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Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-006-008
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-006-007
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-002-008
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-002-003
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-002-002
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-001-035
Textual folder
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-001-030
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-028-001-p0018
Photograph of an unidentified man standing in front of a billboard on United States Route 1 near Richmond, Virginia. The billboard was erected by the Virgina Council on Human Relations and reads, "Be color blind, hire the best man."
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-004-011-p0030
Photograph of an unidentified woman holding a bag containing two dolls that says, "New Front Tears." The photograph accompanies a letter sent to Burke Marshall, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, from Henry Cabirac, Jr. of the Southern Field Service, National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice. According to Mr. Cabirac, the photograph was taken the day Archibishop Joseph Francis Rummel announced the desegregation of all Catholic schools in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-037-006-p0011
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy holds a press conference in his office upon signing the Treaty of Cambridge, an agreement between civil rights activists and city leaders to end segregation and put an end to violence in Cambridge, Maryland. (L-R, seated) Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Burke Marshall; Attorney General of Maryland Thomas B. Finan; civil rights activist Gloria Richardson; Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy; and Mayor of Cambridge Calvin W. Mowbray. (L-R, standing) Unidentified man (with bow tie); Dr. Arthur S. Parker, Cambridge City Commissioner; Charles Awdry Thompson, counsel for Commissioners of Cambridge; and Reginald Robinson, field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-037-006-p0010
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy holds a press conference in his office upon signing the Treaty of Cambridge, an agreement between civil rights activists and city leaders to end segregation and put an end to violence in Cambridge, Maryland. (L-R, seated) Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Burke Marshall; Attorney General of Maryland Thomas B. Finan; civil rights activist Gloria Richardson; Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy; and Mayor of Cambridge Calvin W. Mowbray. (L-R, standing) Unidentified man (with bow tie); Dr. Arthur S. Parker, Cambridge City Commissioner; Charles Awdry Thompson, counsel for Commissioners of Cambridge; and Reginald Robinson, field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-037-006-p0008
Photograph of a certificate of manumission for a boy named Jambo, written and signed by Isaac Rushmore of Queens County, New York.
Photograph
Burke Marshall Personal Papers
BMPP-018-010-p0061
Photograph of the A.G. Gaston Building (currently listed on the National Register of Historic Places) in Birmingham, Alabama. The photograph accompanies an information packet about the African American community in Birmingham.