In this letter Charlotte Manigault states that General Wade Hampton has taken over Mrs. Anemm's house. Charlotte updates Esther on her family and friends, social life, and any engagements, illnesses and births.
A letter to Woodward Manning from his brother Ira L. Manning discussing the weather, the building of a mill, the sale of the enslaved man named Sam and the mortgage taken out on him, and a deal for purchasing Sam's wife in exchange for "old negroes."
In this letter Charlotte Manigault states that on July 25th, Louisa, Ann, Mani, Ester Gibbes's aunt, Gabriel and Peter left for New York. Gabriel and Peter will travel to Saratoga Springs then proceed to Niagara and Boston. Louisa will go to Newport. Charlotte updates Ester on friend's and family's recent illnesses.
A handwritten, four-page letter from Susan Alston to her father, Charles Alston, in which she describes life in Greenville during the Civil War and expresses her concerns regarding the Union Army's actions in South Carolina and Mississippi.
All African People's Revolutionary Party telegram written by Stokely Carmichael regarding "the loss that David's friends and comrades feel at his sudden death."
Smoothly finished art pottery piece with predominantly orange and green coloration. Heart-shaped jar, orange with green and black spots. Smooth finish. Jar stopper designed as a woman without facial features wearing a gele (headtie) and two green earrings.
Document entitled, "Biographical Notes on Curtis Williams," containing two short biographical notes of Williams, one written by Robert Moses, the other written by "the Friends of Curtis Hayes Williams."
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.
A stereoscopic image of African Americans, including children, picking cotton in a Mississippi field. Two young children are posed in the foreground with a basket of cotton.
An article from "The Reporter: The Magazine of Facts and Ideas," Volume 30, Number 11, entitled "It Will Be a Hot Summer in Mississippi," written by Richard Woodley, reprinted by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
An article from "The Nation" entitled, "The Question of SNCC," written by Jack Newfield, including call for contributions from the Student Nonviolent Coordination Committee.