Correspondence from Friends of Curtis Hayes Williams to "His Excellency" Dr. Samuel K. Doe, President of the Republic of Liberia, urging the Liberian Government to respect Williams' rights be respected.
Correspondence from Gwendolyn Williams, wife of Curtis Hayes Williams, to George Crockett, House of Foreign Affairs, regarding the detention of her husband in Liberia.
Photocopy of correspondence from Gwendolyn Williams, wife of Curtis Hayes Williams, to Andrew Young, Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, regarding Curtis Hayes Williams' detention in Liberia.
Document entitled, "Fact Sheet on the Arrest of Curtis Hayes Williams," providing an in-depth description and context for Williams' arrest and subsequent incarceration.
Document entitled, "Curtis Hayes Williams and the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement," written by Robert Moses, containing a short biography of Curtis Hayes Williams and information on the Freedom Riders and the Civil Rights Movement. Additionally, the document contains a correspondence template to the BTC Stockade in Monrovia, Liberia, West Africa, where Williams was detained.
Six coins, three made of brass and three of nickel. The face side of each brass coin reads "Two cents; 1937" and the face side of each nickel coin reads "Two cents; 1941." Each face side depicts a palm tree, and each obverse reads "Republic of Liberia," depicting an elephant.
Knife contained in a leather sheath. There is a braided strap with a button loop closure and several decorative styles with a fringe at the base. Origin Liberia.
Untitled acrylic painting by S.E. Walk of a seated African man holding a long stick in his right hand and wearing a bracelet with a tooth dangling from it on his left. Origin Liberia, but artist is not Liberian.