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    1. New Acquisition: Adventures in Negro History - The Devil's Tale

      Also in 1963, Pepsi sponsored the production of a record album, “Adventures in Negro History,” recently acquired by the John W.

    2. DURHAM IN BLACK AND WHITE · “A Worthy Place”: Durham, Duke, and the World of the 1920s-1930s · Duke

      DURHAM IN BLACK AND WHITE · “A Worthy Place”: Durham, Duke, and the World of the 1920s-1930s · Duke University Library Exhibits Skip to (...)

    3. Civil Rights & Post-World War II - African American Women's History Resources at Rubenstein Library

      Another notable component of the collection is the section of materials from Barrow's mother, Wilhelmina Barrow, who served as an American Red (...)

    4. https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/users/arianne.hartsellgundy/harlems_own.pdf

      For one, you can’t be no grown negro man calling yourself Kid even if you’ve been called that since you were young.

    5. The Life of the Party: Experiencing American Communism

      A Narrative of Hosea Hudson: His Life as a Negro Communist in the South. First Edition. first thus.

    6. Franklin Research Center News & Events | Duke University Libraries

      News and Events PAST EVENTS:  Recordings (re)Imaging the Archive: Impact of Black Voices in Community Archive, Arts, and Education, Sept. (...)

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

      Shennette Garrett, University of Texas at Austin, for research regarding black women entrepreneurs and the National Negro Business (...)

    8. Adopt-a-Book Program | Duke University Libraries

      It is a beautiful volume in need of a custom enclosure. Adopt for $25 The Negro & Indian's Advocate   (1685)  [DUKE001228065]   and (...)

    9. African Americans in Durham | Duke University Libraries

      The collection includes drafts and research notes for his books  Tarheel Tommy Atkins (1963),  Ten years of prelude: the story of integration (...)

    10. New Orleans’ Nourishing Networks: Foodways and Municipal Markets in the Nineteenth Century Global So

      A motley crew of vendors manned their retail spaces: “the Italian,” “the Yankee,” “the Indian [s]quaw,” “the plantation negro,” (...)

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