Search Results
Black Autonomy Network Community Organization records, 2002-2014
The Black Autonomy Network Community Organization records series (1 linear feet, 1 oversize box and 3.41 GB) contains materials related to the work of the organization and the controversial voter fraud charges against founder Reverend Edward Pinkney. The collection includes correspondence, news articles, court documents, protest fliers, religious writings, video recordings, and photos. The materials in the series are organized alphabetically.
Black Autonomy Network Community Organization records, 2002-2014
1 linear foot — 1 oversize box — 3.41 GB (online)
Black Dentistry Conference, 1989-1993
0.2 linear feet (in 5 folders)
The Black Dentistry Conference file (1989-1993, 0.2 linear feet) contains materials related to the planning and execution of (and response to) a conference on Black Dentistry hosted by the University of Michigan in 1991 and planned by two faculty members of the School of Dentistry, Dr. Emerson Robinson and Dr. Michael Razzoog, with the support of Dean Bernard Machen. The conference was convened specifically to generate dialogue about issues related to oral health in African American communities and African American representation within the dental profession. Materials in this file include topical and budgetary planning documents, literature reviews for the six different tracks of the conference, correspondence and press, contractual documents and correspondence with funding sponsors. Also included is a 1989 research grant proposal by Dr. Robinson and Dr. Marilyn Woolfolk to explore dynamics influencing the disproportionate rate of black women entering the dental profession as compared to black men.
School of Dentistry (University of Michigan) records, 1873 - 2020
40.5 linear feet (in 41 boxes) — 1 oversize volume — 1 oversize folder — 1.3 GB (online)
Black Pond
The Black Pond series in this collection relates to neighborhood opposition to development plans for Black Pond in 1968-1970 and 1980-1981.
Black student activism, 1969-2001
The series Black student activism, 1969-2001 (5.5 linear feet) contains four alphabetically arranged subseries relating to the Black Action Movements (BAM) on the University of Michigan campus: BAM I, 1969-1987 (0.4 linear feet), BAM II, 1974-1975 (0.1 linear feet), BAM III, 1985-1995 (0.5 linear feet) and Conferences and Scholarship about BAM, 1970-2001 (0.1 linear feet). These records include correspondence, newspaper clippings, minutes and other records of the United Coalition Against Racism (UCAR), and they address both the movements themselves and reactions to them within the university community. There are also documents concerning incidents of racial harassment that had a part in inspiring the movements.
In 2014 the Bentley Historical Library digitized select archival records relating to BAM I, II and III housed in other University collections. Finding aid to Black Action Movement select documents, 1970-1987 digital collection is available online and contains links to the digitized files.
A fifth subseries, Other activism,1966-2000 (3.9 linear feet), includes newspaper clippings about the civil rights movement; and the anti-apartheid and divestment movements of the 1980s, as well as records of several activist organizations, particularly the Free South Africa Coordinating Committee (FSACC), and the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA). Some of these records pertain to activities on campus, but most are concerned with political and civil rights causes that are national or international in scope. The Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA) records document that organization's efforts to encourage the University of Michigan and Ann Arbor banks to divest their holdings in South Africa.
More records relating to UCAR and the Baker -Mandela Center (BMC) are presented in the "Other activism" subseries, and pertain to activism and events at the University of Michigan during the 1980s and 1990s. Though UCAR and the BMC were separate entities, their records have been arranged together as a result of their frequent and close collaboration.
Department of Afroamerican and African Studies (University of Michigan) records, 1966-2010 (majority within 1970-1994)
54.5 linear feet — 1 oversize folder — 1.9 TB
Blake family, 1806-1984 (majority within 1870s-1910s)
1 linear foot, 1 oversize folder, 1 oversize volume, 902 MB (online)
The Blake family series (1.3 linear feet and oversize items) includes materials of Alde L. T. Blake and William F. Blake, their daughter Dorothy S. Blake (materials of their daughter Ethel are found within the Kutsche family series), as well as Thomas Dawes Blake and Freeman N. Blake. Alde L. T. Blake's materials include correspondence with Jane Addams, Ben Lindsey, Woodbridge N. Ferris, and Anna Howard Shaw, as well as related exchanges with representatives of various women's rights and consumer rights organizations. Also included in the series her personal correspondence and scrapbooks, as well as photocopies of materials held by the Rutgers Archives.
William F. Blake materials include his scrapbooks dated between 1872 and 1929, largely concerning family history and business interests, his personal and business correspondence, as well as volumes containing copies of letters sent by Robert Blake in his capacity as U.S. Consular Agent serving in Canada, including detailed commercial report about London, Ontario in 1873; and a ledger with copies of letters sent by William F. Blake during his time as a U.S. Consul in 1878-1879.
Dorothy S. Blake's correspondence includes her personal correspondence, as well as a number of letters about her teaching career in Grand Rapids. Freeman N. Blake materials include his scattered correspondence and two notebooks from his time as a law school student in Cambridge. The series also includes materials related to Thomas Dawes Blake, all in oversize folder. Included here are his obituaries and military documents dating to 1806. The Blake family series also includes family histories, digital copies of genealogical material, and miscellaneous items.
Blake family papers, 1806-1984
1.8 linear feet — 2 oversize folders — 1 oversize volume — 902 MB (online)
Blanchard Family Papers, circa 1835-circa 2000
49.5 linear feet (in 50 boxes) — 1400 glass photographic plates (in 10 boxes)
Nathan A. Cobb
The Nathan A. Cobb series documents Cobb's ground-breaking work in plant pathology and nematology and includes an extensive assortment of visual materials related to his personal and professional activities. The series is comprised of six major sections: Personal, Professional, Publications, Inventions and Patents, Clippings, and Visual Materials. "Personal" content provides biographical information about Cobb and includes educational materials (through his doctoral studies at the University of Jena) as well as correspondence with friends, family, and various scientific figures in the United States and Australia (including Alexander Graham Bell, William Farrer, and H. C. L. Anderson). The "Professional" section documents Cobb's various endeavors and consists of correspondence and materials related to his work as an instructor (at the Williston Seminary in Easthampton, MA), analytical chemist, advertiser (for the American importer Chipman in Australia), and research scientist (in Australia and the United States). "Publications" include collections of works self-published by Cobb and members of his family as well as content that appeared in various journals and conference proceedings. The sketches, drawings, and lithographic prints that illustrate these works are noteworthy for their detail and clarity (the Yearbooks from 1884-1898 are especially rich in this regard). "Inventions and Patents" contain drawings, explanations, correspondence, and (where applicable) official patents in the United States and abroad related to Cobb's innovations and improvements on cameras, microscopes, and other implements. "Clippings" include material from newspapers and magazines (predominantly from the United States and Australia, although other countries are also represented) that relates to Cobb's personal and professional endeavors. Finally, the "Visual Materials" section contains images in various formats related to Cobb's research and publications and also reveals his ability to capture exquisite photographs of both daily life and scientific phenomena. These photographic images include albums of snapshots from the United States, Europe, Algeria, and Australia as well as a large number of plate glass negatives and positive images. Subject matter includes agricultural practices, varied flora and fauna, members of the Cobb family, and street scenes from a variety of locales (including San Francisco prior to the 1906 earthquake).
Blanche Van Leuven Browne papers, 1898-1981 (majority within 1907-1930)
2 linear feet (in 3 boxes) — 1 artifact
Personal Papers, 1898-1981 (majority within 1907-1930)
The Personal Papers series (0.3 linear feet) contains Browne's correspondence and journals. The series also contains materials related to Browne's family, including notes and correspondence written by her adopted daughter, Esther Browne, about her mother's work; as well as a pair of children's trousers that belonged to Jared N. Browne (born 1850).