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Samuel Davis Wilson

Samuel Davis Wilson
Author: Samuel Davis Wilson
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1996
Genre: Frontier and pioneer life
ISBN:

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Correspondence from Samuel and Polly Ann (Meteer) Wilson that describes their stay at Swan Lake and St. Peter (in present Nicollet County, Minnesota) between 1857 and 1864. Their later correspondence was sent from Forbesville, Illinois. Also: correspondence from various persons, written between 1854 and 1912 and saved by the family of John Benson Crum and his wife Sarah Meteer, sister of Polly Ann (Meteer) Wilson, who lived first in Ohio and later in Illinois; and correspondence written by the compiler, Robert DeGroot and descendants of the earlier Crum and Meteer family members.


Samuel Wilson Correspondence

Samuel Wilson Correspondence
Author: Samuel Wilson
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1832
Genre: Brothers and sisters
ISBN:

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Correspondence written from Samuel Wilson in Greenville, South Carolina, to his sister, Eliza Pitkin and her husband Reverend John Pitkin, in Dresden, Ohio. Wilson talks about his health and a decision to travel south to visit relatives in South Carolina. He accepted a position "in a female seminary established at Greenville Court House ... The price of tuition is enormously high at least five dollars per qr. for spelling, reading and writing." He believes that "the state of religion here is on the whole promising...[however] I only dread a collision between the different denominations."


Samuel Davis Papers

Samuel Davis Papers
Author: Samuel Davis
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1840
Genre: Agency (Law)
ISBN:

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Correspondence, a power of attorney, and legal notes record the work of Samuel Davis, attorney, to obtain the head right, land grant, and back pay owed to the Estate of Alexander O'Brien by the government of the Republic of Texas. Correspondence between Davis and attorneys in Texas, J. De Cordova and James Burke, and Burke's agent and cousin in Austin, William H. Murrah, discuss the difficulties encountered in pressing claims with the government. Of tangential interest is Burke's 1841 letter to Davis in which he encloses 'diamonds' found in Texas for Davis to have appraised in Philadelphia.


Black Citymakers

Black Citymakers
Author: Marcus Anthony Hunter
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2013-03-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0199339775

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W.E.B. DuBois immortalized Philadelphia's Black Seventh Ward neighborhood, one of America's oldest urban black communities, in his 1899 sociological study The Philadelphia Negro. In the century after DuBois's study, however, the district has been transformed into a largely white upper middle class neighborhood. Black Citymakers revisits the Black Seventh Ward, documenting a century of banking and tenement collapses, housing activism, black-led anti-urban renewal mobilization, and post-Civil Rights political change from the perspective of the Black Seventh Warders. Drawing on historical, political, and sociological research, Marcus Hunter argues that black Philadelphians were by no means mere casualties of the large scale social and political changes that altered urban dynamics across the nation after World War II. Instead, Hunter shows that black Americans framed their own understandings of urban social change, forging dynamic inter- and intra-racial alliances that allowed them to shape their own migration from the old Black Seventh Ward to emergent black urban enclaves throughout Philadelphia. These Philadelphians were not victims forced from their homes - they were citymakers and agents of urban change. Black Citymakers explores a century of socioeconomic, cultural, and political history in the Black Seventh Ward, creating a new understanding of the political agency of black residents, leaders and activists in twentieth century urban change.


Let America Be America Again

Let America Be America Again
Author: Langston Hughes
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2022-07-28
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0192667106

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A collection of interviews, speeches, and essays by Langston Hughes. Let America Be America Again: Conversations with Langston Hughes is a record of a remarkable man talking. In texts ranging from early interviews in the 1920s, when he was a busboy and scribbling out poems on hotel napkins, to major speeches, such as his keynote address at the First World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, Senegal, in 1966, Hughes's words further amplify the international reputation he established over the course of five decades through more widely-published and well-known poems, stories, novels, and plays. In these interviews, speeches, and conversational essays, the writer referred to by admirers as the "Poet Laureate of the Negro Race" and the "Dean of Black Letters" articulated some of his most powerful critiques of fascism, economic and racial oppression, and compromised democracy. It was also through these genres that Hughes spoke of the responsibilities of the Black artist, documented the essential contributions of Black people to literature, music, and theatre, and chronicled the substantial challenges that Black artists face in gaining recognition, fair pay, and professional advancement. And it was through these pieces, too, that Hughes built on his celebrated work in other literary genres to craft an original, tragic-comic persona—a Blues poet in exile, forever yearning for and coming back to a home, a nation, that nevertheless continues to disappoint and harm him. A global traveler, Hughes's words, "Let America be America Again" were, throughout his career, always followed by a caveat: "America never was America to me."


Lineage Book

Lineage Book
Author: Daughters of the American Revolution
Publisher:
Total Pages: 478
Release: 1917
Genre: Genealogy
ISBN:

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The Roots of Educational Inequality

The Roots of Educational Inequality
Author: Erika M. Kitzmiller
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2021-12-03
Genre: Education
ISBN: 0812253566

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"Through a fresh, longitudinal analysis that investigates daily events rather than focusing solely on key turning points, this study challenges conventional, declension narratives that suggest that American high schools have moved steadily from pillars of success to institutions of failures. Instead, this work demonstrates that educational inequality has been embedded in our nation's urban high schools since their founding. This book argues that public school have never been funded adequately, and instead, that so-called success of public schools is often tied to an influx of private funding and resources from families and communities that subsidizes inadequate public aid"--