Black Quotidian: Everyday History in African-American Newspapers

November - Archived Posts

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November 1, 1930: Pittsburgh Courier on the Great Migration. Guest post by Jodi Silvio, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 1, 1960: Kennedy wins poll at Morehouse, reported in Atlanta Daily World. Guest post by Ivan Monroy, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 1, 1958: Massive Resistance to school desegregation reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Chris Sullivan, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 2, 1963: Norfolk Journal and Guide reports on black servicemen facing housing discrimination. Guest post by Damian Hondares, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 3, 1956: Hazel Carter reports in Norfolk Journal and Guide that black citizens in Pittsylvania reject voluntary school segregation plan. Guest post by Dominique Brown, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 4, 1950: Vivian Carter Mason reports on race and death penalty in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Bal Artis, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 5, 1949: Navy ends racial segregation, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Emeline Blevins, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 6, 1948: Norfolk Journal and Guide reports on burglary of Bishop “Sweet Daddy” Grace. Guest post by Tenaya Bien, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 6, 1977: Atlanta Daily World calls black police officers pioneers in the city. Guest post by Tracy Stefanov, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 7, 1964: Norfolk Journal and Guide reports on partial integration of teacher associations. Guest post by Canyon Teague, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 7, 1942: History of lynching discussed in Chicago Defender. Guest post by Brian Lloyd, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 8, 1947: Controversy over representations of race in film Hazard, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Dominique Harrington, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 9, 1968: Public housing study reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Madeleine Jordan-Lord, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 10, 1962: African-American voters turn out in record numbers, reported in Chicago Defender. Guest post by Emilie Theobald, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 10, 1956: Roy Wilkins asks Army not to play football game at segregated Tulane University, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Bailey Duplessie, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 11, 1950: Norfolk Journal and Guide criticizes Life magazine pictorial history of WWII that excludes black people. Guest post by Megan Wirtz, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 12, 1955: School segregation discussed in Norfolk Journal and Guide one year after Brown v. Board of Education. Guest post by Keshara Moore, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 13, 1943: Black war industry workers featured in “Victory is Our Business,” a General Motors radio program highlighted in Cleveland Call and Post.
November 14, 1953: Norfolk Journal and Guide editorial on segregation and equality a year before Brown v. Board of Education. Guest post by Maddy Dunbar, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 15, 1952: Eight white teachers resign to protest segregation at University of the South, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide.Guest post by Aggy Barnowski, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 16, 1946: Manassas, Virginia school receives $75,000, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Natalia Chaney, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 17, 1951: South Carolina county sheriff calls on local Ku Klux Klan to disband, reported in Norfolk Journal and Guide. Guest post by Karissa Lim, undergraduate student at University of Richmond.
November 18, 1954: Bal Masque costume ball featured in Los Angeles Sentinel.
November 19, 1960: Four six-year-old girls (Ruby Bridges, Leona Tate, Tessie Prevost, and Gail Etienne) face white mobs as they integrate New Orleans schools, reported in Philadelphia Tribune and Chicago Defender.
November 20, 1929: Mob boss Stephanie St. Clair takes out ad in New York Amsterdam News to warn potential suitors.
November 21, 1974: Federal judge J. Skelly Wright expresses concern about residential segregation and judiciary’s inaction toward it. Guest post by Alexander Cooper, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 22, 1912: Pittsburgh Courier highlights nineteenth-century African-American composers.
November 23, 1946: Dr. Channing Tobias criticizes housing discrimination in Harlem, reported in New York Amsterdam News.
November 24, 1923: Race riot in Elaine, Arkansas, reported in Chicago Defender. Guest post by Monique Vanderlaan, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 25, 1978: Vel Phillips becomes first black woman to win statewide office in Wisconsin, reported in Cleveland Call and Post. Guest post by Kerri Ryer, History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 26, 1959: “Negro History Quiz” in Atlanta Daily World.
November 27, 1920: Hair and beauty school ads in the (tattered) Philadelphia Tribune.
November 28, 1970: Louis Martin discusses possibility of black cabinet member in Nixon administration, in Chicago Defender. Guest post by History MA student at Arizona State University.
November 29, 1984: Waters and local civil rights activists protest apartheid, reported in Los Angeles Sentinel.
November 30, 1946: Christmas ads for colored dolls in the Cleveland Call and Post.

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