Websites with information:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html
Finding aids:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/cole.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/cole.htm
[0611] Kenneth W. Colegrove Papers, 1917-1954, Coll. 11/3/22/4
Location: Northwestern University Archives, Deering Library, Room 110, 1970 Campus Dr., Evanston, IL 60208-2300
Description: Kenneth Wallace Colegrove (1886-1975) was a professor of political science at Northwestern University, 1919-1952. Colegrove also was active in government and community service. He was a consultant to the U.S. Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S.) from 1943 to 1945 and in 1946 was a political consultant on Japanese constitutional revision attached to General Douglas MacArthur's headquarters in Tokyo. He served as editor for the Institute of Fiscal and Political Education in New York and was a member of the editorial board of Amerasia, a review of American and Asian affairs. His papers include correspondence, administrative records, research files, published works, and records of legal proceedings before which Colegrove appeared, gave testimony or was mentioned in the testimony of others. Colegrove's pamphlets and reprints include Senator McCarthy, ca. 1950. The series Professional Correspondence and Related Materials, contains correspondence with Amerasia, Dr. Anthony Bouscaren, Senator Owen Brewster, Senator Styles Bridges, Professor Louis F. Budenz, The Honorable James F. Byrnes, The Honorable Martin Dies, Senator Everett M. Dirksen, Educational Reviewer, Brigadier General Bonner F. Fellers, Mr. Hamilton Fish, Senator Bourke B. Hickenlooper, The Honorable Herbert C. Hoover, General Patrick J. Hurley, Senator William E. Jenner, Dr. Walter H. Judd, Senator William F. Knowland, Mr. Alfred Kohlberg, Mr. David Lawrence, Dr. Felix Morley, Congressman Karl E. Mundt, Mr. Henry Regnery, and Senator Burton Kendall Wheeler.
Websites with information:
http://www.library.northwestern.edu/libraries-collections/evanston-campus/university-archives/holdings/fin
ding-aids
Finding aids:
http://findingaids.library.northwestern.edu/catalog/inu-ead-nua-archon-1223
http://uncap.lib.uchicago.edu/view.php?eadid=inu-ead-nua-archon-1223
http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=inu-ead-nua-archon-1223
[0612] Kenneth W. Colegrove Papers, 1896-1974
Location: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum, P.O. Box 488, 210 Parkside Drive, West Branch, IA 52358-0488
Description: Kenneth Wallace Colegrove was an anti-Communist historian and political scientist. The Subject File 1896-1974, contains folders on American Friends of the Captive Nations, Karl Baarslag, Harry Elmer Barnes, Charles A. Beard, William E. Borah, Brainwashing, John W. Bricker, Bricker Amendment, William F. Buckley, Edgar C. Bundy, Church League of America, Citizens Foreign Aid Committee, Citizens' Foreign Relations Committee, Committee of One Million, Communist Front Organizations, Communist Infiltration: Education, Federal Government, News Media, William T. Couch, Council Against Communist Aggression, Lucille Cardin Crain, Doenitz Release from Spandau, Educational Reviewer (Lucille Cardin Crain), Bonner Fellers, For America (Bonner Fellers), Foundation for Economic Education, Freedoms Foundation, Devin A. Garrity, J. H. Gipson, Barry Goldwater, Alger Hiss, J. Edgar Hoover, Herbert Hoover, House Un-American Activities Committee, Human Events, William E. Jenner, Jews, John Birch Society, Walter H. Judd, Willmoore Kendall, Russell Kirk, William F. Knowland, Alfred Kohlberg, Eugene Lyons, Douglas MacArthur, George W. Malone, J. B. Matthews, Pat McCarran, Joseph R. McCarthy, Robert R. McCormick, Modern Age, National Review, B. Carroll Reece, Henry Regnery, George Washington Robnett, Archibald Roosevelt, Robert A. Taft, Mrs. Garvin E. ("Bazy") Tankersley, John J. Theobald, Strom Thurmond, Walter Trohan, Freda Utley, Harold H. Velde, Francis E. Walter, Robert H. W. Welch, Jr., Charles A. Willoughby, Robert E. Wood, Yalta, and Young Americans for Freedom.
Websites with information:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptcollections.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/hmother.html
Finding aids:
https://hoover.archives.gov/research/collections/manuscriptfindingaids/colegrove.html
http://www.ecommcode2.com/hoover/research/historicalmaterials/other/colegrov.htm
[0612a] J.P. Coleman collection, 1949-1985, MSS.381
Location: Special Collections, Mississippi State University Libraries, 395 Hardy Rd, P.O. Box 5408, Mississippi State, MS 39762-5408
Description: Speeches, public statements, clippings, campaign advertisements, government documents, scrapbooks, oral history interviews, M.A. thesis and seminar paper, concerning the public career of J. P. Coleman, Mississippi governor (1956-1960) and judge of U. S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Included is a copy of letter from Sam Ervin. Names include Ross Barnett, Theodore Bilbo, James O. Eastland, Medgar Evers, Carroll Gartin, Paul B. Johnson, Martin Luther King, Jr., James Meredith, Walter Sillers, and John C. Stennis. Subjects include Civil Rights Movement, Constitution, Democratic Party, Race Relations, and University of Mississippi.
Finding aid:
http://library.msstate.edu/FindingAid/J.P._Coleman_collection_finding_aid_MSS.381.pdf
[0613] J. P. Coleman Papers, ca. 1930s-1960s, Z 1877.000 S
Location: Archives and Library Division, William F. Winter Archives and History Building, Mississippi Department of Archives and History, 200 North Street, Jackson, MS 39201
Description: James Plemon Coleman (1914-1990) was elected governor of Mississippi in 1955 in the wake of the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas decision of the United States Supreme Court and its mandate for racial integration of public schools. In 1957, Coleman insisted that all legal remedies at his disposal would be used to maintain segregation, and he urged the public not to provoke racial disturbances that would prompt President Eisenhower to send federal troops to Mississippi. Throughout his administration, the Citizens' Council, including one of its leaders Judge Tom P. Brady, publicly criticized Coleman for his moderate views on race. In 1965, he won confirmation as judge on the United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, where he served for nineteen years. This collection contains the incoming and outgoing correspondence and other papers and records documenting J. P. Coleman's tenure as district attorney of the Fifth Circuit Court District of Mississippi (elected 1939); circuit judge of the Fifth Circuit Court District of Mississippi (elected 1946); Mississippi Supreme Court justice in September 1950; attorney general of Mississippi from October 1950 to January 1956; and governor of Mississippi from January 1956 to January 1960. Correspondents include Senator John C. Stennis and Congressman Jamie L. Whitten. Also included are letters concerning the Dixiecrat movement and states' rights issues, and files on the lynching of Emmett Till near Money in 1955.
Reference:
Anders Walker, The Ghost of Jim Crow: How Southern Moderates Used Brown v. Board of Education to Stall Civil Rights (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009).
Websites with information:
http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/?C=S;O=D
http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/index.html%3fC=S%3bO=D
Finding aid:
http://mdah.state.ms.us/manuscripts/z1877.html
[0614] Collected Magazine Articles About Huey Pierce Long, 1932-1941, RG 300
Location: Louisiana State Museum Historical Center, 400 Esplanade Ave., New Orleans, LA 70116
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