Browse Items (63 total)

  • Group contains "individual voices"

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_1931.05.09_0357_01.jpg
Frank A. Clunan, "a native born New Yorker," writes of the "manic Reds" in New York City, who ask people to sign protest telegrams but only do so to stir up trouble. Clunan believes that the Southern states should not be led by Soviet Russia, and…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.03.21_0766_00.jpg
In this religious letter, Lillian W. Crocker asks that the Governor give this case his consideration and attention. She writes that as "one of the human family and the Christian Army" she has fasted and prayed for the Scottsboro Boys' comfort. She…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.07.06_1013_01.jpg
H. M. Darling, an attorney, writes that because under Alabama law bail is allowed to prisoners unless the evidence is strong enough to assuredly convict them, and because Judge Horton doubts the evidence, the Scottsboro Boys are entitled to bail.

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_1932.01.19_0561_01.jpg
This sender—"a working woman"—recognizes that the Southern ruling class uses racism and rape accusations to divide the white and black working class so that they do not unite and fight for workers rights together. The author declares that the…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.05.05_0356_01.jpg
T. Gaines Elkins, who had served on the jury, insists with the Governor that his decision was influenced in no way by outside forces, but was made based only on state laws and the evidence provided in the courtroom. He believes that the Scottsboro…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.04.27_0170_01.jpg
Martin Flowers urges Governor Miller to "stand firm" in his support for the Scottsboro trial outcome. Flowers identifies himself as a southerner and warns Governor Miller of the dangers of "Communists" and their "propergander" by describing crimes of…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.11.17_1065_01.jpg
Harry Emerson Fosdick, pastor of the historic, inter-denominational Riverside Church, writes to Governor Miller to express concern about Scottsboro and sympathies for the interference of self-interested communist groups who have complicated matters.…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.04.11_0870_01.jpg
Charlotte Fox asks Governor Miller to let the law run its course. She writes that women are no match for men in a physical altercation and they they need the law to defend them. She wants the Scottsboro Boys to pay the penalty, and insists that her…

Tags:

Output Formats

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