Browse Items (63 total)

  • Group contains "individual voices"

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1932.06.04_0718_00.jpg
Writing from Amsterdam, G. Mannoury argues that certainty is a matter of probability, such that to convict the Scottsboro Boys would be a "judicial error" and "philosophical absurdity."

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_1932.03.15_0300_01.jpg
Concerned that the state has spent a lot of money on the trial of the Scottsboro Boys and will spend more yet, two "citizens and tax payers of Jefferson County, Alabama" offer to perform the Scottsboro Boys' execution for free. They mention to…

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_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_1932.05.25_0702_01.jpg
Harry O. Glasser, an attorney and former senator, hopes that Governor Miller will allow the Supreme Court of the United States to review the Scottsboro Boys' convictions and encloses a clipping from the Manchester [England] Guardian.

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1932.05.23_0692_01.jpg
J. A. Hendrix, a "friend and well wisher" of Governor Miller, congratulates the Governor on his performance in office so far and praises him for having great courage. He writes in detail that he agrees with the Governor on the "school" issue. He also…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1932.04.14_0879_00.jpg
A "worker" demands the release of the Scottsboro Boys, whom the "dirty, degenerate, capitalist class" has framed. The letter warns of a workers' mass movement that will overtake the ruling class, as 97% of the people in the world are workers. The…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1933.05.15_0958_00.jpg
L. H. Goodshaw questions the handling of the Scottsboro Boys and other prisoners in the Alabama jail system. He wonders why the guards do not do a better job of protecting them, and if the guards order other inmates to accost them. He reminds the…

http://betatesting.as.ua.edu/scottsboroboysletters/plugins/img_dump/SB_L_1931.06.26_0370_01.jpg
Lell Smith believes the Scottsboro conviction is based on race prejudice, and argues that a person who is both working class and African American is treated more harshly by the court system. He requests that Governor Miller correct this mistake.
Output Formats

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