll_hpcrc","title":"Historical publications of the United States Commission on Civil Rights","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":["Brookings Institution","New York, Greenwood Press","United States Commission on Civil Rights","United States Commission on Civil Rights. Midwestern Regional Office","United States Commission on Civil Rights. Colorado Advisory Committee","United States Commission on Civil Rights. District of Columbia Advisory Committee","United States Commission on Civil Rights. Connecticut Advisory Committee","Inter-American Commission of Women","United States Commission on Civil Rights. Delaware Advisory Committee"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1959/2007"],"dcterms_description":["Web site providing access to publications of the United States Commission on Civil Rights. Created as part of the 1957 Civil Rights Act, the Commission on Civil Rights has been at the forefront of efforts by the Federal Government and state governments to examine and resolve issues related to race, ethnicity, religion and, more recently, sexual orientation. Although support for the Commission has varied with changes in presidential administrations, the Commission has continued to play a role in building an equal America. Online access to the commission's historical records provides an opportunity to examine the efforts of the Commission more closely.","The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["United States Commission on Civil Rights","Civil rights--United States","Civil rights--United States--History--Sources"],"dcterms_title":["Historical publications of the United States Commission on Civil Rights"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Thurgood Marshall Law Library"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://law.umaryland.libguides.com/commission_civil_rights"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["reports","records"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"lru_lru-segregation","title":"Report, Segregation in the Field of Public and Private Law","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Louisiana, Orleans Parish, New Orleans, 29.95465, -90.07507"],"dcterms_creator":["Campbell, David"],"dc_date":["1959"],"dcterms_description":["This is the only known copy of the legal analysis that was used to justify the desegregation of Tulane University. As a Tulane law student, David Lee Campbell clerked for the firm of Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrère \u0026 Denègre L.L.P. The firm’s founder, Joseph Merrick Jones, Jr. (who was also President of the Board of Administrators of Tulane University), asked Campbell to work on a private, secret project reporting only to him. That project led to Campbell’s report, “Segregation in the Field of Public and Private Law—Status of the Tulane University of Louisiana,” which he delivered on September 4, 1959. The sixty-page report covered a wide swath of research into desegregation law, including areas to which it applied (jury cases, housing, the right to vote, restrictive covenants, labor unions, etc.), the Fourteenth Amendment, whether Tulane University was a private or public corporation, and laws and cases pertaining to Tulane. Campbell went on to graduate first in his class from Tulane Law School and earn a doctorate in law from Oxford University.","Attorney, historic preservationist, and environmentalist, David Lee Campbell was born in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1936 and spent his formative years in Fort Worth, Texas and Morocco. After receiving his BA from North Texas State University and his law degree from Tulane University, Campbell, a Marshall Scholar, earned his D. Phil. in law from Oxford University in 1963. He began his legal career with Lemle Kelleher, branched off to open the Law Offices of David Campbell, and eventually moved to Deutsch, Kerrigan, \u0026 Stiles. He was named \"Outstanding Young Lawyer of Louisiana\" in 1975. The Young Leadership Council named him a New Orleans \"Role Model\" in 1995.","Campbell’s environmental concerns led him to found the Little Tchefuncte River Association. As a historic preservationist, Campbell founded the Peniston-Gen Taylor Association to successfully stop the Mississippi River Bridge at Napoleon Avenue and then the proposed Riverfront Expressway. A past president of the Preservation Resource Center and the Louisiana Landmarks Society, in 2016 he received the Harnett T. Kane Award from the Louisiana Landmarks Society for significant lifetime contributions to historic preservation. He published his memoir, “A Double Life,” in 2016 and a book of poetry, “Nature all Around Us,” in 2017."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/UND/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["David Campbell, Manuscripts Collection 1108, Box 9, Louisiana Research Collection, Howard-Tiltion Memorial Library, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 70115"],"dcterms_subject":["College integration--Louisiana--New Orleans","Tulane University--History"],"dcterms_title":["Report, Segregation in the Field of Public and Private Law"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Tulane University. Special Collections"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://digitallibrary.tulane.edu/islandora/object/tulane%3Asegregation"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["reports"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"tnum_rchurch","title":"Robert R. Church Family Papers","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham, 33.52066, -86.80249"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1959/1963"],"dcterms_description":["Papers of Memphis African American businessman Robert R. Church and his family. Civil rights-related materials include a N.A.A.C.P. card and reprinting of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham City Jail."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":["Robert R. Church Family Papers, MS 71, University of Memphis Special Collections, Memphis, Tennessee"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Volunteer Voices (Project)"],"dcterms_subject":["Civil rights movements--Alabama--Birmingham","Civil rights demonstrations--Alabama--Birmingham","African American civil rights workers--Alabama--Birmingham","Civil rights workers--Alabama--Birmingham","African American clergy--Alabama--Birmingham","Clergy--Alabama--Birmingham","Civil disobedience--Alabama--Birmingham","African Americans--Civil rights--Alabama--Birmingham","Civil rights--Alabama--Birmingham","African Americans--Alabama--Birmingham","African Americans--Segregation--Alabama--Birmingham","Segregation--Alabama--Birmingham","Race discrimination--Alabama--Birmingham","Birmingham (Ala.)--Race relations--History--20th century","Race relations","Protest literature","Project C, Birmingham, Ala., 1963","Imprisonment--Alabama--Birmingham","Jails--Alabama--Birmingham","African American political activists--Alabama--Birmingham","Political activists--Alabama--Birmingham","Christians--Alabama--Birmingham--Political activity","National Association for the Advancement of Colored People"],"dcterms_title":["Robert R. Church Family Papers"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["University of Memphis. Libraries. Special Collections Department"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-0071-church/"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["printed materials"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"tnum_edalstrom","title":"Edwin Dalstrom papers","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Tennessee, Shelby County, Memphis, 35.14953, -90.04898"],"dcterms_creator":["Dalstrom, Edwin, 1886-1974"],"dc_date":["1958/1959"],"dcterms_description":["Correspondence and pamphlet of Edwin Dalstrom, Memphis Urban League chair in 1958. The letters express concerns about integration. Also included is a pamphlet from the States' Rights Action in Memphis, Tennessee, protesting integration and asserting connections between the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and communism.","The University of Tennessee Libraries (Knoxville, Tennessee) is the digital publisher."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":["Edwin Dalstrom papers, University of Memphis Special Collections, Memphis, Tennessee"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Volunteer Voices (Project)"],"dcterms_subject":["African Americans--Segregation--Tennessee--Memphis","African Americans--Tennessee--Memphis","Church and social problems--United States","Civic leaders--Tennessee--Memphis","Discrimination in housing--Tennessee--Memphis","Memphis (Tenn.)--Race relations","Memphis Urban League (Memphis, Tenn.)","National Association for the Advancement of Colored People","Race discrimination--Tennessee--Memphis","Race relations","Race relations--Religious aspects","School integration--Arkansas--Little Rock","School integration--Tennessee--Memphis","Segregation in education--Tennessee--Memphis","Segregation--Tennessee--Memphis","States' rights (American politics)","White supremacy movements--Tennessee--Memphis"],"dcterms_title":["Edwin Dalstrom papers"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["University of Memphis. Libraries. Special Collections Department"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://digital.lib.utk.edu/collections/islandora/search?type=dismax\u0026f%5B0%5D=utk_mods_geo_ms%3AShelby%5C%20County%5C%20%5C%28Tenn.%5C%29%5C%20%5C%2835.20000N%2C%5C%2089.86667W%5C%29\u0026f%5B1%5D=utk_mods_relatedItem_titleInfo_title_ms%3A%22Edwin%5C%20Dalstrom%5C%20Papers%22\u0026islandora_solr_search_navigation=0"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["letters (correspondence)","pamphlets"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Dalstrom, Edwin, 1886-1974--Archives"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"tnsew_hfs","title":"Highlander Folk School collection","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Tennessee, Marion County, Monteagle, 35.24008, -85.8397"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1958"],"dcterms_description":["Materials related to the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.)","Civil rights movements--Tennessee--Monteagle","Social movements--Tennessee--Monteagle","Labor movement--Tennessee--Monteagle","Civil rights movements--United States","Social movements--United States","Labor movement--United States","Schools--Tennessee--Monteagle","Training--Tennessee--Monteagle","Adult education--Tennessee--Monteagle"],"dcterms_title":["Highlander Folk School collection"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Jessie Ball duPont Library. Archives"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://digital.lib.utk.edu/collections/islandora/object/collections%3Avolvoices"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":null,"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"dde_civil-rights-civil-rights-act","title":"Civil rights-- Civil Rights Act of 1957","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1957"],"dcterms_description":["The online collection includes Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr.'s cabinet paper outlining the administration's civil rights agenda; a press release about the proposed civil rights legislation (which would later become the Civil Rights Act of 1957); a fact paper about the administration's civil rights program; a memo from E. Frederic Morrow, Eisenhower's Administrative officer for special projects and an African American, to Chief-of-Staff Sherman Adams; a letter from Republican National Committee Director of Minorities Val J. Washington urging Eisenhower not to compromise on civil rights legislation; a press release from Washington containing a letter to Lyndon B. Johnson on his criticism of Nixon's comments on the Senate's stance on the administration's civil rights legislation; a letter from Attorney General William P. Rogers outlining the amendments made to the proposed civil rights legislation by the Senate; press release from Representative Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. making congratulations about the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1957; the act itself; a February 27, 1959 report from the Executive Branch  in cooperation with the Commission on Civil Rights outlining the Commission's authority, duties, responsibilities and actions); a pamphlet of The Commission on Civil Rights; and a photograph of President Eisenhower signing the bill.","\"In 1957, President Eisenhower sent Congress a proposal for civil rights legislation.  The result was the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction.  The new act established the Civil Rights Section of the Justice Department and empowered federal prosecutors to obtain court injunctions against interference with the right to vote. It also established a federal Civil Rights Commission with authority to investigate discriminatory conditions and recommend corrective measures.  The final act was weakened by Congress due to the lack of support among the Democrats.\"--Eisenhower Library Web page.","The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":["System requirements: Adobe Acrobat reader."],"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["United States. Civil Rights Act of 1957","Civil rights--Law and legislation--United States","African Americans--Civil rights--United States","United States Commission on Civil Rights","African Americans--Suffrage","United States. Dept. of Justice. Civil Rights Division"],"dcterms_title":["Civil rights-- Civil Rights Act of 1957"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Dwight D. Eisenhower Library"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/online-documents/civil-rights-act-1957"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["texts (document genres)","black-and-white photographs","letters (correspondence)","reports","press releases","legislative acts"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Brownell, Herbert, Jr., 1904-1996","Morrow, E. Frederic (Everett Frederic), 1909- ","Adams, Sherman, 1899-1986","Washington, Val J., 1903-1995","Brownell, Herbert, Jr., 1904-1996--Correspondence","Morrow, E. Frederic (Everett Frederic), 1909- --Correspondence","Adams, Sherman, 1899-1986--Correspondence","Washington, Val J., 1903-1995--Correspondence"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"dde_littlerock","title":"Civil rights-- Little Rock school integration","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Arkansas, Pulaski County, Little Rock, 34.74648, -92.28959"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["1957/1958"],"dcterms_description":["This online collection contains a telegram from President Eisenhower to Governor Orval Faubus calling for the peaceful integration of Central High School; a telegram from Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus stating his travel arrangements to meet President Eisenhower for a conference at his vacation headquarters in Rhode Island; a press release stating Governor Faubus' intention of cooperating with the integration of Central High School after his conference with President Eisenhower; a diary entry concerning the September 14, 1957 meeting between President Eisenhower and Governor Faubus in Newport, Rhode Island;  a press release statement by President Eisenhower discussing the major events occurring in the City of Little Rock on September 20, 1957; a telegram to President Eisenhower from Woodrow Wilson Mann, Major of Little Rock describing the mob activity at Central High School on September 23, 1957; an Obstruction of Justice Proclamation from President Eisenhower ordering those hindering the integration of Central High to cease and desist; a Proclamation providing for the Removal of an Obstruction of Justice within the State of Arkansas, September 24, 1957; a telegram from Woodrow Wilson Mann to President Eisenhower pleading for federal troops to restore order and complete the integration process in Arkansas; a letter from President Eisenhower to General Alfred Gruenther; handwritten notes by President Eisenhower on decision to send troops to Little Rock, Arkansas, September 1957; a press release, containing speech on radio and television by President Eisenhower, September 24, 1957; an undated draft of speech on Little Rock; a summary of telephone conversations between President Eisenhower and Attorney General Herbert Brownell, Jr. on September 24, 1957 after the Obstruction of Justice Proclamation was issued; a summary of telephone calls made by President Eisenhower on September 25, 1957; a telegram from Congressman Oren Harris of Arkansas to President Eisenhower protesting the ordering of federal troops to enforce school integration; a letter from  President Eisenhower to Congressman Oren Harris, September 30, 1957; a telegram from Georgia Senator Richard B. Russell to President Eisenhower condemning the use of federal troops to mix the races in public schools in Little Rock; a letter from President Eisenhower to Senator Russell, September 27, 1957; a telegram from the parents of the nine African-American students to President Eisenhower, October 1, 1957; a letter from President Eisenhower to Mr. W.B. Brown, father of one of the Little Rock Nine on October 4, 1957 [identical letter sent to each set of parents]; a telegram from Senator John Stennis, Mississippi to President Eisenhower, October 1, 1957 deploring forced integration of public schools; a letter from President Eisenhower to Senator Stennis, October 7, 1957; a letter from J. Lee Rankin, U.S. Solicitor General, to Sherman Adams, Assistant to the President, concerning list of Court orders and plans for school desegregation, October 28, 1957; undated attachments to Rankin letter listing court orders and plans for school desegregation; several situation reports between December 17, 1957 and March 10, 1958 regarding Central High?s adjustment after integration; a letter from Jackie Robinson to President Eisenhower, May 13, 1958; and a letter from President Eisenhower to Jackie Robinson, June 4, 1958.","\"On May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education that segregated schools are \"inherently unequal.\"  In September 1957, as a result of that ruling, nine African-American students enrolled at Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. The ensuing struggle between segregationists and integrationists, the State of Arkansas and the federal government, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus has become known in modern American history as the \"Little Rock Crisis.\" The crisis gained attention world-wide. When Governor Faubus ordered the Arkansas National Guard to surround Central High School to keep the nine students from entering the school, President Eisenhower ordered the 101st Airborne Division into Little Rock to insure the safety of the \"Little Rock Nine\" and that the rulings of the Supreme Court were upheld. The manuscript holdings of the Eisenhower Library contain a large amount of documentation on this historic test of the Brown vs. Topeka ruling and school integration.\"--Eisenhower Library Web page.","The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata."],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":null,"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":["System requirements: Adobe Acrobat reader."],"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["Segregation in education--Law and legislation--United States","Discrimination in education--Law and legislation--United States","African Americans--Civil rights--United States","Segregation--Southern States","Obstruction of justice--Arkansas--Little Rock","Federal-state controversies--Arkansas--Little Rock","Intervention (Federal government)","Executive orders","Federal-city relations--United States","Government, Resistance to--Arkansas--Little Rock","Arkansas--Politics and government--1951-","African Americans--Government policy","United States--Politics and government--1953-1961","Civil rights movement--United States","High school students--Political activity","Central High School (Little Rock, Ark.)","School integration--Arkansas--Little Rock","Mobs--Arkansas--Little Rock","Race riots--Arkansas--Little Rock","School integration--Massive resistance movement"],"dcterms_title":["Civil rights-- Little Rock school integration"],"dcterms_type":["Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Dwight D. Eisenhower Library"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/research/online-documents/civil-rights-little-rock-school-integration-crisis"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["texts (document genres)","press releases","diaries","telegrams","letters (correspondence)","transcripts","reports"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":["Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969","Faubus, Orval Eugene, 1910-1994","Mann, Woodrow Wilson, 1916-2002","Gruenther, Alfred M. (Alfred Maximilian), 1899-1983","Harris, Oren, 1903-","Russell, Richard B. (Richard Brevard), 1897-1971","Brown, W. B.","Stennis, John C. (John Cornelius), 1901-1995","Robinson, Jackie, 1919-1972","Brownell, Herbert, Jr., 1904-1996","Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969--Correspondence","Faubus, Orval Eugene, 1910-1994--Correspondence","Mann, Woodrow Wilson, 1916-2002--Correspondence","Gruenther, Alfred M. (Alfred Maximilian), 1899-1983--Correspondence","Harris, Oren, 1903- --Correspondence","Russell, Richard B. (Richard Brevard), 1897-1971--Correspondence","Brown, W. B.--Correspondence","Stennis, John C. (John Cornelius), 1901-1995--Correspondence","Robinson, Jackie, 1919-1972--Correspondence"],"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"dlg_efhf","title":"\"Integrated in all respects\": Ed Friend's Highlander Folk School films and the politics of segregation","collection_id":null,"collection_title":null,"dcterms_contributor":["Georgia Commission on Education","Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, Georgia, 32.75042, -83.50018","United States, Tennessee, Grundy County, 35.38837, -85.72258","United States, Tennessee, Marion County, Monteagle, 35.24008, -85.8397"],"dcterms_creator":["Friend, Ed, 1912-1991"],"dc_date":["1957"],"dcterms_description":["\"Integrated in All Respects consists of Ed Friend's film of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee during Labor Day weekend in 1957 and the Georgia Commission on Education's propaganda broadside that features Friend's photographs and stills from his film. Founded in 1932, the Highlander Folk School served as an adult education center to promote social and economic justice. By the 1950s, the school began to focus on the Civil Rights movement and trained many of the movement's activists including Septima Clark and Rosa Parks. Sent by the Georgia Commission on Education, an anti-integration state committee founded during Marvin Griffin's administration, Ed Friend filmed the anniversary festivities without revealing his motives. Labor and civil rights activists such as Ralph Abernathy, Myles Horton, Martin Luther King, Jr., Aubrey Williams, Charles G. Gomillion, Rosa Parks, Abner W. Berry, Pete Seeger, Harry Schneiderman, Ralph Helstein, A. T. Walden, and Maurice McCrackin are featured in the footage. Friend also documented the integrated social activities during the weekend including dining, swimming, and dancing. Much of the footage and many stills were incorporated into the Commission's broadside linking the school and its civil rights activities with the communist movement.","The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata."],"dc_format":["video/mp4"],"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Film from the Ed Friend Visual Materials Collection, Richard B. Russell Library. Broadside from the S. Ernest Vandiver, Jr. Papers."],"dcterms_subject":["Activists--Tennessee--Monteagle","Adult education--Tennessee--Monteagle","African American civil rights workers--Tennessee--Monteagle","African American clergy--Tennessee--Monteagle","African American men--Tennessee--Monteagle","African American women--Tennessee--Monteagle","African Americans--Politics and government","Audiences--Tennessee--Monteagle","Automobiles--Tennessee--Monteagle","Bicycles---Tennessee--Monteagle","Blue collar workers--Tennessee--Monteagle","Camera operators--Tennessee--Monteagle","Civil rights movements--Tennessee--Monteagle","Civil rights workers--Tennessee--Monteagle","Clergy--Tennessee--Monteagle","Communism--Tennessee--Monteagle","Dance--Tennessee--Monteagle","Educators--Tennessee--Monteagle","Labor leaders--Tennessee--Monteagle","Labor unions","Lakes--Tennessee--Monteagle","Libraries--Tennessee--Monteagle","Men, White--Tennessee--Monteagle","Newspaper editors--Tennessee--Monteagle","Photographers--Tennessee--Monteagle","Photographs","Propaganda, Anti-communist--United States","Race relations","Racism--United States","Social integration--Tennessee--Monteagle","Social movements--Tennessee--Monteagle","Social reformers--Tennessee--Monteagle","Swimming---Tennessee--Monteagle","Women, White--Tennessee--Monteagle","United States--Race relations--Sources","Youth--Tennessee--Monteagle","Monteagle (Tenn.)--Race relations--History--20th century","Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.)--Anniversaries, etc.","Southern Christian Leadership Conference--Employees","Georgia Commission on Education","Highlander Folk School (Monteagle, Tenn.)","Southern Farm and Home (Magazine)--Employees","Tuskegee Institute--Employees","Daily worker (Harlem, N.Y.)","United Packing House Workers of America--Employees","Findlay Street Neighborhood House (Cincinnati, Ohio)--Employees"],"dcterms_title":["\"Integrated in all respects\": Ed Friend's Highlander Folk School films and the politics of segregation"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage","Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Richard B. 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