Search

Back to top

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Online Content Includes Digital Content Remove constraint Online Content: Includes Digital Content Collection Robert F. Williams papers, 1948-2014 Remove constraint Collection: Robert F. Williams papers, 1948-2014
Number of results to display per page
View results as:

Search Results

Collection

Robert F. Williams papers, 1948-2014

14.5 linear feet — 1 oversize folder — 40.5 GB (online) — 6 digital audio files — 10 digital video files

Online
African American civil rights activist and Black militant leader in Monroe County North Carolina who came to advocate armed self-defense in response to violence, left the United States in 1961 and lived in Cuba and China until 1969 when he settled in Baldwin Michigan. Papers include correspondence, newspaper clippings, audio-visual material, manuscripts, petitions, and government documents documenting the civil rights movement, black nationalism, radical politics in the United States and Williams's experiences in Cuba and China.

The Robert Williams papers, dating from 1951, include correspondence, notes, newspaper clippings, audio-visual material, manuscripts, petitions, and government documents. The collection documents a wide variety of subjects: the American civil rights movement, Black Nationalism, cold war politics, Castro's Cuba, Mao's China, and the radical left in the United States.

As Robert Williams continued to add to his collection following his initial donation in 1976, it was necessary to arrange and describe the materials based on groupings of dates of accessioning. Thus the bulk of the collection is divided into two subgroups: 1976-1979 Accessions and 1983-1997 Accessions with much overlapping of material. In addition, the collection contains a small series of papers collected by his son John C. Williams and a separate series of Audio-Visual Materials.

Folder

Audio-Visual

Online

The Audio Visual series (1964-1996) consists of three subseries: sound recordings, photographs, and videocassettes. The sound recordings include audio tape reels of Williams' "Radio Free Dixie" broadcasts, an oral history on cassette tape, a recording of a public discussion on China in which Williams participated, and a radio interview with Williams. The photograph subseries richly document Williams' residences in Cuba, China, and the United States.

Container

[Part 1]

Online
(Radio Free Dixie radio program featuring music and speeches by 2 delegates from the US Delegation to the International Conference for Solidarity held in Hanoi, Vietnam November 25-29, 1964. Part 1 is only a speech by Dr. Anna Louise Strong.)
Container

[Part 1]

Online
(Part 1 Radio Free Dixie radio program dated December 11, 1964. Featuring Sidney Brecht (Blues) and Max Roach and Ray Charles (Gravy Train Waltz). Reading of an editorial column published in The Illustrated News August 3rd 1964 discussing the Harlem Riots.)
Container

[Part 1]

Online
(Part 2 Radio Free Dixie radio program dated December 11, 1964. Featuring Sidney Brecht (Blues) and Max Roach and Ray Charles (Gravy Train Waltz). Feautring Robert F. Williams speech on recent deaths of African Americans in the US. Music - "Mississippi Goddam" and other songs Editorial from Washington Afro-American Newspaper July 18 1964 on the murder of Lemuel Penn)