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Library of Congress,-- Manuscript Division
Correspondence, diaries, and biographical material, documenting Logan's concern with racial inequality and his career as an historian of Africans and African Americans. Topics include his army service in France during World War I; the Pan-African movement of the 1920s and 1930s; Haitian diplomatic soirées; the founding conference of the United Nations, San Francisco, Calif. (1945); Logan's meetings with African independence leaders, Kwame Nkrumah and Nnamdi Azikiwe; and his career at Howard University and colleagues including Mordecai W. Johnson. Correspondents include Harry T. Burleigh, Betty Riis, Roger William Riis, and Logan's wife, Ruth Robinson Logan
Howard University,-- Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
Personal papers, including academic transcripts, calendars, and travel memorabilia; correspondence; material relating to Alpha Phi Alpha, including correspondence, campaign and convention programs, bulletins, newsletters, memoranda to chapters, financial papers, and general reports; speeches; writings by Logan, including a chapter from his unpublished autobiography, drafts of published articles and monographs including Howard University: The First Hundred Years (1969) and The Negro in the United States ([1957]), and essays by contributors to What the Negro Wants (1944); writings about Logan (newspaper articles (1934-1980)); programs; material relating to organizational affiliations; subject files; writings by others; printed materials; photographs of Logan during travels in Acapulco; oversize material; and restricted items, including correspondence and scholarship material
Library of Congress - Research and Reference Services
Correspondence, diaries, and biographical material documenting Logan's concern with racial inequality and his career as an historian of Africans and African Americans. Topics include his army service in France during World War I; the Pan-African movement of the 1920s and 1930s; Haitian diplomatic soirées; the founding conference of the United Nations, San Francisco, Calif. (1945); Logan's meetings with African independence leaders, Kwame Nkrumah and Nnamdi Azikiwe; colleagues including Mordecai W. Johnson; and his career at Howard University. Correspondents include Harry T. Burleigh, Betty Riis, Roger William Riis, and Logan's wife, Ruth Robinson Logan
Howard University,-- Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
Personal and family papers, teaching materials, correspondence, travel documents, speeches, writings and book reviews, organizational files, subject files, printed materials, photographs, memorabilia, and audiotapes and films, relating to Logan's activities as a scholar and advocate of human rights -- Includes materials relating to his association with Alpha Phi Alpha, Howard University, the Peace Corps, and Unesco, and to the preparation of the Dictionary of American Negro Biography (1982)
New York Public Library
Views of author, historian and Howard University professor Rayford Logan. Includes studio portraits and views of Logan in group portraits at a banquet and in a living room with Otto McClarrin, Mrs. E. Elly, Count and Countess Guido Piovene and Dr. Eunice D. Lee
Library of Congress - Research and Reference Services
Historian and educator. Correspondence, diaries, and biographical material documenting Logan's concern with racial inequality and his career as an historian of Africans and African Americans.
New York Public Library
Views of civic leader and political activist Jeanetta W. Brown. In group photos at various events including; with Dr. Rayford Logan, Elmer Henderson, Ted Brown, Secretary Acheson, Bishop William Y. Bell and Clarence Mitchell; at a National Council of Negro Women tea with Yvonne English and Vivian Miller; receiving a certificate of appreciation at the National Association of Fashion and Accessory Designers Annual Dinner; with two other unidentified women at an event of some kind
Howard University,-- Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
Personal and family papers of Henry Arthur Callis -- Includes awards, certificates, clippings, correspondence, a diary, notebooks, photographs, programs, and scrapbooks relating to Callis and his father Henry J. Callis. Also contains material concerning Callis's medical career at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Tuskegee, Ala., and the Howard University School of Medicine, and information relating to his activities as a founding member of the national African American fraternity Alpha Phi Alpha, including its history, constitution, by-laws, chapter manuals, memos, convention material, newsletters, and speeches by Callis. Correpondents include Numa P.G. Adams, Ralph J. Bunche, W. Montague Cobb, Eugene Dibble, W.E.B. Du Bois, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Raymond Gregory, William L. Houston, John A. Kenney, Alain Locke, Rayford Logan, Paul Robeson, Mary Church Terrell, Charles H. Wesley, and Doxey Wilkerson. There is no material dated between 1889 and 1904
Howard University, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
Chiefly notes, clippings, and printed matter, relating to Brawley's research interests; together with correspondence, writings, and other papers -- Includes ms. biography of his father, Edward McKnight Brawley (1851-1923), Baptist clergyman, missionary, and educator; and a ms. of the Seven Sleepers and other poems. Other persons represented include Matilda Dunbar, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Arthur Huff Fauset, Francis J. Grimke, Roland Hayes, James W. Johnson, Alain Locke, Rayford W. Logan, John Merrick, Newman I. White, and Carter G. Woodson. Institutions represented include Howard University, Alabama Baptist Normal and Theological School, and Morehouse College. Other topics represented include Baptists in South Carolina and churches in Lewisburg, Pa
Howard University, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
Chiefly notes, clippings, and printed matter, relating to Brawley's research interests; together with correspondence, writings, and other papers -- Includes ms. biography of his father, Edward McKnight Brawley (1851-1923), Baptist clergyman, missionary, and educator; and a ms. of the Seven Sleepers and other poems. Other persons represented include Matilda Dunbar, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Arthur Huff Fauset, Francis J. Grimke, Roland Hayes, James W. Johnson, Alain Locke, Rayford W. Logan, John Merrick, Newman I. White, and Carter G. Woodson. Institutions represented include Howard University, Alabama Baptist Normal and Theological School, and Morehouse College. Other topics represented include Baptists in South Carolina and churches in Lewisburg, Pa