Browse Items (17 total)

  • Tags: African Americans

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.06.01_0405_01.jpg
C. H. DuVall, a former slave, writes to ask Governor Miller to stay the Scottsboro Boys' execution. He also requests to have the case further investigated as a favor to the weeping mothers and ex-slaves, as he has heard a lot of doubt about the…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1932.01.30_0546_01.jpg
David H. Pierce, president of the Cleveland Branch of the NAACP, writes that he has collected a large file on the Scottsboro case, and given all the information, does not believe the boys to be guilty. He insists that if the Scottsboro Boys are…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.04.11_0328_00.jpg
Though he had never traveled South, a 24-year-old African American in Illinois explains to Governor Miller that he understands how to reason with the "Southern point of view." He offers to travel to Alabama to argue for the Scottsboro Boys' sentence…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.04.24_0167_01.jpg
An African American county jail chaplain from Missouri, Rev. Capt. G. Thomas, proclaims the innocence of the Scottsboro Boys and asks the Governor to show mercy.

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.04.26_0940_00.jpg
The Jackson County [Illinois] Organization of Colored Voters asks Governor Miller to exercise his power in the Scottsboro case and to treat the nine boys like fellow human beings. They ask the Governor to support the Constitution of the United States…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.05.02_0359_01.jpg
An African American, Levi G. Byrd of Cheraw, South Carolina, writes to Governor Graves, who had already been succeeded by Governor Miller. Byrd urges the Governor to look into the case thoroughly, given the enlightening information he has found in…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.05.10_0960_00.jpg
The Mme. C. J. Walker Club of San Francisco joins the NAACP in asking for the release of the Scottsboro Boys.

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.12.04_1114_00.jpg
Signed by "Dr. George G. Mehlen" and representing 1,161 members, this letter from the Negro Businessmen's League (NBL) of Corona, New York, protests the 1933 verdicts from Judge Callahan's court and declares the Scottsboro defendants' innocence. It…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.04.21_0918_00.jpg
The Phyllis Wheatley Club asks why rape is punishable by death in Alabama and why the state disregards constitutional law by refusing to allow African Americans to serve on juries. The club asks about other specifics of the case and urges Governor…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.04.14_0606_01.jpg
Tuskegee Institute president Robert R. Moton writes to the Governor of Alabama on the school's letterhead, applauding the orderly punishment of crime, but stating that he hopes the courts will be equally just with African Americans as with whites.
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2