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    1. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/pdf/DesegregatingDurham.pdf

      Durham was one of the great hubs of commerce for African Americans in the United States during the early and mid-twentieth century.

    2. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/rubenstein/users/john.gartrell/Travel%20Grant%20A (...)

      Nicholas Syrett, University of Northern Colorado, Topic: “American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United (...)

    3. Among Friends - Summer 2013

      It monitors hate groups and other extremists throughout the United States and exposes their activities to law enforcement (...)

    4. Digital Teaching Resources | Duke University Libraries

      Instructor’s Summary (PDF) for Women’s Suffrage in the United States Yellow Fever in the 18th Century In the late 18th (...)

    5. African Americans in Durham | Duke University Libraries

      North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives, 1850-2008 The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives documents the (...)

    6. Women at the Center - Issue 21, Spring 2012

      Holliger-Soles, English Literature, University of Kentucky, for dis- sertation research on the ideology and cul- ture of domestic service and (...)

    7. Women at the Center - Issue 25, Spring 2014

      Donna Drucker, civil and environmental engineering, Technische Universität Darm- stadt, for a journal article on sexual behavior and the science (...)

    8. Adopt a Digital Collection | Duke University Libraries

      Bradford Archive of Documentary Arts American Slavery Documents Legal and personal documents related to slavery in the United (...)

    9. Frequently Asked Questions | Duke University Libraries

      At twelve years old, he was adopted by a maternal uncle and emigrated to the United States where he lived in Boston before (...)

    10. Seated for Change: The Greensboro Sit-Ins and the Fight for Desegregation | Duke University Librarie

      People of all ages wrote in and signed the petition advocating for desegregation, ranging from school children to a captain of the (...)

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