New York: New York University Press, 2008. Dayton, Lucille S., and Donald W. Dayton. “Your Daughters Shall Prophesy: Feminism in the Holiness Movement.” Methodist History 14 (1976) 67–92. Deal, William E., and Timothy K. Beal.
Both later expressed concern with the threat to coalition democracy (and, in Carey's view, to an appropriately moderate coalition outlook) that they had perceived as arising from the growing influence of the RSB.
In many ways, Clarence Lewis lived out the dream that Iudge Norman could never quite attain. With the elder Lewis's elevation to the ministry, the Lewis family became part of Iackson's black middle class. They lived in a new segregated ...
... each one's critique of Boswell's work is on Fordham University's People with a History: An Online Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Trans* History site, the John Boswell Page. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/pwh/index-bos.asp.
Also, Carters willingness to appoint black activist judges like Nathaniel Jones and A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. was yet another distinguishing feature of his nominations. But for a variety of reasons, no blacks were appointed to the First, ...
She concluded her lecture by remembering her friend Hamilton Holmes, who had fulfilled his lifelong ambition to become a ... ball into which we could have looked to the future fortyyears hence and seen only6 percent students of color .
An interactive history of the Civil Rights movements chronicles the struggles of African Americans for equality on all fronts over the course of the twentieth century, from the Harlem Renaissance to the present day, capturing key events and ...
The photograph, which plays a central role in the book's perspectives from frontline participants, caught a moment when the raw virulence of racism crashed against the defiance of visionaries.
The photograph, which plays a central role in the book's perspectives from frontline participants, caught a moment when the raw virulence of racism crashed against the defiance of visionaries.
We Shall Not Be Moved tells the absorbing story of the community leaders who stepped into this void to rebuild the city they loved.
A study of the events surrounding an iconic photograph places the Jackson Woolworth's sit-in in its historical context, examining how it set the stage for the civil rights movement in the city as well as for the assassination of Medgar ...
The woman's factory strike of 1909 is the story of thousands of young women (most of whom were below 18 years of age) who fought a sexist and dangerous labor...
We Shall Not Be Moved tells the absorbing story of the community leaders who stepped into this void to rebuild the city they loved.
That melody is an adaptation of the traditional folk tune, 'We shall not be moved'. And when this old labour protest song is sung from the terraces, some say the locals shout it with an intensity which can't be described in words.
This exhaustively researched contribution to our understanding of the civil rights movement tells, for the first time, the full story of the harrowing lunch counter sit-in that erupted into violence and led, two weeks later, to the shooting ...
Now in paperback is the story of teenage workers and important female activists in their courageous fight for humane working conditions in 1909. Photos.