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Illinois -- Chicago.

 Subject
Subject Source: Fast

Found in 6 Collections and/or Records:

AMF Midway Postal Retirement Organization Archives

 Collection
Identifier: harsh-2006-04
Abstract

These workers were the first African Americans allowed to work at Midway Airport’s AMF postal facility. They later worked on trains, distributing mail throughout the Midwest. The AMF Midway Postal Retirement Organization was founded in 1991 to document the history of African Americans in the organization. The collection contains administrative records, newsletters, photographs, reports, diagrams and memorabilia.

Dates: 1957-2010, undated

Brenetta Howell Barrett Papers

 Collection
Identifier: harsh-2007-08
Abstract

A lifelong Chicagoan, Brenetta Howell Barrett was a leader and political activist in West Side community organizations. She served in the mayoral administrations of Harold Washington and Eugene Sawyer. Active in housing, environmental and civil liberties issues, she was also involved in community protests in the 1960s and 1970s. Her papers include correspondence, office files, programs, clippings, photographs and memorabilia.

Dates: 1942-2006

Toni Bond Leonard Papers

 Collection
Identifier: harsh-2011-03
Abstract Toni M. Bond Leonard became involved in the reproductive justice movement in the 1980s, eventually becoming executive director for the Chicago Abortion Fund. In 1996, Bond Leonard was one of the founding members of African American Women Evolving, which was formed to provide educational services to the African American community about reproductive justice, equality and education. The collection includes organizational and biographical records, as well as manuscripts, correspondence and...
Dates: 1948-2012; Majority of material found in (1995-2011)

Chicago Public Library, George Cleveland Hall Branch Archives

 Collection
Identifier: harsh-1932-01
Abstract The Hall Branch is named for George Cleveland Hall, African American physician, Chicago Public Library board member and a founding member of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, who campaigned tirelessly for a full-service library in Bronzeville neighborhood. Hall Branch, headed by Vivian G. Harsh from 1932 to 1958, was a leading cultural institution during the Black Chicago Renaissance. The archives include administrative records, programs, correspondence, photographs,...
Dates: 1930-1975.

Coalition to Save the South Shore Country Club Archives

 Collection
Identifier: harsh-1997-09
Abstract

South Shore Country Club, originally a private club that barred African Americans, was scheduled for demolition in 1977. A grassroots coalition of community organizations organized to save, preserve and restore the historic site for all citizens. This collection contains blueprints and drawings of the renovation of South Shore Country Club, administrative records, statistical reports, newspaper clippings, photographs and memorabilia.

Dates: 1906-1993

Toni Bond Leonard Papers

 Unprocessed Material
Identifier: harsh-2011-03
Dates: 1948-2012; Majority of material found in (1995-2011)