A clock topper, ornamental figurine that is displayed atop a mantel or shelf clock. The female figure is seated beside a quiver of arrows and holds a box of jewels. Made by the Art Metal Works Company in New York, New York.
Correspondence from Edward J. Odom, Jr., NAACP National Church Secretary, to friends of the NAACP regarding a Self-Help "Community Uplift" project and enclosed Guidelines for the project.
NAACP Project Excellence Metropolitan Council of Branches, New York State Conference document, "Curriculum of Inclusion," a report by the New York State Task Force on Minorities.
Interview with Ruby Cornwell by Edmund L. Drago and Eugene C. Hunt, November 24, 1981, AMN 500.001.001, in the Avery Normal Institute Oral History Project, at the Avery Research Center at the College of Charleston
Pamphlet entitled, "How to Organize An NAACP Youth Council" published by the Youth and College Division, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Five dollar bill issued by the Farmers & Exchange Bank of Charleston and dated September 28, 1853. Bill depicts an African American tending to a wagon pulled by oxen. Engraved by Toppan, Carpenter, Kasilear & Company, Philadelphia and New York.
John Hay Whitney Foundation pamphlet discussing the foundation's purpose, description of the foundation operations, and current programs of the foundation.