TMCREALIA372A5128B
BLACK HISTORY AND CULTURE INVENTORY LIST
[Consists of 1 box (pt.1) and 1 bag (pt.2)]
BOX Pt.1 Please return all items marked Pt.1 to this box.
Audiotapes and CD’s
“Marian Anderson: Spirituals”
“Scott Joplin: King of Ragtime Writers”
“The Very Best of Duke Ellington"
Booklets (these go with poster sets in Pt.2)
“Harriet Tubman & The Underground Railroad” (game)
“Segregation: Before Civil Rights: Twelve Historical Photo-Posters”
“Slavery in America Album: Teacher’s Resource”
“Struggle for Civil Rights: 1954-1968: Photo Preview, Broadsheet & Photo-Analysis Worksheet”
“Women in the Civil War: Teaching Guide”
“Women of Hope: African Americans Who Made A Difference: Study Guide”
Books
African-American ‘Firsts’ (coloring book)
African Americans by Marie E. Rodgers (Chapter Eleven from Multicultural
Information Quests: Instant Research Lessons, Grades 5-8)
Black Achievers in Science
Black Folk Art in America 1930-1980
Black History at an Early Age (Series of 10)
Volume 1: Historic Black Women
Volume 2: Black Scientists & Inventors
Volume 3: Historic Black Pioneers
Volume 4: Black Civil Rights Leaders
Volume 5: Historic Black Abolitionists
Volume 6: African Kings and Queens
Volume 7: Historic Black Firsts
Volume 8: Historic Blacks in the Arts
Volume 9: Blacks in the Federal Government
Volume 10: Historic Black Educators
Black Stars of the Civil Rights Movement
Black Stars of the Harlem Renaissance
Blacks in American History (Whole Language Unit) (Grades 4-6)
Freedom Fighters (coloring book)
Great African Americans of the 20th Century (coloring book)
History of African Americans in McLean County (with matching video)
If You Lived at the Time of Martin Luther King
Kwanzaa: An African American Holiday
Kwanzaa: Everything You Always Wanted to Know But Didn’t Know Where to Ask
People Could Fly: American Black Folktales
The Shimmy Shimmy Shimmy Like My Sister Kate (poems)
Teacher’s Manual
Magazines
Cobblestone (entire issues, not bound)
“African American Inventors” (February 1992)
“Antislavery Movement, The” (February 1993)
“Black History Month: The Struggle for Rights” (February 1983)
“Frederick Douglass: Fighter for Freedom” (February 1989)
“Harlem Renaissance, The” (February 1991)
“Harriet Tubman: 1820-1913: The Woman Called Moses” (February1981)
“Ida B. Wells-Barnett” (February 2001)
“Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Civil Rights Movement” (February 1994)
Cricket
“Sweet Land of Liberty” (April 2001)
Faces (entire issue)
“Asante World, The” (January 1985)
Footsteps: African American History (entire issues)
“Black Cowboys and Cowgirls” (March/April 1999)
“Black Immigration to the United States” (March/April 2001)
“Colonial Slavery” (May/June 2002)
“The Great Migration” (September/October 2002)
“Sengbe and the Amistad” (September/October 1998) (charter issue)
“Slavery at Mount Vernon” (November/December 2000)
Kids Discover (entire issue)
“Martin Luther King, Jr." (January 2001)
Masonic Journal: The Official Magazine of the Prince Hall Masons and the Order of the Eastern Star (July 1998, Volume 1)
“America’s Unsung Patriots: A Proud Past, A Great Future”
“Prince Hall: The Man and the Social Institution”
National Geographic
“An African-American Celebration of Life” (August 1990)
National Geographic World
“Huggable History” (December 1986)
People, Land & Water (August 2003)
“Paul Laurence Dunbar: An African-American Voice from the Heartland”
Smithsonian (tagboard binder)
“Facing History: Images of African-Americans Illuminate a Proud Past”
(November 1999)
Spider
“Karima Loved the Music” (February 2001)
Primary Source Packets
I. Black Voting Rights: The Fight for Equality
Black Voting Rights: Notes on Exhibits
Black Voting Rights: Study Guide, Reproducible Masters
1. “This is a White Man’s Government” cartoon by Thomas Nast
2. Two Thomas Nast cartoons
3. Three cartoons by Thomas Nast
4. “The First Colored Senator and Representatives…” lithograph
5. “Canvassing for Votes” cartoon by R. N. Brooke,
and black political parade cartoon
6. “The Political Pinkertons” cartoon by Grant Hamilton
7. “Negro Rule” cartoon
8. “Opinion of W.E.B. Du Bois” editorial
9. “Election Day in Florida” article by Walter F. White
10. “Nixon vs. Herndon,” Supreme Court Reports 536
11. “Why the Poll Tax Must be Repealed,” broadside, NAACP
12. Letters, J. L. LeFlore to Thurgood Marshall and Thurgood Marshall
to Robert E. Hannegan
13. Committee for Alabama, letter
14. “Hands Off Democracy,” handbill, NAACP
15. “M is for Mississippi and Murder,” pamphlet, NAACP
16. “Hands that Picked Cotton…” poster, Voter Education Project
17. “100% Registered to Vote,” window sticker
18. Profiles of Lowery, King and Young on Voter’s Card,
19. “The Fifteenth Amendment” poster
20. Broadsheet I: Reconstruction
21. Broadsheet II: Disfranchisement
22. Broadsheet III: Blacks Organize
23. Broadsheet IV: We Shall Overcome
II. Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Renaissance: Notes on Exhibits
Harlem Renaissance: Study Guide, Reproducible Masters
1. Maps of Manhattan and Harlem, 1800-1930
2. Poster: “True Sons of Freedom”
3. Profile: James Reese Europe and the “Fighting 15th”
4. Harlem in the 1920s: A photo album
5. Text of interview for WPA American Life Histories Project:“
Harlem Rent Parties”
6. Manuscript for Federal Writer’s Project: “The Whites Invade
Harlem”
7. (a/b/c) Posters showing books, plays and magazines of the Harlem
Renaissance
8. A Review of Langston Hughes’ The Weary Blues
9. “Reflections on O’Neill’s Plays” by Paul Robeson
10. “The Prodigal Son,” from God’s Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons
in Verse
11. Illustrations by Aaron Douglas for God’s Trombones
12. Race ads
13. Two paintings of the Harlem Renaissance: “Thinnin’ Corn” and
“Midsummer Night in Harlem”
14. Profile: Zora Neale Hurston, Renaissance woman
15. Illustrations by Miguel Covarrubias for Zora Neale Hurston’s Mules
and Men
16. Profile: William Grant Still, a Harlem Renaissance classic
17. First page of the first movement of “Afro-American Symphony”
by William Grant Still
18. Harlem Renaissance Timeline: 1903-1930
19. Broadsheet 1: Harlem
20. Broadsheet 2: The New Negro
21. Broadsheet 3: Literature of the Harlem Renaissance
22. Broadsheet 4: The Arts in Harlem
23. Broadsheet 5: Women of the Harlem Renaissance
III. The Slave Trade & Its Abolition
The Slave Trade & Its Abolition: Notes on Exhibits
The Slave Trade & Its Abolition: Study Guide, Reproducible
Masters
1. A Plan of the Slaving ship Brooks
2. William Wilberforce by Sir Thomas Lawrence.
3. A bill advertising a West Indian slave auction in 1829.
4. Selected pages from the Journal of John Newton.
5. A remonstrance from the Council and Assembly of Jamaica to the
House of Commons on the subject of the slave trade (1789)
6. Accounts of the numbers of negroes delivered to the islands of
Barbados, Jamaica and Antigua for the years 1698 – 1701.
7. Views of slavery from cartoons of 1790, 1830 and 1832.
8. Sold into slavery: scenes from slave life.
9. Broadsheet 1: Slavery
10. Broadsheet 2: How it Began
11. Broadsheet 3: The Middle Passage
12. Broadsheet 4: The Plantations
13. Broadsheet 5: The Men with a Conscience
14. Broadsheet 6: Why did it take so long?
IV. Slavery in the United States
Slavery in the United States: Notes on Exhibit
Slavery in the United States: Study Guide, Reproducible Masters
1a. Newspapers and Slavery: Page 3 of the South Carolina Gazette of
October 30, 1736
b. Newspapers and Slavery: Page 1 of the Camden [South Carolina]
Journal of January 1, 1831
2. A slave sale poster, 1835
3. A bill of sale for a slave, 1838
4. An Ordinance to prohibit Slaves from carrying on any Mechanic or
Handicraft Trade of themselves, 1796
5. A portion of the Georgia Slave Code, 1848
6a. A petition for payment for execution of a slave by burning, 1802
b. (transcript)
7a. A petition to free a slave, ca. 1820
b. ( transcript)
8a. A letter from a slave, 1838
b. (transcript)
9a. The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863
b. (transcript)
10. Broadsheet 1: Slavery Comes to the Colonies
11. Broadsheet 2: Slavery in the North
12. Broadsheet 3: Slavery in the Nineteenth Century
13. Broadsheet 4: The Slave’s Culture
14. Broadsheet 5: The Slave’s Reaction to Slavery
15. Broadsheet 6: Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation
V. Underground Railroad
Underground Railroad: Notes on Exhibits
Underground Railroad: Reproducible Student Activities
1. Runaway Slave Reward Poster, 1847, and Runaway Slave
Advertisements, 1736 and 1831
2. Anti-Abolition Handbill, 1837
3. First Page of “Song of the Abolitionist” by William Lloyd Garrison,
1841
4. Front Page of The North Star, June 2, 1848
5. Certificate of Freedom of Harriet Bolling, 1851
6. Anti-Slave Catchers’ Mass Convention Broadside, 1854
7. Broadside Warning “Colored People of Boston” of Slave Catchers,
1851
8. Antebellum Map Showing Free and Slave States, 1956
9. Page from the Boston Vigilance Committee Handbook, ca. 1854
10. Excerpt from The Underground Railroad by William Still,
1879 edition
11. Detail from the Elgin Settlement Plan, 1866
12. Excerpt from Reminiscences of Levi Coffin by Levi Coffin, 1876
13. Joint Resolution of Congress Submitting the Proposed Thirteenth
Amendment to State Legislatures for Ratification, February 1, 1865
14. Photo-poster: “Underground Railroad: The Train to Freedom”
15. Underground Railroad Timeline: 1619-1879
16. Map Showing Major U.S. Routes on the Underground Railroad
17. Stories from the Underground Railroad
18. Broadsheet 1: “Negroes for Sale”: A Brief History of Slavery in the
United States
19. Broadsheet 2: Laying Tracks for an Underground Railroad
20. Broadsheet 3: Fighting Slavery Above Ground
21. Broadsheet 4: The Train to Freedom
Pictures
“Civil Rights Leader, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.” (craft tinfoil portrait)
“Bill Pickett: ‘The Bull-Dogger’”
“Hidden Meanings in Quilt Designs”
“The King Center: Six Principles of Nonviolence”
Realia
Game pieces (6) and die (goes with“Harriet Tubman and the Underground
Railroad” game poster in Pt.2, booklet in Pt.1)
Kwanzaa set
Kikombe Cha Umoja (communal unity cup)
Kinara (candleholder)
Mishumaa Saba (seven candles, 3 red, 3 green, 1 black)
Mkeka (place mat)
Videos
History of African Americans in McLean County (with matching book)
BAG Pt.2 Please return all items marked Pt.2 to this bag.
Brochures (laminated)
“Martin Luther King, Jr.: I Have A Dream”/“Sweet Auburn:
The Black Atlanta of King’s Early Years”
Posters
1. “African Americans in the Arts”
2. “Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.”
3. “Famous Black Americans” (#1)(2-sided)
Side 1: Martin Luther King, Jr.
Side 2: A. Philip Randolph, Booker T. Washington,
Carter G. Woodson, Dorie Miller, Ethel Waters,
George Washington Carver, Granville T. Woods,
Jackie Robinson, James Weldon Johnson, Jesse Owens,
Joe Louis, Langston Hughes, Mary Church Terrell,
Mary McLeod Bethune, Paul Robeson, Robert Smalls, Scott Joplin,
W. E. B. DuBois
4. “Famous Black Americans” (#2)2 sided)
Side 1: Benjamin Banneker, Blanche Kelso Bruce, Crispus Attucks,
Dred Scott, Estevancio, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman,
James Forten, Jean Baptiste Point DuSable,
John Brown Russwurm, Joseph Rainey,
Martin Robinson Delany, Nat Turner,
Phillis Wheatley, Sojourner Truth
Side 2: Andrew Young, Jr., Arthur Ashe, Bill Cosby, Duke Ellington,
Frank Robinson, James Meredith, Jesse Jackson,
Leon Howard Sullivan, Louis Armstrong,
Michael Jackson, Muhammad Ali, Ralph Bunche, Rosa Parks,
Shirley Chisholm, Thomas Bradley, Thurgood Marshall,
Whitney Moore Young, Jr.
5. “Harriet Tubman & the Underground Railroad” (game)
6. “Langston Hughes: The People’s Poet: 1902 – 1967”
7. “Malcolm X and 1199, New York’s Health Care Workers Union”
8. “Lift Every Voice and Sing”
9. “Martin Luther King, Jr. Civil Rights Leader”
10. “Martin Luther King, Jr. ‘I Have a Dream’”
11. “Martin Luther King, Jr.” (Instructor Special Poster)
12. “Outstanding Black Americans of the 20th Century” (literature,
entertainment & sports)
13. “Outstanding Black Americans of the 20th Century” (public service,
education & science)
14. “Outstanding Black Americans of the Past” Segregation:Before Civil
Rights
15. (1) Hauling Cotton Bales
16. (2) Cotton Planting
17. (3) Chain Gang
18. (4) Chemistry Laboratory
19. (5) End of the School Day
20. (6) Cross Burning
21. (7) Segregated Movie Theater
22. (8) Bus Station
23. (9) Segregated Café
24. (10) Rioting at Housing Project
25. (11) African-American Platoon
26. (12) Pickets at Movie Theater
“Slavery in America Album” (set of 12, #28-39)
27. (1) Auction and Negro Sales Building, c. 1864
28. (2) Slave Pen, c. 1863
29. (3) White Boss Watching Cotton Pickers, c. 1870
30. (4) Free Blacks Cutting Sugar Cane, c. 1880
31. (5) Slave Quarters on Plantation, c. 1862
32. (6) Young Slave, c. 1860
33. (7) Slave with Lash Marks, c. 1862; Branded Slave, C. 1863
34. (8) Whipping Post and Pillory, c. 1870s
35. (9) Fugitive Slaves, 1862
36. (10) Harriet Tubman and Freed Slaves, c. 1877
37. (11) Escaped Slaves, “Contrabands”, c. 1862
38. (12) Ex-Slaves, c. 1936
“Struggle for Civil Rights: 1954-1968” (set of 12, #40-51)
39. (1) Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-56
40. (2) Crisis in Little Rock, 1957
41. (3) Freedom Riders, 1961
42. (4) Integration of the University of Mississippi, 1962
43. (5) Lunch Counter Sit-in, Jackson, Mississippi, 1963
44. (6) Birmingham Children’s Crusade, 1963
45. (7) March on Washington, 1963
46. (8) Non-Violence and the March on Washington, 1963
47. (9) Sixteenth Street Baptist Church Bombing, 1963
48. (10) Freedom Summer, 1964
49. (11) Selma-to-Montgomery March, 1965
50. (12) Memphis Sanitation Workers Strike, 1968
51. “Women and the Civil War” (c.1990, National Women’s History
Project)
“Women of Hope: African Americans Who Made A Difference”
52. Alexa Canady, Neurosurgeon
53. Alice Walker, Author
54. The Delany Sisters; Elizabeth, Dental Surgeon; Sarah, Teacher;
Authors
55. Ella J. Baker, Civil Rights Organizer
56. Fannie Lou Hamer, Mississippi Freedom Fighter
57. Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Editor, Anti-Lynching Crusader
58. Mae C. Jemison, Astronaut, Physician
59. Marian Wright Edelman, President of Children’s Defense Fund
60. Maya Angelou, Poet, Playwright, Professor
61. Ruby Dee, Actress, Author
62. Septima P. Clark, Taught Literacy as Key to Empowerment
63. Toni Morrison, Author
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