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| Adams, Frankie Victoria (1902-1979) |
African American Biographical Database http://aabd.chadwyck.com . Search for Adams, Frankie
Beasley, L. M. (1995).
Adams, Frankie Victoria. (1902-1979). In R. L. Edwards, (Ed. in Chief),
Encyclopedia of social work:
biographies (vol. 3, 19th ed., p. 2571). Washington, DC:
National Association of Social Workers.
HV35 .S6 1997
Frankie V. Adams (1902-1979). (1991). In R. E. Hill, (Ed.), The Black women oral history project: from the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the history of women in America, Radcliffe College (v.1, pp.101-121). Westport, CT: Meckler. E185.86 .B544 1991
Frankie V. Adams (1902-1979). (1991). In R. E. Hill, & P. M. King, (Eds.), Guide to the transcripts of the Black women oral history project (pp. 4-5.), [sponsored by the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College]. Westport, CT: Meckler. E185.86 .B544 1991, Suppl.
Frankie V. Adams Collection 1931-1981. Retrieved March 28, 2006 from http://www.auctr.edu/collections/manuscripts/titles/fadams.html
NASW Foundation National
Programs. Social Work Pioneers. Retrieved March 28, 2006 from
http://www.naswfoundation.org/pioneers/a/adams_f.htm
| Allen-Meares, Paula G. (1948 - ) |
Allen-Meares,
P. (1997, Summer). Serving as dean: A
public university perspective.
New Directions for Higher Education, 98, 83-89.
Awards and Honors: Paula Allen-Meares. (2000, Summer/Fall). Ongoing. Retrieved March 28, 2006 from http://www.ssw.umich.edu/ongoing/00-sf/features5.html
Paula G. Allen-Meares. (2003). In Who's Who among African Americans (p.24). New York: Gale Research.
University of Michigan. School of Social Work. Faculty Profiles. Paula Allen-Meares, Dean and Norma Radin Collegiate Professor of social work. Retrieved from the Internet March 28, 2006 http://www.ssw.umich.edu/faculty/profile-pameares.html
|
Barrett, Janie Porter (1865-1948) |
African American Biographical Database http://aabd.chadwyck.com . Search for Barrett, Janie Porter.
African American Registry. Educator Janie Barrett was a reformer. Retrieved from the Internet March 27, 2006. http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/1062/Educator_Janie_Barrett_was_a_reformer
Barrett, Janie Porter. (1943, January). Crisis, 50, 15
Barrett, Janie Porter (1865-1948) (1996). In J. Salzman, D. L. Smith, & C. West, (Eds.), Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History (p.267) New York: Macmillan, 1996. E185. E54 1996
Barrett, Janie Porter (1865-1948). (1974). In Dictionary of American Biography (Suppl. 4, pp. 53-54). New York: American Council of Learned Societies. E176. D576 Suppl.4
Barrett, Janie Porter.
(1994). In D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn,
(Eds.), Black women in America: an historical encyclopedia (pp. 90-91). Bloomington: Indiana
University Press.
E185.86 .B542 1994
Barrett, Janie Porter. (1982). In R. W. Logan, & M. R. Winston, (Eds.), Dictionary of American Negro Biography (pp. 31-32). New York: Norton. E185.96 D53 1982
Becoming equal: Janie Porter Barrett. Retrieved from the Internet March 24, 2006. http://www.vahistorical.org/sva2003/barrett.htm
Carlton-LaNey, I., & Alexander, S. C. (2001). Early African American social welfare pioneer women: working to empower the race and the community. Journal of Ethnic & Cultural Diversity in Social Work, 10, 2, 67-84.
Cash, F. B. (1995). Kinship
and quilting: An examination of an African-American tradition.
The Journal of Negro History, 80, 1, 30-41.
Encyclopedia Britannica. (2004). Barrett, Janie Porter.
Retrieved March 27, 2006 from the Internet
http://search.eb.com/Blackhistory/article.do;jsessionid=${jsessionid}?nKeyValue=105736
Ford, K. A. (2001). Building an institution: Janie
Porter Barrett and the Virginia Industrial Home
School for Colored Girls: 1915 to 1920. Thesis (D. S. W.)--Howard
University.
HM15.H682 F67 2001
Hall, W. R. (1954). Janie Porter
Barrett, her life and contributions to social welfare in Virginia.
Thesis (M. S. W.)--Howard University, 1954.
HM15.H68 H342 1954
Hammond, L. H. (1922). A believer in happiness: Mrs. Janie
Porter Barrett. In In the vanguard of a
race (pp. 78-93). New York: Council of Women for Home Missions and Missionary
Education Movement of the United States and Canada.
E185.6 .H22
Janie Porter Barrett, 1865-1948. Hanover, Education Activist. Retrieved March 24, 2006 from http://www.rbc.edu/library/SpecialCollections/Women_history_resources/vfwposter2002_barrett.pdf
McHenry, R., (Ed.). (1980). Liberty's women (p. 21.). Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam Co. S.W. Ref. HQ1412 .L52
Markers will honor founders of centers. (1999, July 7). The Richmond Times Dispatch, Hanover Plus, J-2.
Neverdon-Morton,
C. (1989). Afro-American women of the south and the advancement of
the race,
1895-1925 (pp. 105-109). Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
E185.86 N48 1989
Peebles-Wilkins, W. (2001). Janie Porter Barrett and the Virginia
Industrial School for Colored Girls:
community response to the needs of African American children.
In I. B. Carlton-LaNey, (Ed.), African
American Leadership: an empowerment tradition in social welfare
history (pp. 123-135). Washington, DC: NASW Press.
HV27 .A46 2001
Peebles-Wilkins, W. (1995). Barrett, Janie Porter (1865-1948).
In R. L. Edwards,
(Ed. in Chief), Encyclopedia of social work:
biographies, (vol. 3, 19th ed., p. 2572). Washington, DC:
National Association of Social Workers.
HV35 .S6 1997
Peebles-Wilkins, W. (1995, January/February).
Janie Porter Barrett and the Virginia
Industrial
School for Colored Girls: community response to the needs of African
American children.
Child Welfare, 74,
143-61.
St. Clair, S. D. (1971) "Janie Porter Barrett." In
Notable American women 1607-1950: a
biographical dictionary (vol.1, pp. 96-97). Cambridge: Harvard University
Press.CT3260 .N57
Scott, A. F. (1990).
Most invisible of all: Black women's voluntary
associations. The Journal of
Southern History, 56, 1, 3-22.
White, B. W., & Hampton, D. M. (1995). African American pioneers in social work. In R. L. Edwards, (Ed. in Chief), Encyclopedia of social work, (vol. 1, 19th ed., p. 117). Washington, DC: National Association of Social Workers. HV35 .S6 1997
| Barrier, Fannie M. (1855-1944) see Williams, Fannie Barrier |
| Burroughs, Nannie Helen (1879-1961) |
African American Biographical Database http://aabd.chadwyck.com . Search for Burroughs, Nannie Helen.
Artis, L. L. (1993). Nannie Helen Burroughs : a study of accommodationist and feminist-activist elements in her career. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Howard University. HM15.H682 A77 1993
Barnett, E. B. (1997). Nannie Burroughs and the education of black women. In S. Harley, & R. Terborg-Penn, The Afro-American woman: struggles and images (pp 98-108). Baltimore, MD: Black Classic Press. E185.86 .A34 1997
Batker, C. (1998, Summer). "Love me like I like to be": the sexual politics of Hurston's 'Their Eyes Were Watching God, the classic blues and the Black women's club movement. African American Review, 32, 2, 199-213.
Blevins, C. D. (2000, Summer-Fall). Reflections: Baptists and women's issues in the twentieth century. Baptist History and Heritage, 35, 3, 53-66.
Burroughs, Nannie. (1982). In R. W. Logan, & M. R. Winston, (Eds.), Dictionary of American Negro Biography (pp.81-82). New York: Norton. E185.96 D53 1982
Burroughs, N. H. (1973). Glorify blackness. In G. Lerner, (Ed.) Black women in white America: a documentary history (pp. 550-551). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Burroughs, N. H. (1973). The National Training School for Girls appeals for funds. In G. Lerner, (Ed.) Black women in White America: a documentary history (pp. 132-134). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Burroughs, N. H. (1973). Unload your Uncle Toms. In G. Lerner (Ed.) Black women in White America: a documentary history (pp. 551-553 ). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Burroughs, Nannie Helen. (1994). In D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn, (Eds.), Black women in America : an historical encyclopedia (pp. 201-205). Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994. E185.86 .B542 1994
Burroughs, Nannie Helen: Up from the depths. (1976). In R. L. Hill, Rhetoric of Racial Hope (pp. 49-52). New York: McDaniel Press.
Burroughs, Nannie Helen (1879-1961). (1996). In J. Salzman, D. L. Smith, & C. West, (Eds.), Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History (pp.478-479). Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Group. E185.E54 1996
Burroughs, Nannie Helen. (1980). In B. Sicherman, (Ed.), Notable American women, the modern period: a biographical dictionary (pp. 125-127). Cambridge, MA: Belkings Press of Harvard University.
Collier-Thomas, B., & Franklin, V. P. (2002, January 1). Biography, race vindication, and African American intellectuals. The Journal of African American History, 87, 1, 160-164.
Gordon, L. (1991, September).
Black and white visions of welfare: women's welfare activism,
1890-1945.
The Journal of American History, 78, 2, 559-590.
Hammond, L. H. (1922). Saving an idea: Miss Nannie H. Burroughs. In L. H. Hammond, In The vanguard of a race (pp. 47-62). New York: Council of Women for Home Missions and Missionary Education Movement of the United States and Canada. E185.6 .H22
Harley, S. (1996, January 1). Nannie Helen Burroughs: 'the black goddess of liberty.' The
Journal of
Negro History, 81, 1/4, 62-71
Harrison, E. L. (1956). The dream and the dreamer: an abbreviated story of the life of Dr. Nannie Helen Burroughs and the National Trade and Professional School for Women and Girls at Washington, D. C. Washington, DC: The author. E185.97.B95 H37 1956
Hart, J. (1994, January 1). Who should have the children? discussions of
birth control among
African-American intellectuals, 1920-1939.The
Journal of Negro History, 81, 1/4, 71-84.
Johnson, K. A. (2000).
Uplifting the women and the race: the educational philosophies, and
social
activism of Anna Julia Cooper and Nannie Helen Burroughs. New
York: Garland Pub.
M370.92
J6331 2000
Martin, E. P., & Martin, J. M. (1985). The Helping
tradition in the Black family and community
(p. 56).
Washington, DC: NASW Press.
E185.86 M375 1985
Moore, J. M. (1999).
Leading the race: the transformation of the Black elite in the nation's
capital,
1880-1920 (pp. 5, 30-31, 80-81, 92, 164). Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.
E185.93.D6
M66 1999.
Perkins, L.C. (1997). Nannie Helen Burroughs: A progressive example for modern times. Affilia: Journal of Women & Social Work, 12, 2, 229-239.
Pickens, W. (1921). Nannie Burroughs and the school of the three B's. New York: [n. p.] MB9 Bp4p
Rashidi, R., &
Johnson, K. A. The
Global African community history notes. a brief note on the
lives of
Anna Julia Cooper & Nannie Helen Burroughs: profiles of African American
women educators. Retrieved
March 28, 2006 from
http://aalbc.com/reviews/anna.htm
Ross, R. E. (2003). Nannie Helen Burroughs: a turn-of-the-century activist. In Witnessing and testifying: Black women, religion, and civil rights (pp. 21-30). Minneapolis: Fortress Press. BR563.N4 R67 2003.
Scott, A. F. (1990, February). Most invisible of all: Black women's voluntary associations. The Journal of Southern History, 56, 1, 3-22.
Taylor, T. L.
(2002, September 22) "Womanhood glorified": Nannie Helen Burroughs and
the National
Training School for Women and Girls, Inc., 1909-1961. The
Journal of African American History, 87,
390-402.
Thompson,
E. B.
(1950, July). A message
from a mahogany blond. Negro Digest, 8, 29-33
Wolcott, V. W. (1997, March 22). Bible,
bath, and broom: Nannie Helen Burroughs's training school
and
African-American racial uplift. Journal of Women's History, 2,
88-110.
| Cooper, Anna J. (1858-1964) |
African American Biographical
Database
http://aabd.chadwyck.com . Search for Cooper, Anna Julia
Haywood.
African American Registry. Anna Cooper, a Black visionary of gender equality. Retrieved from the Internet March 28, 2006. http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/1066/Anna_Cooper_a_Black_visionary_of_gender_equality
Baker-Fletcher, K. E. (1990). A "singing something": the literature of Anna Julia Cooper as a resource for a theological anthropology of voice. Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard University, 1990. MB9 C78b 1990
Baker-Fletcher, K. (1994). A singing something: womanist reflections on Anna Julia Cooper. New York: Crossroad. BT82.7 .B35 1994
Cooper,
Anna Julia, 1860-1964
Papers, 1881-1958
5 linear ft.
Educator and author. Includes writings by Anna J. Cooper, biographical
data, memorabilia, correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, and
clippings for her book on the Grimké family. There is some material
relating to her tenure as President of Frelinghuysen University,
1930-1941.Manuscript
Collection of the Moorland Spingarn Research Center.
Cooper, A. J. (1998).
The voice of Anna Julia Cooper : including A
voice from the South and other important essays, papers, and letters. [C. Lemert and E. Bhan
(Eds.)] Lanham, MD: Rowan & Littlefield.
E185.86 .C58214 1998
Cooper, A. J. (1973). The Colored Woman Should Not be Ignored. In G. Lerner, (Ed.) Black women in White America: a documentary history (pp. 572-574). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Cooper, Anna Julia. (1891). The Southland, 2, 2.
Cooper, Anna
Julia. (1994). In D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn,
Eds.), Black women in America: an historical encyclopedia (pp.
275-281).
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994.
E185.86 .B542 1994
Cooper, Anna Julia Haywood. (1925). Crisis, 30, 76
Cooper, Anna Julia. (1982). In R. W. Logan, & M. R. Winston, (Eds.), Dictionary of American Negro Biography (pp. 128-129). New York: Norton. E185.96 D53 1982
Dyson, Z. E. (May-June 1930). Biographical sketch [of Anna Julia Cooper]. The Parent-Teacher Journal
Glass, K. L. (2005). Tending to the Roots: Anna Julia Cooper's sociopolitical thought and activism. Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism, 6, 1, 23-55
Guy-Sheftall, B. (1982, Summer). Black women and higher education: Spellman and Bennett
Colleges revisited. The Journal of Negro Education,
51, 3, 278-287.
Harley, S. (1997). Anna J. Cooper: a voice for Black women. In S Harley, & R. Terborg-Penn, The Afro-American woman: Struggles and images (pp. 87-97). Baltimore, MD: Black Classic Press. E185.86 .A34 1997
Johnson, K. A. (2000).
Uplifting the women and the race: the educational philosophies, and
social
activism of Anna Julia Cooper and Nannie Helen Burroughs. New
York: Garland Pub.
M370.92 J6331
2000
Kernan, M. (1982, September 13). Anacostia's
tribute to Anna Cooper. The Washington Post,
Final
Edition. Style; Arts; Spotlight; D7
Knupfer, A. M. (1997, Spring). "If You can't push, pull, if you can't pull, please get out of the way": The Phyllis Wheatley Club and Home in Chicago, 1896 to 1920. The Journal of Negro History, 82, 2, 221-231.
Lipscomb, D. R. (1996). Anna Julia Cooper (1858-1964): educator, feminist. In R. W. Leeman, (Ed.), African-American orators: a bio-critical sourcebook (pp. 41-50). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. E185.96 A447 1996
Martin, E. P., & Martin, J. M. (1985). The Helping Tradition in the Black Family and Community (p.56). Washington, DC: NASW Press. E185.86 M375 1985
Moore, J. M. (2003). Anna Julia Cooper: educator, clubwoman, and feminist. In N. Mjagkij, (Ed.), Portraits of African American life since 1865. Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources. E185.96 .P67 2003
Pellow, D. W. H. (1993). Cooper, Anna J. In J. C. Smith, (Ed.), Epic lives: one hundred Black women who made a difference (pp.125-128). Detroit: Visible Ink Press. E185.96 E65 1993
Rashidi, R., &
Johnson, K. A. The
Global African community history notes. A brief note on the
lives of
Anna Julia Cooper & Nannie Helen Burroughs: profiles of African American
women educators.
Retrieved July 12, 2004 from
http://aalbc.com/reviews/anna.htm
The Woman and labor questions in racial uplift ideology: Anna Julia Cooper's Voices from the South. (1996). In Gaines, K. K. Uplifting the race : Black leadership, politics, and culture in the twentieth century (pp.128-151). Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. E185.86 .G35 1996
Women and social Movements in the United States. Document 14: "Discussion of the Same Subject [The Intellectual Progress of the Colored Women of the United States Since the Emancipation Proclamation] by Mrs. A. J. Cooper of Washington, D.C.," 1893, pp. 711-15 in The World's Congress of Representative Women, May Wright Sewall, ed. (Chicago: Rand McNally, 1894). Retrieved March, 20, 2006 from the Internet http://www.alexanderstreet6.com/wasm/wasmrestricted/ibw/doc14.htm
| Coppin, Fannie (Fanny) Jackson (1837-1913) |
African American Biographical Database http://aabd.chadwyck.com . Search for Coppin, Fanny Muriel Jackson.
African American Registry. Educator, Frances Coppin Jackson was a leader. Retrieved March 28, 2006 from http://www.aaregistry.com/african_american_history/771/
Coppin, F. J.(1995). Reminiscences of school life and hints on teaching. New York: G. K. Hall . LD7501.P495 C67 1995
Coppin, F. J. (1973). Training to become an educator. In G. Lerner, (Ed.), Black women in White America: a documentary history (pp. 88-90). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Coppin, F. J. (1973). Methods of instruction. In G. Lerner, (Ed.), Black women in White America: a documentary history (pp. 90-92). New York: Vintage Books. E185.86 L4 1973
Coppin, Fanny Jackson. (1994). In D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn, (Eds.), Black women in America: an historical encyclopedia (pp. 281-283). Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994. E185.86 .B542 1994
Coppin, Fanny Jackson. (1982). In R. W. Logan, & M. R. Winston, (Eds.), Dictionary of American Negro Biography (pp. 130-132). New York: Norton. E185.96 D53 1982
Coppin, F. J. (1914). A Plea for industrial opportunity. In A. R. D. Nelson, (Ed.), Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence: the best speeches delivered by the Negro from the days of slavery to the present time. New York: The Bookery Publishing Company. M815 N33
Coppin, Fanny Marion Jackson (1837-1913).(1980). In R. McHenry, (Ed.). Liberty's women (pp. 80-81). Springfield, MA: G. & C. Merriam Co. HQ1412 .L52
Coppin, Fannie Marion. (1989). In C. Neverdon-Morton, Afro-American women of the south and the advancement of the race,1895-1925 (pp. 112-113). Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. E185.86 N48 1989
Fannie Jackson Coppin. (March 1913). Crisis, 5, 225
Fannie Jackson Coppin. (1996). In E. L. Davis. Lifting as they climb (pp. 202-203) [quoted from Who's Who in Colored America] . New York: G. K. Hall. Aux E185.86. D384 1996.
Fannie Jackson Coppin (1835
-1912): teacher and moulder of character.(1988). In H. Q. Brown.
Homespun heroines and other women of distinction (pp. 119-126). NY:
Oxford University Press.
E185.96 H65 1988
Martin, E. P., & Martin, J. M. (1985). The Helping tradition in the Black family and community (p. 56). Washington, DC: NASW Press. E185.86 M375 1985
Perkins, L. M. (1982, Summer). Heed life's demands: The educational philosophy of Fanny Jackson Coppin. (The Impact of Black Women in Education: An Historical Overview). The Journal of Negro Education, 51, 3, 181-190.
| De Baptiste, Georgia Mabel (1867- |
African American Biographical Database
http://aabd.chadwyck.com .
Search for Faulkner, Georgia
Mabel De Baptiste.
Georgia Mabel De Baptiste.(1996). In J. C. Smith, (Ed.), Notable Black American Women, (Book 2, pp.165-167). Detroit: Gale Research, 1996. E185.96. N68
Georgia Mabel De Baptiste, contributor to our women and children. (1969). In P. I. Garland. The Afro-American press and Its editors (pp. 386-388). New York: Arno Press. PN4888.N4 P4 1969
Gordon, L. (1991). Black and white visions of
welfare: women's welfare activism, 1890-1945
| Dumpson, James (1909- ) |
African American Biographical Database
http://aabd.chadwyck.com .
Search for Dumpson, James
Russell.
Dumpson, J. R. (2001). The Jarvie Colloquium: the search for meaning
in the later years.
Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 34, 4, 3-6
Guide to the James R. Dumpson (1909-) Papers, 1930-1992. Fordham University Archives. Prepared by Michael J. Robinson, July, 1994. Retrieved from the Internet March, 22, 2006. http://www.library.fordham.edu/archives/dumpsonpapers.html
Interview with James R. Dumpson, Former NYC Commissioner of Social Welfare. Retrieved from the Internet March, 22, 2006.. http://www.mainchance.org/upward/read/march2002/dumpson.html
James R. Dumpson. A Life's labor of love: work with children. (2003). In E. W. Dumez, (Ed.), Celebrating social work: faces and voices of the formative years (pp. 44-45). Alexandria, VA: Council on Social Work Education. HV27 .C45 2003
NASW Foundation. James R. Dumpson (1909-). Retrieved from the Internet March, 22, 2006. http://www.naswfoundation.org/pioneers/d/dumpson.htm
Riede, P. (1998, February
19). Reform called off the mark current policy fails to use the
strengths
of poor people to help end dependence on welfare, a former NYC official
says. Syracuse,
NY: The Post-Standard. Local news, B3.
| Duster, Alfreda M. (1904-1983 ) |
Alfreda M. (Barnett)
Duster (1904-1983). (1991). In R. L. Hill, & P. M. King, (Eds.),
Guide to the
transcripts of the Black women oral history project (pp. 24-25).[Sponsored by the
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger
Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College]. Westport,
CT: Meckler.
E185.86 .B544 1991, Suppl.
Batker, C. ( 1998, June 22). "Love me like I like to be": the sexual
politics of Hurston's 'Their Eyes
Were Watching God, the classic blues and the Black Women's Club
movement. African American
Review, 2, 2, 199-213.
Duster, Alfreda M.
(1994). In D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn,
(Eds.), Black women in America: an historical encyclopedia (pp.
370-372).
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994.
E185.86 .B542 1994
Duster, Alfreda M. (1991). R. E. Hill, (Ed.), The Black women oral history project: from the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College (v.3, pp.111-182). Westport, CT: Meckler. E185.86 .B544 1991
Duster, Alfreda M. (2001). In R. L. Schultz, & A. Hast, (Eds.), Women building Chicago 1790-1990: a biographical dictionary (pp. 241-243). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. HQ1439.C47 W66 2001
Gordon, L. (1991). Black and white visions of
welfare: women's welfare activism, 1890-1945
Mason, M. G. (1990, Summer). Travel
as metaphor and reality in Afro-American women's
autobiography,
1850-1972. Black American
Literature Forum, 20th-Century Autobiography, 24, 2,
337-356.
Wade-Gayles, G. (1981, Feb.-Oct.). Black women
journalists in the
South, 1880-1905: an approach
to the study of Black women's
history. Callaloo, 11/13, 138-152 .
| Edelman, Marian Wright. (1939 -) |
Atkins, N. (1992, December). Marian Wright Edelman. Rolling Stone, 645/646, 126-131.
BlackSeek.com. Marian Wright Edelman: an American advocate. Retrieved from the Internet March 27, 2006. http://www.blackseek.com/bh/2001/16_MarianEdelman.htm
Block, J. L. (1996, June). A voice for children. Good Housekeeping, 222, 6, 71-72.
Clift, E. (1992, June 8). A mother's guiding message. Newsweek, 119, 23, 27.
Dickerson, D. (1996, June 24). Suffer the children. Nation, 262, 25, 4-5.
Edelman, M. W. (1999). Lanterns: a memoir of mentors. Boston: Beacon Press. E185.97.E33 A3 1999.
Edelman, M. W. (2000, Spring). Spelman College: A Safe Haven for a Young Black Woman. The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 27, 118-123.
Edelman,
Marian. (1994). In
D. C. Hine, E. B. Brown, & R. Terborg-Penn,
(Eds.), Black women in America: an historical encyclopedia
(pp. 377-379).
Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
E185.86 .B542
1994
Edelman, Marian Wright. (2001). In H. Rappaport, (Ed.), Encyclopedia of women social reformers (pp. 214-216). Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. HQ 1236. R29 2001
Gardner, M. (1999, October 20). A passionate advocate for children.
Christian Science Monitor,
91, 227.
Gleick, E., & Ludtke, M. (1996, June, 3). The children's crusade. Time, 147, 23, 30-36.,
Goodman, C. ( 1999, Mar/Apr). Marian Wright Edelman: `I Know Why I've Been
Put on Earth.' Crisis
(The New), 106, 2, 14-16.
Green, M. & Pinsky, M. (Eds.). (1989). America's transition:
blueprints for the 1990s.(pp. 535-551).
New York, NY : Democracy Project.
HC106.8 .A4635 1989
Guy-Sheffield, B. (1993). Marian Wright Edelman. In J. C. Smith, (Ed. ), Epic lives: one hundred Black women who made a difference. (pp.166-171). Detroit: Visible Ink Press. E185.96 E65 1993
Haywood, R. L. (1996, May). Marian Wright Edelman: First mom. Ebony, 51, 7, 150-153.
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| White, Eartha Mary Magdalene (1876-1974) |
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