1,723,956 research outputs found

    William F. Williams

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    Photograph of William F. Williams. Print from Tin Type

    William F. Williams

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    Photograph of William F. Williams. Copy by Harry Watton, Oklahoma City, OK

    Mrs. S. F. Williams

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    Photograph of Mrs. S. F. Williams. Photo by S.C. Hunt, Brundidge, AL, c. 1894-1895

    [Judson F. Williams]

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    Undated portrait of Judson F. Williams, who served on the Texas Tech University Board of Regents from 1969-1979 and was chair from 1976-1978

    Portrait of Paul F. Williams

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    Paul F. Williams entered Jacksonville State Teachers College as a freshman in Fall 1939.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1930/2046/thumbnail.jp

    P. F. Williams

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    Portrait shot of P. F. Williams, smartly dressed in a suit, wearing a simple smile. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram evening edition May 9, 1950.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/3871/thumbnail.jp

    Interview with Deloris F. Williams (FA 457)

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    Interview with Deloris F. Williams, part of the Ralph Bunche National Historic District - Oral History Project. Oral interviews with thirty African Americans who had some association with the area included within the Bunche historic district in Glasgow, Kentucky. Interviewees discuss family history, social rites and customs, the importance of the church and the school, integration and segregation, as well as urban renewal

    Floriant et Floreley edited by Harry F. Williams

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    Delbouille Maurice. Floriant et Floreley edited by Harry F. Williams. In: Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, tome 28, fasc. 1, 1950. pp. 192-194

    A question of survival: Robert F. Williams and black armed self-defense in the american south, 2018

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    Many academic and popular accounts of the Civil Rights era emphasize nonviolent activists and activism at the expense of those who embraced armed self-defense and resistance. Nevertheless, the latter played a significant role within these struggles. One of the most significant was Robert F. Williams, a black militant activistand president of the local NAACP chapter in Monroe, North Carolinawho embraced armed self-defense as a necessary and instrumental component for the liberation of black people in America. After publicly declaring that blacks should defend themselves and hold racist whites accountable through armed self-defense, he was met with immeasurable backlash from other civil rights leaders and organizations, including the national NAACP. The purpose of this study is to examine his beliefs in the necessity of armed self-defense, as well as his impact on the civil rights movement. KEY TERMS: Robert F. Williams, Armed Resistance, Guns, NAACP, Self Defense, SNCC, United States Histor
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