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Transcript
Third section images-captions and credits
3-1) Finding Meaning: no images
3-2) Immediate Legacy: no images
3-3) Northern Diehards: GAR in Portsmouth image: Union veterans at a GAR meeting
in Portsmouth, Ohio. CMC Photograph and Print Collection.
Memorial Hall image- separate from panel: Memorial Hall. Dedicated June 13, 1908 as a
memorial to Hamilton County’s “soldiers, sailors, marines, and pioneers.” The buildings
construction was the result of years of lobbying by various GAR posts in Cincinnati.
CMC Photograph and Print Collection.
3-4) Southern Diehards: Cartoon image: A Harper’s Weekly cartoon from September 5,
1868 depicting the Southern attitude toward the “race issue”. CMC Photograph and Print
Collection.
3-5) Great Flag Controversy: Grover Cleveland: President Grover Cleveland. CMC
Photograph and Print Collection.
Joseph B. Foraker image: A large CDV of Joseph Foraker alludes to his Civil War
service.CMC Photograph and Print Collection.
Case 90) Memories in Print: no images
3-6) 1st Monuments: Milan monument : The monument in Milan, Ohio. Emilie Sedziol
3-7) Fight for an Image: Loyal slave image (labeled Conf. Veterans): Photograph from
a July 1910 Confederate Veteran magazine of a group of “faithful Confederates”. CMC
Printed Works Collection.
Wilberforce students image: A group of students and faculty at Wilberforce University.
Courtesy of the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center, Wilberforce,
Ohio. Isaac and Lenora Lane Collection.
Separate panel/image: G. Williams image: George Washington Williams. Born in 1849,
Williams wrote two books, History of the Negro Race in America and A History of the
Negro Troops in the War of the Rebellion. As an historian, his work is considered to be
the first written with an objective point of view on the history of blacks in the United
States. A veteran of the Civil War, he was also a Baptist minister in Cincinnati, lecturer,
lawyer, and became the first African American elected to the Ohio House of
Representatives. He died in England in 1891. CMC Printed Works Collection.
3-8) Memories for the Emancipated: Brantley monument image: Monument to Henry
and Rebecca Brantley who came to Ravenna, Ohio as fugitive slaves in 1862. The word
“Emancipation” appears on the monument along with the relief of a hand with broken
manacle. Barb Petroski, Portage County Historical Society
John Brown monument: Obelisk erected in 1860 at Oberlin, Ohio to honor 3 African
Americans who were killed while taking part in the famous raid at Harper’s Ferry,
Virginia with John Brown. Roland Sedziol
Black veteran image: A proud black Civil War veteran poses for the camera. CMC
Photograph and Print Collection.
On separate panel adjunct to panel # 3-8: Title: Celebrating Emancipation
Emancipation Day pamphlet cover: A pamphlet containing the speech given by Ohio
Governor George K. Nash at an Emancipation Day celebration at Grove City, Ohio in
1901. CMC Printed Works Collection.
Emancipation Day in Richmond image: Celebrating Emancipation Day in Richmond,
Virginia, 1888. The Valentine Richmond History Center, Richmond, Virginia.
3-9) Kentucky’s Memories: no images
3-10) Ky. Ratifies: no images
3-11) War Continues: w/ lynching cartoon: Bitter feelings left over from the war and
intimidation of blacks striving for equality resulted in continued violence in the border
areas, such as Kentucky. Blacks and whites alike were the victims. CMC Photograph and
Print Collection
Separate panel adjunct to panel # 3-11: titled Exodusters:
Ho for Kansas broadside: Broadside calling on southern blacks to resettle in Kansas.
Library of Congress.
Pap Singleton: Benjamin “Pap” Singleton. Kansas State Historical Society.
Exodusters image (on riverbank): Exodusters waiting on a levee for a steamboat to take
them west. Library of Congress
3-12) South wins the Peace: Harlan image: Supreme Court Justice John Marshall
Harlan. Kentuckian and Union veteran of the Civil War, Harlan was the only dissenter to
the 1896 Plessey vs. Ferguson Decision which was the precedent to the “separate but
equal “ doctrine.
3-13) Jim Crow: Expulsion from railway car image: Illustration of the expulsion of a
Negro from a railway car from the Illustrated London News. Library of Congress.
3-14) Good for Business: Century Magazine cover: CMC Printed Works Collection.
Confederate Veteran Magazine ad: A page from a 1910 Confederate Veteran magazine
which includes advertisements from northern companies looking to sell goods to southern
veterans. CMC Printed Works Collection.
3-15) Reconciliation: old Union veteran ( CMC Photograph and Print Collection) and
old Confederate veteran ( Filson Historical Society) images to appear side by side on
panel: common caption: Aging heroes- veterans of the Blue and Gray.
Images separate from and adjunct to panel #3-15 (or #3-3): GAR Encampment Chester
Park image: GAR Encampment in Chester Park. CMC Photograph and Print Collection.
GAR veterans and car image: GAR veterans on parade, 1919. CMC Photograph and
Print Collection.
3-16) Monuments in Kentucky in the Era of Reconciliation: The Jefferson Davis
monument in Fairview Kentucky. Kentucky Historical Society.
3-16a) New Monuments in Ohio: Uhrichsville monument: There are Civil War
monuments in practically all of Ohio’s 88 counties. In 1891, the people of Uhrichsville in
central Ohio erected an unusual monument depicting a wounded soldier reaching up to
take a canteen from a comrade. The tableau includes a tree, flag, cannon, and even a
squirrel. Ruby Rogers.
West Union monument: In 1903 John T. Wilson provided $5,000 to pay for a soldier at
parade rest monument for West Union, Ohio. Built by a Dayton firm, the granite
monument soars to a height of 50 feet. Chris Bedel
3-17) Birth of a Nation: NA
3-18) Race Films: NA
3-19) Gone w/ the Wind: NA
3-20) Roots: NA
3-21) Glory: NA
Case 77) Vaudeville: NA
Case 56) Black Imagery: NA
3-22) KKK: No images
3-23) The Union: Dabney image: Wendell Phillips Dabney. CMC Photograph and Print
Collection
lynching editorial: A 1918 editorial from Dabney’s Union newspaper. The black press
strove to keep the ugly facts of racial violence and intimidation in the public’s eye. This
article also chastises the Wilson administration for its neglect of the problem. Ohio
Historical Society
3-24) WPA Slave Narratives: image of ex-slave Toler: Richard Toler, an ex-slave. Toler
was born on the plantation of Henry Toler in Lynchburg, Virginia around 1837. He was
living in Cincinnati, Ohio when this photo was taken in 1937. Ohio Historical Society
Virginia Washington and Charles Green photos to be printed out original size on photo
paper to be mounted separately on desk.
3-25) Marion Anderson: Marion Anderson singing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial
on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939. Thomas D. McAvoy/TimePix
3-26) WW 2: All posters: National Archives.
Image of blacks in formation w/ flag: The 41st Engineers on parade at Fort Bragg, North
Carolina. National Archives.
Fliers of the 15th Air Force in Italy pose with one of their P-51 Mustangs. August, 1944.
National Archives.
USO ladies: Members of the Cincinnati USO prepare packages for shipment to troops
overseas. CMC Photograph and Print Collection.
3-27) Brown vs. Board: George E.C. Hayes, Thurgood Marshall, and James Nabrit
celebrate after the Brown vs. Board decision, declaring segregation unconstitutional.
Library of Congress, NYWT and S Collection.
Integrated school photo: An integrated class. The Brown vs. Board decision would make
scenes like this more and more common. CMC Photograph and Print Collection
3-28) Centennial: cover of RPW’s book.
3-29) The Dream: 1965 Civil Rights March: A civil rights march in Cincinnati, Ohio,
1964. CMC Photograph and Print Collection
On Civil Rights in Kentucky panel: MLK in Ky: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Jackie
Robinson sign autographs at a civil rights march in Frankfort, Kentucky, 1964. Public
Information Collection, Public Records Division, Kentucky Department for Libraries and
Archives
Voter registration photo: A rally for voter registration in Kentucky. CMC Photograph
and Print Collection.
separate images- all CMC Photograph and Print Collection: Civil Rights Women
Office Sit In
Construction Site
3-30) Confederate Flag Controversy: No images
3-31 Reliving the War: reenactment photo of marching troops (no caption): Lee Drake
“
“ “ battle (no caption): Scott Gampfer
3-32 Saving History: No images