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Hoyt William Fuller Collection
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HOYT WILLIAM FULLER COLLECTION
1940 - 1981
Atlanta University Center/Robert W. Woodruff Library
Archives and Special Collections
Atlanta, Georgia
1991
(Re-typed July 2000)
A Guide Charles Freeney Dovie T. Patrick Doris T. Shockley
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Introduction......................................................................................................................................1
In Honor of Hoyt Fuller ...................................................................................................................2
An Autobiographical Sketch............................................................................................................3
In Memoriam: Hoyt Fuller ...............................................................................................................4
The Late Hoyt Fuller: 1923-1981 ....................................................................................................6
Biographical Profile .........................................................................................................................8
Scope and Content .........................................................................................................................10
Series Descriptions.........................................................................................................................11
Container List.................................................................................................................................14
Series 1. Personal Correspondence, 1951-1981................................................................14
Series 2. Personal Records, 1951-1982.............................................................................17
Series 3. Publication and Literary Files, 1953-1981 .........................................................18
Series 4. Negro Digest, 1961-1970 ...................................................................................22
Series 5. Black World, 1970-1976 ....................................................................................26
Series 6. First World, 1976-1981......................................................................................30
Series 7. Conferences, 1958-1981.....................................................................................36
Series 8. Teaching and Research, 1965-1981 ...................................................................39
Series 9. Resource and Clippings File, 1953-1981 ...........................................................41
Series 10. Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1946-1981...................................................................46
Series 11. Non-Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1940-1981 ..........................................................50
Series 12. Photographs, 1958-1980 ..................................................................................54
Series 13. Memorabilia, 1943-1981..................................................................................58
Series 14. Slides, 1958-1981.............................................................................................58
Series 15. Posters, 1958-1981...........................................................................................58
1
INTRODUCTION
In a time of great change, turmoil and creativity, Hoyt Fuller’s search for clarity and
beauty was his special gift. His genius for detail and nuance is a source of continuing wisdom.
The Hoyt William Fuller Collection documents his activities as a writer, editor, activist
and also reveals his tireless efforts as promoter, mentor and friend to the arts and the artist.
The Collection spans a period roughly from the early 1940's to 1981. It is an important
source on the development of the Black Arts Movement which Hoyt Fuller did much to
encourage and define.
The Hoyt William Fuller Collection includes correspondence, manuscripts, photographs,
phonograph records, slides, posters and more than 3000 books on the Black Experience. The
many short stories, scripts, essays and lectures by Mr. Fuller will be of great interest to
biographers.
The tribute “Remembering Hoyt”, was take from the memorial celebration of his life. It
was chosen because we realized that remembering Hoyt is to remember Detroit, Dakar, College
Park, Paris and Mallorca. Remembering Hoyt affords the opportunity to examine in painful and
joyful detail the Negro Press, Black Studies, Black art, Africa, African American artists, poets,
writers and thinkers.
“Remembering Hoyt” helps us to fulfill our obligation to honor that which is best in us
and to pass it on to our progeny, the world.
Charles Freeney
2
In Honor of Hoyt Fuller
Our best people leave us. They sicken and die. They leave us too early because much of
our burden they bear. Because their commitment is tense and intense. Because their strength is
measured but their love is not.
Hoyt Fuller was one of our best influences. His genius, his judgement, the efficient
richness of his supervision--all have warmed and have magnificently corrected us. Because of
his gift we are a little less wobbly in the wild wind.
Gwendolyn Brooks
3
An Autobiographical Sketch
The community in which I was born, like so much else of that time, remains and ever
receding memory in the minds of an ever diminishing number of people. It was called
“Grabbal”, and it was part of what is now East Point. The first years of my life were spent there
and on the other side of East Point in those frail little cabins locally known as shotgun houses.
After the death of my father, Thomas Fuller, my mother took my brother James and me back to
her mother’s home in College Park. It was there that I grew up.
Like all the other Negro children in College Park and vicinity, I attended the Redwine
Avenue School, and institution that evolved in the period that I was there from a sprawling
wooden old-time schoolhouse to a semi-modern brick building. Prior to that, however, I had
gone to kindergarten in a huge two-story house on Princeton Avenue presided over by a
wonderful lady known as Mrs. Johnson. That lady did such an excellent job on getting through
to me with the ABC’s that I was able to skip right into the second grade, whose keeper was a
short, tough, no-nonsense type named Miss Moore...
Hoyt William Fuller
4
In Memoriam: Hoyt Fuller
The sudden death of Hoyt Fuller at the age of fifty-seven, the result of a heart attack in Atlanta
Georgia, the city to which he went in 1976 to establish an international journal of the black world called
First World, came as a brutal shock to the many black writers, old and young, who had come to respect
and even to take for granted his eloquent voice and elegant style.
Hoyt Fuller, already recognized as a talented writer and editor, went to Guinea in the early sixties
to experience the “new” Africa, and while there, came to recognize that the problems experienced by the
latter were part and parcel of the larger dichotomy of color described so eloquently at the beginning of
the century by W.E.B. Du Bois. With this realization, he accepted a little later the invitation of the
publisher, John H. Johnson, to edit a revived Negro Digest from the Chicago headquarters of Johnson
Publishing. IN his hands, Negro Digest, later adopting the more accurate title of Black World, became a
vibrant and vital journal of black Americans and black overseas opinion, of literary criticism and
historical analysis and a major vehicle for short fiction and poetry.
5
A perceptible black arts movement came into being in the United States in the sixties as a parallel
to the Civil Rights Movement and Hoyt’s journal was recognized as its principal organ. His special
interest in young writers led him to establish the O.B.A.C. (Organization of Black American Culture), a
writers’ workshop in Chicago from which emerged Don L. Lee (Haki Madhubuti), Carolyn Rodgers,
Angela Jackson and many others. His concern with, and understanding of, the situation of black people
as an interconnected one was a motive for travel and involvement with international cultural
manifestations. He attended the First World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar and reported extensively on
it. There, he forged firm ties with Alioune Diop among others. He served as vice-chairman of the U.S.
Zonal Committee for F.E.S.T.A.C. He also served on the Committee for, and participated in, the First
and Second New World Festivals of the African Diaspora held in Brazil and in Haiti. He also attended
the Pan-African Congress of Algiers and the Colloquium on Negritude in Dakar.
Hoyt Fuller’s most distinctive and initially most controversial achievement was the launching of
the concept of the “Black Aesthetic”, a challenge taken up by Addison Gayle who published a book with
that title. A bibliography of that concept has recently been compiled by Carolyn Fowler. Hoyt had
reviewed the bibliography and accepted it as the first book-length work to issue for the First World
Press.
In leaving Chicago for Atlanta, following the publisher’s decision to close down Black World,
Hoyt was giving form to an idea he had long been developing - that of founding a journal of the black
world that fulfilled his own expectations, visual and entrepreneurial. The slow start of the journal and
the necessity of changing it from a monthly to a quarterly and then to an even more occasional format
were a great grief to him. Nevertheless, he remained optimistic both as to the journal’s mission and to
its prospects. His optimism seemed on the verge of being justified as he had just concluded an attractive
publishing arrangement with the publishers of Black Collegian in New Orleans.
6
Late in 1980, on the occasion of the Black South Arts Conference in Atlanta, Hoyt had been
genuinely touched by an outpouring of sentiment for First World expressed at a party held for it. Among
the speakers were Andrew Young, Sterling Brown, Atlanta Police Commissioner Lee Brown and many
others.
Hoyt died on May 11, 1981. On Saturday, May 16, 1981, some of his friends participated in a
program entitled “Remembering Hoyt”. Among those speaking were James Baldwin, Gwendolyn
Brooks, Abena Joan Brown, Mari Evans, George Kent, Richard Long, Dudley Randall and Val Gray
Ward...
Dr. Richard A. Long
Atticus Haygood Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia
7
8
The Late Hoyt Fuller, 1923 - 1981
Originally, Council Contact was started to inform constituents about city affairs and related
matters. I did not contemplate writing about personal relations and especially close friends. However, I
recently lost a very dear friend and I think it is noteworthy that I write a passing note about memories of
the man and his life.
It was a little over four years ago that I met Hoyt Fuller when he stopped by my law office to
consult with me about a legal matter. We became friends over the years and he was the speech writer
during my campaign for president of the Atlanta City Council. Because I did not fully know who he was
until sometime later, I did not know at our first meeting about his work and his commitment to a better
life for black Americans.
I subsequently learned that he was a native Atlantan, having received his early childhood
education here in the city of Atlanta. He was an editor, a lecturer, teacher and great writer with a deep
concentration in Black history.
He was a prolific writer, provoking an abundant intellectual growth among his peers. A local
columnist, Roger Witherspoon, wrote, “...Hoyt W. Fuller was a premier promoter of literary and artistic
development in the black American community.” It can be said that Hoyt Fuller put forth a new thought
process for black Americans.
Hoyt was a controversial personality and sometimes misunderstood to a great extent. One of my
associates and I had a dispute over a recent letter which Hoyt wrote to the editor of the Atlanta Journal
newspaper. I basically agreed with my colleague’s observation, but defended Hoyt’s right to express
himself about an unpopular issue. True to form, Hoyt took the editor to task about not having an
appreciation for the black perspective. He even accused the editor of being insensitive and not informed
9
about the black experience.
Hoyt simply did not understand why black Americans had to wait for constitutionally guaranteed
rights. He was impatient because he felt the system could simply enforce the law in an equitable manner
and guarantee human rights for all people. Yet, he understood the system that produced the new rise of
the Ku Klux Klan; the hanging death of a young black in Mobile, Alabama; the killing of young black
men in Buffalo, New York; and, the new conservatism in America. In fact, he believed blacks were
losing precious rights gained in the 60's and he was openly hostile toward the Bakke decision because of
its impact on the black movement.
Hoyt could not tolerate mediocrity. He felt black Americans needed to know about important
issues, particularly third world politics. Most of his knowledge about the black experience came from
personal experiences gained in Africa and other foreign countries. Where there was no personal
experience, there were books and other publications at his fingertips. His living room had a touch of a
public libraray. You knew instantly upon entering his home that he was a student and a teacher of the
black experience.
Hoyt was also strong, committed to an idea and principle. He was understanding, concerned,
sensitive and involved. He was a total man and a good friend and I shall miss him.
Although Hoyt will not be around to give me counsel and advice, he had a profound impact on
my life and I am sure I matured both professionally and spiritually from our friendship.
Hoyt’s death is a great loss to the black community and indeed the world, and he will be sorely
missed.
Farewell to a good friend,
Marvin S. Arrington
Council Contact, City of Atlanta
1981
10
Biographical Profile
Hoyt William Fuller (September 10, 1923 - May 11, 1981) was born in Atlanta, Georgia to Mr.
Thomas and Mrs. Lillie Beatrice Ellafair Fuller. Hoyt Fuller was reared and educated in the elementary
schools of Atlanta, Georgia. After the death of his father, his mother took Hoyt and his brother, James to
her mother’s home in College Park, Georgia. Early in life Hoyt was sent to Detroit, Michigan to live
with an aunt were he attended Northern High School.
After graduating from high school, Fuller joined the United States Army and was attached to the
370th
Battalion of the 92nd
Infantry Division and was sent to the “War Front” in Italy. With the surrender
of Germany, Fuller was sent to the University of Florence, the Aeronautical Institute, Florence, Italy.
After the war, in 1945, Fuller returned to Detroit, Michigan and immediately enrolled at Wayne
State University. Two years later he received the Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature and
Journalism. Upon graduation, Fuller accepted a job as Cincinnati editor of the Ohio State News, a
Columbus, Ohio newspaper. Fuller’s second job was as associate editor of Color magazine in
Charleston, West Virginia.
In 1951, Fuller returned to Detroit and worked for the Water Board for the city of Detroit. After
a year he resigned from the city and took a job as feature editor of the Michigan Chronicle, a Detroit
weekly newspaper. Three years later, Fuller left the Chronicle for a position as associate editor of Ebony
magazine in Chicago, Illinois.
In 1957, Fuller resigned from the staff of Ebony and sailed to Europe. He spent nearly three
years travelling over Europe and residing on the Mediterranean island of Mallorca as a legal resident of
Spain. While in Europe Fuller took a three-month journey to West Africa and served as the West
African correspondent for the Haagse Post, Amsterdam, Holland.
In January 1959 in Europe, Fuller booked passage on the FOCH for Africa and spent several
11
weeks in Senegal and the New Republic of Guinea, a few months after Sekou Toure led Guinea to
independence from France.
After returning to the United States, Fuller moved to New York City and worked as an assistant
editor at Collier’s Encyclopedia. In March, 1961, he resigned from Collier’s Encyclopedia and returned
to Chicago to revive and serve as managing editor of the Negro Digest which was published by Johnson
Publications of Chicago, Illinois. The magazine was renamed Black World in 1970 and ceased
publication in 1976.
In 1965-1966 Mr. Fuller spent six months in Africa under a John Hay Whitney Fellowship.
A collection of his articles concerning his travels to Guinea and Senegal was published under the
title Journey to Africa, Third World Press, 1971. Other countries in Africa visited by Fuller included
Algeria, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania and Zambia.
In the early summer of 1976, Fuller and a group of concerned people from across the country met
in New York City (Harlem) and formed the First World Foundation, the purpose of which was to publish
First World magazine. In 1977 Fuller returned to Atlanta and began publishing the new publication and
became its first editor.
Fuller was a professor of Literature and Journalism at serveral colleges and universities. His last
teaching position was at the Africana Center of Cornell University to which he commuted weekly from
Atlanta, Georgia to Ithaca, New York. Early in the afternoon on the 11th
of May, 1981, Fuller ended his
meeting with Howard Dodson at the Institute of the Black World. Dodson relates that they discussed his
rigorous schedule, and Fuller was excited abou the prospects for a change. Mr. Dodson was informed
that evening that Hoyt Fuller had been stricken with a heart attack in downtown Atlanta and that he had
died.
Dovie Touchstone Patrick
12
Scope and Content
The Hoyt William Fuller Collection documents his career from 1943-1981. Included in these
papers are several autobiographies that together give an account of his childhood, and youth. The
collection follows his long association with the Bertha Krausner Literary Agency and includes an
extensive collection of his short stories as well as those of aspiring writers, and established writers,
poets, historians, and others.
Mr. Fuller’s association with Johnson Publishing Company from the 1950's until 1976 is
represented by those papers generated during his years as the associate editor of Ebony and as editor of
Negro Digest/Black World, 1961-1976. In his capacity as editor of the leading Black literary publication
in the nation, Mr. Fuller was mentor, critic, consultant and publisher to many of today’s writers. He was
a founder of the Organization of Black American Culture (O.B.A.C.). The famous Wall of Respect in
Chicago, created by the artist workshop of O.B.A.C. in May of 1976, gave impetus to the wall mural
movement of the 1960's.
In 1976 Mr. Fuller left Johnson Publishing Company. This historically significant parting is
documented here as is his teaching career at Cornell University, Northwestern University, Atlanta Junior
College, and elsewhere.
The struggle to establish First World magazine in Atlanta and the accompanying network of
Atlanta supports right up until his death in 1981 complete the collection. These papers and the
correspondence, photographs and posters that document his travels in Africa, Europe and the Americas
leave a collection of great clarity and great beauty. This collection will prove to be a vital link in the
history of African Americans and a most important part of the development of responsible journalism in
the United States. It is our strong conviction that for researchers, writers, poets and scholars the Hoyt
13
William Fuller Collection must be a point of reference.
Charles Freeney
14
SERIES DESCRIPTIONS
Series 1 Personal Correspondence, 1951-1981
Boxes 1-5
The series contains correspondence, carbons and some financial records.
It spans the years 1951-1981. Correspondence includes letters to his
family, numerous friends and associates.
Series 2 Personal Records, 1951-1982
Box 6
This series includes autobiographical and biographical sketches. It
contains newspaper commentaries at the time of Hoyt W. Fuller’s death,
obituary notices, as well as final family notes and instructions.
Series 3 Publication and Literary Files, 1953-1981
Boxes 7-12
The series contains correspondence in reference to publications of both
Fuller and other writers, the Negro Press, foreign and domestic publishers,
some unpublished writings, acceptance and rejection letters. The long
span 1953-1981 lends great interest to this series.
Series 4 Negro Digest, 1961-1970
Boxes 13-18
The series contains information on the Organization of Black American
Culture and correspondence with writers, artists, and activists, Black
Forum, National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities. The series is of
particular interest because of the number of organizations and people
included in it. From the standpoint of volume it seems to represent a most
busy and productive time in Mr. Fuller’s career. The observations and
inter-office communication regarding Johnson Publication Company will
be of interest to scholars interested in the development and history of the
African American Press.
Series 5 Black World, 1970-1976
Boxes 19-23
The series represents the correspondence generated as editor of Black
World. Some of the letters and concerns are addressed to the Negro Digest
indicating that public acceptance of the new name (Black World) took
time. The series also reflects the international scope of Mr. Fuller’s
literary interest.
15
Series 6 First World, 1976-1981
Boxes 24-31
The series represents the largest body of materials in this collection. It is
large for two reasons: (1) it was the most recently generated material and
(2) most of these materials were from the Avon Street home and office of
Mr. Fuller and were left largely intact. It should be noted that while First
World magazine consumed a large portion of his time, Mr. Fuller
continued to teach, lecture, write and consequently commute between
Atlanta, Georgia and New York City. This series reveals his growing
involvement in Atlanta’s political life and growth, and his contribution to
it.
Series 7 Conferences, 1958-1981
Boxes 32-37
The series includes the organization of, participation in conferences on
many aspects of the arts, literature and communication. It is just as Mr.
Fuller created it and the conferences are worldwide; academic institutions
dominate. Of interest will be the attention given to struggling black
student organizations and the young people involved.
Series 8 Teaching and Research, 1965-1981
Boxes 38-39
The series was created to keep pace with the increasing demand for Mr.
Fuller’s services as lecturer and teacher. Syllabi, course outlines, and
correspondence with his students at Cornell, Emory, Northwestern and
others make up the majority of the material. Of particular interest are the
Africana studies at Cornell.
Series 9 Resources and Clippings File, 1953-1981
Boxes 40-45
The series is a rich collection of topics, personalities and ideas that parallel
Mr. Fuller’s career. The series from 1953-1981 includes some
correspondence by Mr. Fuller.
Series 10 Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1946-1981
Boxes 46-50
Short stories, poetry, essays and lectures by Hoyt William Fuller are in this
series. Almost all of these materials have been published. The range of
publications and the subjects of the writings are important in that they not
only document the African American press, but give a most insightful look
at the Civil Rights struggle from Mr. Fuller’s unique vantage. The galleys
from his book, Journey to Africa, and speeches on the media can be found
16
here.
Series 11 Non-Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1940-1981
Boxes 51-56
The series contains the work and correspondence of established and
aspiring writers, poets, and historians. Of great interest is the
correspondence of Eric Walrond with Rosey Pool and the autobiographical
unfinished work, Fly Out of Darkness, by Claude Barnett. Included in
Barnett’s folder is the photographic collection from the American Negro
Exhibition held in Chicago, Illinois in 1940 and the correspondence and
manuscripts of Fuller’s friend and mentor, Mr. Fred Hart Williams (1882-
1961). The manuscript is titled The Detroit Heritage.
Series 12 Photographs, 1958-1980
Boxes 57-61
These five manuscript boxes contain photographs of Mr. Fuller, his
friends, family, and co-workers at Johnson Publishing Company. A large
part of the collection contains pictures of celebrities, dignitaries and
documents his travels in Africa, Europe and the United States.
Series 13 Memorabilia, 1943-1981
Box 62
One manuscript box contains nine address books and two wooden plaques.
The address books indicate the United States cities of New York, Chicago,
Washington, Baltimore, and Atlanta, with an address book for Africa.
Series 14 Slides, 1958-1981
Box 63
The slides are divided into geographical locations with the exception of
three sub-series. They are Art-Humanities, Inc., Famous People, and
Miscellaneous.
Series 15 Posters, 1958-1981
61 posters
The majority of the posters advertise various festivals of Africa and
African-American life. The remainder depict aspects of the Civil Rights
struggle.
17
CONTAINER LIST
Series 1. Personal Correspondence, 1951-1981
Box Folder
1 1 Bagwell, Ed, 1978
2 Baldwin, James, 1961
3 Banks, Douglas and Kay, 1956-1972
4 , Bill, 1956-1958
5 Booker, Simeon, 1956-1958
6 Boyd, Edward, 1964-1966
7 Brady, Kit, 1956-1968
8 Breman, Paul, 1967
9 Brock, Edward and Ida Mae, 1955-1971
10 Brown, Rocky (and parents), 1956
11 Brown, Sterling and Daisy, 1968
12 Thomas, Carl, 1956-1959
13 Chamberlain, John, 1964
14 Cheatwood, Kiarri, 1981
15 Clark, Guy, 1970
16 Collier, Eugenia, 1970-1973
17 Dixon, Nancy, 1958-1959
18 , Diana, 1958
19 De Windt, Hal, 1956
20 Dee, Ruby (Davis, Ossie)
21 , DeMarr (and Blanche), 1958
22 , Dauphine, 1955
23 Denton, Melba, 1956-1965
24 Doan, William Sayles, 1968-1971
25 Evans, Mari
26 Fowler, Carolyn, 1980
27 , Frank, 1957
28 Frank, Richard, 1966-1967
29 Fuller, Lillie (mother), 1955-1963, 1971
30 Gilboy, Andrew, 1968-1972
31 , George, 1957
32 Gildroy, Robert, 1962-1971
33 Haley, Alex, 1965
34 Hall, Myrtle, 1956-1965
35 Hammond, Peter, 1956-1959
36 , Harold
37 , Henry, 1962
38 Hillers, Frederick, 1961
39 Hillers, Frederick, 1961
18
Box Folder
1 40 Hoaglard, Everett, 1976
41 , Houston, 1972
42 Reams, Jack, 1971
43 Janheinz, Jahn, 1964-1969
44 , Jenine, 1956-1957
45 , Jerry, 1956
46 , Jim
47 Joans, Ted, 1973-1974
48 , John, 1957
49 Kallister, Thomas, 1963
50 , Karl, 1956
51 Kent, Sidney E., Jr., 1962-1979
52 King, Helen Hayes, 1971
53 King, Narcissa Swift, 1968
54 Knight, Etheridge (and Sanchez, Sonia, wife), 1969-1970
Box Folder
2 1 Larsson, Clotye Murdock, 1959-1967
2 Long, Richard A.
3 Long, Richard A., 1967
4 Long, Richard A., 1968
5 Long, Richard A., 1969
6 Long, Richard A., 1970
7 Long, Richard A., 1971
8 Long, Richard A., 1972-1980
9 Malcolm, Arthur, 1972
10 Marnat, Marcel, 1966-1972
11 Mason,
12 Miyoshi, Gay and Masao, 1964-1965
13 Nkoualze, Robert, 1981
14 Onyango, Pauline Cole, 1971
15 Parks, Alma Forrest, 1956-1968
16 Parks, Carole, 1979
17 Payne, Hank, 1957-1965
18 , Priscilla, 1957
19 , Raymond, 1957
20 , Rolla, 1964
21 , Russ, 1961-1962
22 , Scott, 1958-1959
23 Scott, Robert W., 1958-1971
24 Smith, Hughie, 1962
25 Stokes, Rose (sister and Stokes), 1956-1968
26 Tesch, Otto, 1959-1960
27 Tesch, Otto, 1959-1960
28 Tesch, Otto, 1961-1962
19
Box Folder
2 29 Tesch, Otto, 1963-1966
30 Tesch, Otto, 1967
31 Tesch, Otto, 1968
32 Tesch, Otto, 1969
33 Tesch, Otto, 1970-1972
34 Thomas, Eloise, 1956-1964
35 Thomas, Eva Louise (Auntie), 1955-1963
36 Thomas, John Wesley, 1962
37 Unidentified, ca. 1958-1970
38 Wedgery, Albert W., 1956-1970
39 Wharton, Donald, 1961-1964
40 Wiggins, Mattie (Aunt Matt)
41 Wiggins, Mattie (Aunt Matt), 1955-1957
42 Wiggins, Mattie (Aunt Matt), 1958-1959
43 Wiggins, Mattie (Aunt Matt), 1960-1963
44 Wiggins, Mattie (Aunt Matt), 1964-1970
45 Wiggins, Fred Hart, 1960
46 Wilson, , 1957
47 Yakubu, Yaki (Sayles, James L.), 1971-1973
Box Folder
3 1 Danner, Margaret
2 Danner, Margaret
3 Danner, Margaret, 1954-1955
4 Danner, Margaret (poetry), 1955
5 Danner, Margaret (poetry), 1956
6 Danner, Margaret, 1956
7 Danner, Margaret, 1957
8 Danner, Margaret, 1958
9 Danner, Margaret, 1959
10 Danner, Margaret, 1960
11 Danner, Margaret, 1961
12 Danner, Margaret, 1962-1963
13 Danner, Margaret, 1964
14 Danner, Margaret, 1965-1966
15 Danner, Margaret, 1967
16 Danner, Margaret, 1968
17 Danner, Margaret, 1970-1978
Box Folder
4 RESTRICTED
Box Folder
5 1 Business Correspondence, 1958-1959
2 Business Correspondence, 1960-1963
3 Business Correspondence, 1964-1965
4 Business Correspondence, 1966
20
Box Folder
5 5 Business Correspondence, 1967-1968
6 Business Correspondence, 1969
7 Business Correspondence, 1970
8 Business Correspondence - Awards, 1978
9 Business Correspondence - Black Quartet Agreement (Leroy Jones, Ed
Bullins, Ben Caldwell, Ronald Milner), 1969
10 Business Correspondence - Cruse, Harold, 1978
11 Business Correspondence - Dictionary of International Biography, 1967-
1969
12 Business Correspondence - Federal Bureau of Investigation/Central
Intelligence Agency, 1981
13 Business Correspondence - Fellowship in Journalism/Columbia, 1967
14 Business Correspondence - Housing, 1975-1977
15 Business Correspondence - Invoices, 1976-1981
16 Business Correspondence - Job Development, 1957-1979
17 Business Correspondence - John Hay Whitney Foundation, 1964-1970
18 Business Correspondence - Litigation, 1964-1966
19 Business Correspondence - Mailing Address/Business Cards, 1956-1981
20 Business Correspondence - Midnight Cowboy (photographs), 1969
21 Business Correspondence - Ninety-Second Infantry, 1942-1945
22 Business Correspondence - Passports, 1959
23 Business Correspondence - Traffic Violations, 1980
24 Business Correspondence - Utilities, 1964-1977
25 Business Correspondence - Vouchers, Literary Earnings, 1967-1969
26 Business Correspondence - Who’s Who in America, 1979-1981
Series 2. Personal Records, 1951-1982
(Series 2 revised December 1999)
Box Folder
6 1 Curriculum Vitae
2 “The Biography of Hoyt William Fuller” (autobiographical statement -
typescript)
3 Dedication of the Hoyt W. Fuller Collection, 06 November 1982
4 Notes about the Fuller estate
5 Obituaries (news clippings)
6 Memorial Service (program)
7 List of periodicals accompanying the Fuller Collection
8 List of record albums accompanying the Fuller Collection
21
Series 3. Publications and Literary Files, 1953-1981
Box Folder
7 1 Acceptance Letters, 1961
2 Achebe, Chinua, 1970
3 Alexander, Denis (Paula Goodnight), 1970
4 Are We a Nation of Racists?
5 Baldwin, James, 1952
6 Ball and Chain Review, Vol. I, Nos. 1-6
7 Bambara, Toni Cade, 1977
8 Beacon Press, 1969
9 Bennett, Lerone (Biography, clippings, photograph), 1963
10 Bennett, Lerone - “Pan Africanism at the Crossroads” Ebony, 1974
11 Black Book Stores, ca. 1969
12 Black Books, Bulletin (Interview with Fuller), 1973
13 Black Dialogues (first chapter manuscript)
14 Black Muslims, Notes, 1960
15 Bone, Robert A.
16 Bontemps, Arna (correspondence), 1964
17 Boyd, Melba (to Darnell and Johnny)
18 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Black Steel Aurora), 1971
19 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Gayle Addison), 1972
20 Brooks, Johnson, 1964-1966
21 Brown, Oscar, Jr. (Kicks and Company), 1961
22 Buckley, William F. and Mailer, Norman (Debate and Article), 1962
23 Bundschu, Barbara (Black Muslims, News Release, United Press
International), 1950
24 Cayton, Horace, 1969
25 Chicago School Boycott, 1964
26 Childress, Alice
27 Chilton Books, Inc. (Journey to Africa, Correspondence), 1965
28 Ciardi, John (Saturday Review), 1965
29 Clarke, John Henrik, 1971
30 “A Cold Bottle of Perrier” (Galleys and Correspondence), 1961
31 College Language Association (Notes on Africa), 1980 [missing? 06/00]
32 Colliers Year Book (Correspondence), 1967
33 Contemporary Forum, Lecture Bureau
34 Cooper, Clarence (“The Angriest Negro” Esquire), 1972
35 Correspondence, Poetry, Articles, 1960
Box Folder
8 1 Davis, Ronda (“Rip Off”), 1970
2 “Decision” (Short Story, Redbook), 1962
3 Dee, Ruby
4 Dialogue for the Deaf (North American Review), 1964
5 “Dinner at Diops” (Correspondence), 1962
22
Box Folder
8 6 Doan, William (The People Press, Vol. I, No. 4)
7 Documentary, WGN TV, New Mood/New Pride, 1968
8 Donaldson, Jeff
9 Doubleday, Contract for Short Story, 1968
10 Doubleday and Co., Inc., Zenith Anthology (Proposed), 1968
11 Drum and Spear Press, 1969
12 Ducas, George, 1969
13 Fabio, Sarah Webster (“A Mirror, A Soul”), 1969
14 Fabre, Michel, 1963
15 Forman, James, 1979
16 Frazier, Joe (“The Champ Nobody Knew”), 1972
17 Fuller, Hoyt (“Black Muslims Midstream”), 1961
18 Garvey, Jacques A., 1970
19 Giovanni, Nikki, 1972
20 Giovanni, Nikki (“All I Gotta Do”), 1970
21 Goncalves, Joe, 1971
22 Greenlee, Sam, 1970
23 Grosvenor, Verta Mae, 1970
24 Gulliver, Hall, 1978
25 “Haircut in Conakray” (Southwest Review), 1961
26 Haley, Alex, 1968
27 Hamilton, Charles V., 1968
28 Hansberry, Lorraine, 1961-1962
29 Harding, Vincent, 1969
30 Harding, Vincent (Documents in Afro American History), 1969
31 Harper and Row, 1968
32 Hayden, Robert, 1970
33 Hellman, Lillian (Correspondence), 1963
34 Henderson, Stephen, 1969
35 Hentoff, Nat
36 Hicks, Granville, 1967
37 Holder, Geoffrey
38 Hobbs Literary Agency, 1971
39 Hughes, Langston, 1957
40 Hunt, Richard (Chicago Sun-Times), 1971
Box Folder
9 1 Illinois, Board of Higher Education Executive Directors Report and Report
No. 79, 1969
2 Illinois Crime Investigating Commission, 1970
3 “Images in Black and White” (Manuscript), 1962
4 Innis, Doris
5 Jackson, Ester, 1966
6 Jackson, Jesse, 1979
7 Jackson, Angela, 1972
23
Box Folder
9 8 James, Richard C. (“A Simple Poem to Mae”), 1971
9 Jarrett, Vernon
10 Joans, Ted, 1969
11 Johnson, Alicia L., 1970
12 Johnson, Alicia (Realities vs. Spirits), 1969
13 Johnson, Helen A., 1971
14 Jones, Leroi (Baraka, Amiri), 1969
15 Journal of Black Poetry Benefit, 1971
16 Joyce, Donald
17 Keeby, Robert (“Black Rebel”, “Stephany”, “Poem”), 1971
18 Kelley, William Melvin, 1968
19 Kerrigan, Anthony, 1963
20 Kgositsile, K. (Willie) (Note), 1968
21 Killens, John Oliver, 1966
22 King, Woodie (The Vanderkellan Company), 1979
23 Knight, Etheridge (“For Black Poets Who Think of Suicide”), 1970
24 Knopf, Alfred, Publishers, 1968
25 Larsens, Nella (Introduction to Passing by Hoyt Fuller), 1970
26 Lee, Don L. (“Dynamite Voices”, “Don’t Cry, Scream”)
27 Lee, Don L. (Madhabuti, Haki)
28 Lee, Don L. (Poems, Manuscript), 1969
29 “A Letter From the Southside”, 1964
30 Lomax, Louis (“Speaking Out”)
31 Long, Richard A., (“Homage to Alain Locke”), 1970
32 McClean, Claire, 1962
33 McKay, David, Co.
34 Mackey, W. William (Manuscript, “Family Meeting”), 1966
35 Malcolm X (Colliers Encyclopedia), 1968
36 Mansfield, John
37 Marx, Erica (Correspondence re: Walrond, Eric)
38 Mboya, Tom, 1969
39 “Measure of a Man” (Manuscript, Bari Barrow (Fuller), Duke Magazine),
1958
40 Muhammad, Elijah (Article), 1961
41 Mwandishe, Kuweka A. (“The Nigger Cycle”), 1970
42 “The Myth of the New Negro” (Manuscript, Fuller), 1963
43 “The Myth of White Backlash”, 1964
Box Folder
10 1 National Association of Black News Media Workers, 1970
2 Negro Press, 1961
3 Nettleford, Rex, 1974
4 New American Library, 1970
5 Pereira, Maurina C. (Jornal do Brazil), 1970
6 Perkins, Eugene (Black Theater and Community Expression)
24
Box Folder
10 7 Petrie, Phil
8 Pfister, Arthur (Granny Blak Poet. Margaret Danner), 1970
9 Poole, Rosey (Marx, Erica, Correspondence on Walrond, Eric), 1969
10 Porter, Sargent Publishers, 1969
11 Praeger, Inc., 1969
12 Progressive, Inc., 1966
13 Pulliam, Helen (“Slaughterhouse”), 1970
14 Quotes, “Bon Mots”
15 Racism in Publishing
16 “A Raisin in the Sun” (Playbill)
17 Randall, Dudley, 1971
18 Random House Publishers, 1969
19 Rathmann, Mel (How it is in Soul City, Documentary, Proposed)
20 Redding, Saunders
21 Reed, Ishmael, 1969
22 Rejection Slips
23 Rexroth, Kenneth (Correspondence), 1963
24 “Riots” (Collier’s Yearbook article), 1968
25 “The Rise of the Militant Negro” (Nation and Correspondence), 1963
26 Rivers, Conrad Kent, 1933-1968
Box Folder
11 1 Robinson, Billy Hand, 1971
2 Rodgers, Carolyn (Poems, “A Long Rap”, “Now Ain’t That Love?”),
1970-1971
3 Royster, Phillip
4 Rustin, Bayard, 1969
5 Scott, Melvin, 1969
6 Seabury Press, 1968
7 Second Front (Black Journalist), 1972
8 Senghor, Leopold (Interview), 1966
9 Smith, Ann E., 1969-1970
10 Smith, Ann E., 1972
11 Smith, Ann E., 1973
12 Smith, Lillian (Correspondence), 1962
13 Southwest Review, 1965
14 Stevens, Shane
15 Sanchez, Sonia, 1971
16 Styron, William (Confessions of Nat Turner)
17 Styron, William (Confessions of Nat Turner, Reviews), 1969
18 Swiggett, Howard, 1954
19 “Tale of Two Cities”, Harpers Bazaar, 1962
20 Taylor, Della Brown
21 Taylor, Rockie (Black Henry), 1971
22 Third World Press, 1970
25
Box Folder
11 23 Terkle, Studs, 1968
24 Tesch, Otto (“Amanda”), 1957
25 Turner, Darwin T., 1971
26 Twentieth Century Fund
Box Folder
12 1 University of Georgia Press, 1979
2 Venturati, Isa, 1968
3 Venture
4 Voyage (Notes), 1959
5 Walker, Alice (“Leventhal”)
6 Walrond, Eric and Poole Rosey (Correspondence), 1957
8 Walrond Eric (Original Selection of Negro Poems with Note by Rosey
Poole), ca. 1958
9 Washington, Mary Helen (Ethel Waters, Interviews), 1972
10 “The White Devil’s Day is Almost Over” (Life), 1963
11 Williams, John A.
12 Williams, John A. (Articles)
13 William, Frederick J., 1964
14 Witherspoon, Jill (“County Jail”), 1970
15 Worthy, William (“The Nation of Islam...”), 1962
Series 4. Negro Digest, 1961-1970
Box Folder
13 1 African Forum: Reverberations From a Writers Conference, 1965
2 Afro American Studies, Harvard University, Progress Report, 1969
3 Alan, James (“Beyond Chicago Someone Sleeps”, “What Can I Say?”)
4 “American Black Supremacist” (Krosney, Herbert), 1961
5 Angelou, Maya, 1971
6 “The Apostle” and Correspondence, 1965
7 Articles, 1961
8 Arts in Society (University of Wisconsin Questionnaire)
9 Banks, Lester, 1971
10 Bates, Daisy (Christian Century), 1958
11 Bigsby, Chris W. (Correspondence), 1969
12 Black Journal, 1968
13 Black Muslims (Press Releases), 1958
14 Black Muslims (Clippings), 1960-1970
15 “A Black Quartet” (Plays), 1970
16 Black Writers Questionnaire, 1969
17 Bontemps, Arna (Correspondence), 1964-1970
18 Book Reviews
19 Book Reviews
26
Box Folder
13 20 Booker, Simeon, 1964
21 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Correspondence), 1962-1971
22 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Correspondence), 1962-1971
23 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Chicagoland Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 1), 1969
24 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Clippings, Frank Brown, London, Chicago Tribune),
1964
25 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Clippings)
26 Brooks, Gwendolyn (“I See Chicago”, “A New Poem”), 1964
27 Brooks, Gwendolyn (“The Wall”), 1967
28 Bullins, Ed (“Death List”, Correspondence and Clippings), 1969
29 Butler, Broadus, 1962
Box Folder
14 1 Calder, Angus (“Chester Himes and the Art of Fiction”)
2 “Chicago” (Fuller Manuscript)
3 Chicago Economic Development Corporation, Lawndale, 1968
4 The Chicago Riot, 1966
5 Clarke, John Henrik (Correspondence), 1966
6 Cleage, Pearl (“We Don’t Need No Music”), 1972
7 Clifton, Lucille (“Magic Mama”, Redbook), 1969
8 Cohn, David (“On Richard Wright”, Atlantic Monthly, Reviews), 1940
9 Cole, Celeste (Programs), 1957-1964
10 “Confessions of George Washington” and Clippings
11 Contemporary Negro Fiction (Lecture and Correspondence), 1964-1965
12 Critics and Negro Writers, 1969
13 Cruse, Harold, 1969
14 Cunningham, James, 1969
15 Daniels, Ron, 1980
16 Davis, Arthur P. (“Gwendolyn Brooks, Poet of the Unheroic”, CLA
Journal), 1963
17 Dickerson, Earl B. (Correspondence), 1961
18 Dickstein, Morris (“Black Aesthetic in White America”)
19 Dodson, Owen (Correspondence), 1972
20 DuBois Institute for Advanced Studies Proposal, 1968
21 Dumas, Henry, 1968
22 Ebert, Roger (Correspondence), 1968
23 Ekwensi, Cyprian, 1966
24 Evans, Mari, 1969
25 Foundation Grants (Correspondence), 1958
26 Foundation Grants, 1968
27 Fournier, Rift (“Where Are You?”), 1968
28 Fowler, Carolyn (Black Arts and Black Aesthetics), 1976
29 Fowler, Carolyn (Manifesto Poetry), 1972
30 Fowler, Sherman L., 1968
31 Fuller, Autobiographical
27
Box Folder
15 1 Fuller, Autobiographical
2 Gaines, Ernest W. (Correspondence), 1964
3 Gayle, Addison (“The Black Situation”)
4 Gayle, Addison (Correspondence), 1969
5 Goddall, Kenneth (Associate Editor, Reporter, Correspondence), 1967
6 Greaves, William, 1969
7 Haase, Dennis B. (Correspondence), 1969
8 Grauman, Lawrence (Editor, Antioch Review), 1969
9 Hare, Nathan, 1968
10 Hildreth, Chauncey (Washington Esquire), 1968
11 Himes, Chester, 1967-1969
12 Himes, Chester (Interview, Alicante, Spain), 1969
13 Holden, Sprague, 1965
14 Housing, Chicago, 1961
15 International Association for Cultural Freedom, 1969
16 Jackson, Angela (Poetry, Kharlos, Carolyn Rodgers), 1970-1971
17 Hughes, Langston, 1966-1967
18 Johnson, Jack, 1965
19 Johnson, John H. (Correspondence), 1969
20 Johnson, John H. (Correspondence and Clippings), 1954-1973
21 Johnson, John H. (Correspondence re: 1966 Festival in Dakar), 1965-1972
22 Johnson, John H. (Correspondence re: Salary)
23 Johnson Publications (Observations), 1959
24 Journey to Africa (Contract and Galleys), 1971
25 Journey to Africa (Reviews), 1971-1972
Box Folder
16 1 King, Sivia (Obituary and Correspondence), 1916-1971
2 Klausner, Bertha (Literary Agent), 1958-1965
3 Klausner, Bertha (Literary Agent), 1966-1971
4 Knight, Etheridge (Poem), 1969
5 Kupcinet, Irv (Correspondence), 1961
6 Lake Meadows, Prairie Shores, 1962
7 Lee, Don L. (“One Sided...”), 1970
8 Letters to the Editor, 1958-1961
9 Letters to the Editor, 1961-1964
10 Letters to the Editor (Correspondence re: Black Literature), 1961-1964
11 Letters to the Editor (Correspondence re: Black Literature), 1965-1971
12 Letters to the Editor, 1965-1971
13 Little Rock (Essay), 1958
14 Llorens, David (Correspondence), 1965-1971
15 “Lost Moment” (Poem for Gwendolyn Brooks), 1969
16 McClean, Stuart and Elizabeth Morgan (University of Santa Clara,
California), 1968
17 Mailer, Norman, 1964
28
Box Folder
16 18 Mainstream (Correspondence), 1967
19 McCluskey, John, 1970
20 Malcolm X (Clippings), 1962-1964
21 Memmi, Albert (Colonizers and Colonized, Review), 1969
22 Meyer, Howard (Correspondence), 1961-1964
23 Moten, Etta (Mrs. Claude Barnett, Note), 1970
Box Folder
17 1 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Clippings),
1968
2 National Endowment for the Humanities Proposal, 1968
3 National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, 1966
4 National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, 1967
5 Negro History Roundtable, 1969
6 New Leader, 1964
7 New York City Ballet, 1964-1965
8 New York Herald Tribune Book Week (Reviews, Correspondence), 1964
9 New York Times (Review and Correspondence), 1968-1969
10 A Night of Salvation
11 Norris, Hoke (“New Black Aesthetic”, Article and Correspondence), 1970
12 Notes, Writers, Literature, 1965
13 Organization of Black American Culture, 1969-1970
14 Old Line American (Manuscript and Correspondence re: Publication),
1964-1965
15 An Overview of Contemporary Negro Fiction (with Correspondence and
Notes), 1965
16 Path Press, 1969
17 Playbills
18 Plumpp, Sterling and Daisy, 1978
19 Portugal in Africa, 1974
20 Poetry, 1948
21 Projections for Publication, 1967-1968
22 Perspectives, 1970-1971
23 Publishing Industry
24 Publication (Correspondence), 1957-1967
25 Publication (Correspondence), 1969
26 Racism in Book Publishing, A Statement, 1971
27 Redding, Saunders, 1967
28 Redmond, Eugene, 1968-1970
29 Reflections: Fundamental Polarization and the Bicentennial, 1975-1976
30 Rivers, Cora (Correspondence), 1968
31 Robinson, Pat (Note), 1961
Box Folder
18 1 “Saga of Sarah Lou” (Poem, Duke Magazine), 1957
2 Salk, Erwin
29
Box Folder
18 3 Saturday Review, 1964-1968
4 Schedule and Notes, 1973
5 Shaping an Image
6 Siebel, Julia, 1962-1965
7 Spectator, University of Iowa, 1973
8 Stavros, George (“An Interview with Gwendolyn Brooks”, Contemporary
Literature), 1970
9 Story Ideas, 1970-1971
10 Toure, Sekou (Biography and Others), ca. 1965
11 Toure, Sekou (“A New Kind of Leader”)
12 “Toward a Black Aesthetic” (Critic), 1968
13 Untitled Writings
14 Untitled Writings
15 Untitled (“Haircut in Conakry”)
16 Untitled (Non-Fiction)
17 Valcour, Pierre, 1967
18 Weintroub, benjamin (Editor, Jewish Forum), 1966
19 Weiss, Samuel
20 Western Review (Correspondence), 1966
21 White, Charles (Raffles), 1966
22 “Why Was Vernon Jordan Shot?” Forum, 1980
23 Williams, Ahmed (West Virginia State R.O.T.C. Glee Club)
24 “Why Women Live Longer” Ebony, 1961
25 World Wide Lecture Bureau, 1969
26 Wright, Richard (Letters to Joe. E. Brown), 1968
27 Yerby, Frank (Correspondence), 1966
28 Yerby, Frank, 1969
Series 5. Black World, 1970-1976
Box Folder
19 1 Adoff, Arnold (Correspondence, Anthology of Black American Poetry,
Harper and Row), 1972
2 African Heritage Studies Association, 1975
3 “Alien Message of the Wind” Controversy (Black World Editorial), 1970-
1971
4 Amini, Hohari (Jewel Latimore, Correspondence), 1972
5 Amis, Barry D. (“The Black Writer and the Western Cultural Aesthetic”),
1971-1972
6 Barnett, Etta Moten, 1971
7 Bell, Era (Memo and Correspondence re: Illinois Arts Council), 1974
8 Billingsley, Andrew (Howard University), 1972
9 Black Academy of Arts and Letters, 1969-1972
30
Box Folder
19 10 Black Academy of Arts and Letters (New York Amsterdam News), 1971
11 Black Press, 1969-1980
12 Black Scholar Book Club, 1971
13 Black World (Accounting), 1974
14 Black World (Formerly Negro Digest), 1970
15 Black World (Printing Estimates), 1970-1976
16 Black World (Publicity), 1970-1976
17 “The Black Writer in An Era of Struggle”
18 Black Writers vs. White Critics, 1971-1974
19 Blacks in Higher Education, 1974-1979
20 Braithwaite, Edward, 1970
21 Brutus, Dennis, 1975
Box Folder
20 1 Chicago State University Conference on Multi-Ethnic Literature, 1974
2 Chicago Sun-Times, 1967-1971
3 Chicago Sun-Times (Clippings, Ellis Close), 1971-1972
4 Chicago Sun-Times (Correspondence)
5 Chinweizu (“Olympic Games, Nobel Prizes and the Black World”), 1978
6 “Civil Rights Organizations” (Collier’s Year Book, Clippings/March on
Washington), 1963
7 Clarke, John Henrik, 1970
8 Clippings (Black Writers), 1974
9 Clippings (Miscellaneous), 1975-1976
10 Colter, Cyrus (Correspondence, Stories, Clippings), 1967-1973
11 Conley, Cynthia (Sister Zubena), 1945-1972
12 Coombs, Orde (Correspondence, Articles), 1971-1974
13 Cornell University, Afrikana Studies (Symposium), 1974
14 Correspondence re: Contributor, Poetry of Black American, The Black
American Writer, The Black Aesthetic, Black Literature in America, 1970-
1972
15 Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) (James Swan vs. Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Board of Education, et. al.), 1970-1971
16 Davis, John A. (Correspondence), 1970
17 Dorsey, David F., Jr. (“The Dual Aesthetic of Black American Writers”,
Correspondence), 1970-1971
18 Dorsey, David F., Jr. (“Formal Elements of the Black Aesthetic in
Poetry”), 1972
19 Dunbar, Paul Laurence (NAACP Officially Endorsed Cachet), 1975
20 Eaves, Reginald (Bari Barrow (Fuller) letter to Atlanta Constitution), 1978
21 Ebony Talent Foundation (Internal Revenue Service Letter), 1974
22 Evans, Mari (“Indianapolis” Correspondence), 1967-1971
Box Folder
21 1 Fabre, Michel (Correspondence), 1970-1978
2 Fentress, Robert (Memos re: Black World), 1970-1973
31
Box Folder
21 3 Gayle, Addison, Jr., 1970-1978
4 Grinnell College (Correspondence re: Black Students), 1975-1976
5 Harding, Vincent (“Black Power and the American Christ” Christian
Century), 1967
6 Hare, Julia (Mrs. Nathan Hare), 1971
7 Howard University, 1971
8 Hayden, Frank (Sculptor, With Photograph), 1971-1972
9 Hobbs, Ronald (PSI Systems), 1971
10 “How Soulful is Soul Radio?” (Race Relations Information Center,
Nashville, TN), 1970
11 Howard University, Second National Conference of Afro-American
Writers, April 22-24, “From a Decade of Triumph To the Next Stage:
Where We Were, Where We Want To Go” (Speech), 1976
12 Illinois Arts Council, 1968-1971
13 Indiana University Project, 1969-1971
14 Indiana University Project, 1971
15 Institute of Positive Education, 1972
16 Institute of the Black World, 1970-1971
17 Institute of the Black World (Correspondence, Vincent Harding), 1970-
1971
18 Johnson, John H. (Memos from Fuller), 1973
19 Johnson Publishing Company, 1953-1974
20 Kharlos (Poetry, Letters), 1970-1974
21 King, Woodie, Jr. (Correspondence), 1971
22 Klausner, Bertha International Literary Agency, 1977
23 Kuumba Workshop (Panel Discussion on Angola), 1976
Box Folder
22 1 Lamming, George, 1972
2 Lane, Pinkie Gordon (Discourses on Poetry, Vol. 6), 1972
3 Lee, Don L. (Correspondence), 1972
4 Llorens, David (Correspondence), 1964-1969
5 Llorens, David (Correspondence, Articles, Poetry, University of
Washington, Seattle), 1970-1973
6 Mahone, Barbara, 1970
7 Mayfield, Julian, 1971
8 Memos (Circulation and Promotion), 1973-1976
9 Memos (General), 1966-1974
10 Memos and Material Prior to Departure from Black World, 1973-1976
11 Memos (re: Personnel), 1970-1974
12 Memos (re: Publicity), 1940
13 Meriwether, Luise (“A Happening in Barbados” The Antioch Review),
1970
14 Miles College Women’s Seminar, 1976
15 Minority Publishing, 1971
32
Box Folder
22 16 Modern Language Association of America, 1970
17 Moore, Joel L., 1970
18 Morrison, Toni, 1972
19 Muhammad, Mr. (Untitled Poem by Fuller), 1976
20 “The Myth of ‘The New Negro’” (Michigan Chronicle Emancipation
Centennial Article)
21 Neal, Larry (Guggenheim Foundation), 1970
22 Negro Digest (Press Release re: Name Change to Black World), 1970
23 Negro Digest/Black World (Memos to John H. Johnson), 1961-1975
24 Negro Digest (Resignation), 1968
25 Negro Newspapers in the United States, 1966
26 “Negro Writers and White Critics” The Progressive (Correspondence),
1965
27 New Yorker (Correspondence), 1976
Box Folder
23 1 “On Black Studies and the Critics” (Perspectives, Black World, “Bayard
Rustin and Company”), 1974
2 “On Solving the Racial Puzzle”, “Black Images and White Critics”
(Perspectives, Negro Digest), 1963-1969
3 Onwuachi, P. Chike (“Black Consciousness, Community Development,
and Resurgent Humanism”), 1972
4 Panorama, Chicago Daily News, 1971
5 Parks, Carlos A. (Memos), 1970-1973
6 Perkins, Huel, 1974
7 Peters, Brock (Correspondence), 1972
8 Peterson, Joyce (Memos), 1975
9 Poetry (Broadside Press), 1970-1974
10 “The Post-Bakke Era: The Crisis of Consciousness”
11 Programs, Clippings, Correspondence re: Broadside Press Banquet,
Howard University Afro-America Studies Colloquium, Third World Press
10th
Anniversary Dinner, Atlanta Association of Black Journalists 2nd
Annual Luncheon, etc., 1971-1978
12 Proofs (“Black Interests and the Neo-Conservative Movement” Black
World, “The Angola Crisis and Afro-Americans”Black World), 1976
13 Published Articles, 1975-1976
14 Race Relations Information Center (Press Releases), 1970
15 Reed, Ishmael (Correspondence), 1970
16 Rodgers, Carolyn (Correspondence, Writings), 1967-1971
17 Rodgers, Carolyn (“Walk Wid Jesus” Essence, “For Our Fathers” Ebony,
Clippings), 1972
18 Ross, Norman (Correspondence, Clippings), 1971
19 School Library Controversy re: Black World, Pasadena, CA, 1970
20 Shockley, Ann Allen (Correspondence), 1973
21 Stewart, Dr. Edward B., 1923-1976
33
Box Folder
23 22 Tutu, Bishop Desmond (Trans Africa Dinner)
23 University of Iowa, Spectator, Vol. 6, No. 5, 1973
24 University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Institute for Pan-African Culture,
1973
25 University of Vermont (Colloquium), 1971
26 “The Wall” The New Republic, “White Standards and Negro Writing” The
New Republic, “Chicago and the Death of Martin Luther King”, 1968
27 Wayne State University, Center for Black Studies (Edward Simpkins,
Director), 1972-1973
28 Wayne State University, Center for Black Studies, 1973-1974
29 Widener College, 1976
30 Wilkins, Roger W. (Illinois Mayors Seminary, Speech), 1968
31 Williams, Eddie N. (Chicago Sun-Times), 1971
Series 6. First World, 1976-1981
Box Folder
24 1 Africa and Black America
2 Africa Journal, 1976
3 African American Family History Association, 1978
4 African Festival (FESTAC), 1977
5 African Heritage Studies, 1981
6 Africana Studies, Cornell University Courses, 1978
7 American Program Bureau, Inc., 1976
8 American Theater Critic Association, 1977
9 Amin, Idi (Interviews), 1977
10 Angola, 1976
11 Appointments
12 Armah, Kwei, Ayi, 1976
13 Armstead Johnson Foundation, 1978
14 Art Selection Committee (Johnson Publication), 1971
15 Askew, Eugene, 1979
16 Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History 61st Meeting,
1976
17 Atlanta Constitution, Letters to the Editor, 1976-1981
18 Atlanta Council for International Visitors, 1977
19 Atlanta Journal, 1977
20 Bailey, Peter, 1979
21 Bain, Carl E., 1977
22 Baker, Houston A., 1978
23 Bell, Bernard, 1977-1978
24 Bell, Derrick (Curse of Brown on Black), 1977
25 Bell, Derrick, 1978-1979
34
Box Folder
24 26 Bethea, Juliette (Correspondence on Brazil), 1978
27 Black Americans in Congress, 1977
28 Black Collegian, Vol. 3, No. 1
29 Black Collegian (Book Notes), 1978
30 Black Press
31 Black Press Clippings, 1970
32 Black Publications, Short History
33 Black World Stationery, 1977
Box Folder
25 1 Blanks, Raymond S., 1978
2 Bloomingdales Department Store, 1976
3 Bond, Julian, 1977
4 Bookfinder (Correspondence), 1978
5 Boyd, Edward F., 1977
6 Boyd, Melba and Herb, 1977-1979
7 Boyer, Horace C.
8 Brathwaite, Edward K., 1977
9 Brazil (Black Brazilians Against Racism, Press Release), 1978
10 Brazil, S.A. (Demonstrations Against Racism), 1978
11 Brooks, Gwendolyn, 1976
12 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Poetry Reading, Atlanta), 1978
13 Brown, Beth, 1979
14 Brown, Robert, 1979
15 Bulletin, 1978
16 Bureau of Cultural and International Affairs, Atlanta, GA, 1977
17 Burks, Mary Fair (Maryland University), 1975
18 Burroughs, Margaret
19 Callahan, James Carl
20 Campbell, Horace, 1976
21 Carr, Walter, 1977
22 Center for Community Change, Washington, DC, 1977
23 Chaney, Betty (Correspondence and Article, Dangerous Divisiveness) [See
Archivist Note in Folder], 1980
24 Cheatwood Kiarru, 1976
25 Chinweizu, 1977
26 Clarke, John Henrik, 1979
27 Clarke, John Henrik, 1980
28 Clarke, Peter, 1976-1977
29 College Park, GA, 1977
30 Collier, Eugenia, 1977
31 Collier, Eugenia, 1979
32 Colonialist Media and African World, 1976
35
Box Folder
26 1 Committee for the Humanities in Georgia, 1978
2 Committee on West Papua, 1976
3 Congratulatory Subscriptions (Folder 1, A-I), 1977
4 Congratulatory Subscriptions (Folder 2, J-P), 1977
5 Congratulatory Subscriptions (Folder 3, Q-Z), 1977
6 Congressional Black Caucus, 1979
7 Congressional Black Caucus, 1980
8 Contemporary Forum, 1978-1979
9 Cook County, IL (Chicago) Juror Questionnaire, 1972
10 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, 1977-1980
11 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, 1978
12 Correspondence, First World Subscriptions, 1976-1978
13 Correspondence, First World Subscriptions, 1979-1981
14 Cruse, Harold (Correspondence), 1976-1980
15 Cruse, Harold (Creative and Performing Arts), 1978
16 Cruse, Harold, 1979
17 Cruse, Harold (Robeson Controversy, Review), 1979
18 Delta Airlines, 1981
19 Diop, Alioune, 1976
20 Diversified Systems, 1980
21 Duke University, 1979
Box Folder
27 1 Editorials, 1978
2 Edley, Christopher, 1977
3 Ellison, Julian, 1977
4 Employment, 1976-1978
5 Employment, 1977
6 Engagements (Speaking, Notes)
7 Equal Opportunity Forum, 1978
8 Evans, Mari (Correspondence), 1976
9 Evans, Mari (Morning Day One), 1978
10 Farrakhan, Louis (Abdul Haleem, Interview, Africa Correspondence and
Clippings, no. 50), 1975
11 Fernandes, Tony (Sangumba Jorgel-Angola), 1974
12 Financial Report, 1977-1978
13 Fingarette, Shirley (South Africa and US Corporations), 1977
14 First New World Festival, Brazil, Rio de Janeiro and Salvadoe, 1978
15 First World, Vol. 2, No.3, 1979
16 First World (Correspondence), 1977-1979
17 First World Festival of Negro Art (Invitations to Receptions, Haile
Selassie, Duke Ellington), 1966
18 First World Festival of Negro Arts (United States Committee, Planning),
1965-1966
19 Frazier, Kermit, 1979
36
Box Folder
27 20 Fundraising, 1980
21 Gcabashe, Thulani, 1979
22 Ghana (Visa Requirements), 1977
23 Gloster, Hugh, 1973
24 Goines, Leonard, 1976-1977
25 Goreleigh, Rex, 1979
26 Grant, Kevin, 1979
27 Greene, Preston (Clippings and Correspondence), 1979
Box Folder
28 1 Hale, Janice, 1975
2 Hamilton, Charles, 1977-1978
3 Harding, Vincent, 1978
4 Hare, Nathan (Correspondence), 1977
5 Harvard University, Report, Afro American Studies Department, 1970
6 Hatcher, Richard (Invitation to Inaugural), 1968
7 Henderson, Freddye, 1980
8 Hill, Shelia Radford, 1977
9 Hoagland, Everett (Iwe Folktale Blood Rite), 1976-1977
10 Hue Magazine, Vol. II, No. 5, 1955
11 Humphrey, Hubert (Correspondence), 1966-1967
12 Illinois State Employment, 1976
13 Illinois, University of, Circle Campus
14 Images and Responsibilities in Advocacy Periodicals (Fuller)
15 Institute of the Black World Black Women’s Conference
16 Jackson, Angela
17 Johnson, John H. (Congratulatory Letter 10 Years Service), 1968
18 Johnson Publications, Art Selection Committee, 1971
19 Johnson, Willard R., 1977
20 Jones, Donald (Articles, Manuscript), 1974
21 Jones, Gayl
22 Jones, Morris (Resume), 1980
23 Jordan, Millicent Dobbs (Durbar at Kaduna), 1977
24 Joseph, Richard A., Dr., 1980
25 Journey to Africa (Correspondence), 1970
26 Karanga, Ron (Kawaida and Its Critics), 1977-1980
27 Khalid Lim (ERIC) (Manuscripts), 1977
28 Kilgore, James, 1979
29 Killens, John O. (Black Writers as a Force For Liberation), 1976
30 Killens, John Oliver, 1977
31 Klausner, Bertha, 1978-1980
32 Knight, Etheridge, 1977
Box Folder
29 1 Lamming, George, 1977
2 Liberia (Visa Requirements)
37
Box Folder
29 3 Lynch, Charles, 1979
4 McHenry, Donald (Washington Post), 1979
5 Madgett, Naomi Long, 1977
6 Maggie, Poetry, The God of Fire, 1977
7 Mahabuti, Haki (Don L. Lee) (Poem, First World), 1976
8 Mahabuti, Haki (Don L. Lee), 1978
9 Mahone, Barbara, 1977
10 Mailing List, Notes on Second Issue, 1976
11 Marable, Manning, 1978-1979
12 Martin, Odette C., 1977
13 Mathis, Sharon Bell, 1976
14 Maybank, Art, 1978
15 Midwest Black Theater Conference, 1976
16 Mitchell, Parren (Interview, Correspondence), 1977
17 Mphahele, Exehiel, 1976-1978
18 Muhammad, Fard, 1978
19 Nascimento, Abdias, 1978
20 Nascimento, K. (Counsel General Jonestown, the Media and Reality),
1979
21 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and
American Business, 1978
22 National Council for Black Studies, First Annual Convention, 1977
23 National Endowment for the Arts, 1977
24 Ndanga, O. Toindepi, 1977
25 Negro Digest (Business Cards), 1973
26 Negro Digest (Stationery), 1976
27 Nettleford, Rex, 1980
28 Nigeria (Visa Requirements), 1977
29 Nwachuku, Levi A.
Box Folder
30 1 “On Journalism” (Manuscript), ca. 1977
2 Organization of Black American Culture (Brochure), 1967
3 Pan Afrikanism and Afrikan American Politics Conference, Oberlin, OH,
1979
4 Parker, Bettye
5 Peeples, Kenneth, Jr., 1977-1978
6 Perkins, Huel D., 1977-1980
7 Phillips, Frank Lamont (Poetry), 1977
8 Plumpp, Sterling, 1977
9 Powell, Richard, 1980
10 Press Release, 1978
11 Quotations
12 Rattley, Sandra, 1977
13 Rawls, Melanie A., 1977
38
Box Folder
30 14 Rodgers, Carolyn (“Poem for Hoyt” and Correspondence), 1976-1981
15 Rowell, Charles, 1977-1980
16 Sanchez, Sonia, 1977
17 Schrader, Allen (Poetry), 1975-1976
18 Second New World Festival, 1979
19 Sembene, Carrie D., 1981
20 Silva, Candelaria
21 Simama, Jabari (Six Black Writers Experience), 1977
22 Sistrunk, Albertha
23 Smith, Baxter (Who Killed Malcolm X), 1977
24 Smith, Tabethia (Cornell University), 1979
25 Le Soleil, Kakar, Senegal, 1976
26 Southeastern Federation of Black Publishers, 1977
27 Southern Illinois University Project, 1978
28 Southern Illinois University Project and Grant Information, 1978
29 Southern University, Baton Rouge, LA (Black Poetry Festival), 1975
30 Strickland, Bill, 1977
31 Stuckey, Sterling, 1980
32 Subscriptions, Invoices and Adjustments, 1978-1979
Box Folder
31 1 Taylor, Clyde, 1977-1979
2 Texas Southern University Drums (School of Journalism Newsletters),
1975-1977
3 Things Fall Apart (Notes), 1977
4 Thomas, Eva (School), 1980
5 Thomas, Gerald Lee (Poem), 1977
6 Thomas, Gladys (Poetry), 1976
7 Thomas, Joyce Carol, 1977
8 Turner, James, 1980
9 Twentieth Century Fund (Correspondence), 1978
10 Unemployment (Blacks), 1977-1978
11 Union Graduate School, Yellow Springs, OH, 1976
12 Walters, Ronald W., 1976-1980
13 Ward, Francis (Correspondence), 1976-1980
14 Ward, Jerry W., 1979
15 Ward, Val Gray, 1979
16 Watermelon Seeds (Poetry, Barbara), 1978
17 Watts, Thomas D., 1980
18 Wayne State University, Afro American Studies (Syllabus), 1974
19 Who Will Fill the Black Leadership Vacuum?, 1977
20 Williams, Gene A. (Manuscript, “The Relevance of Cannonball Adderly”),
1977
21 Williams, Shirley A., 1980
22 Woodson, Carter G. (Biography), 1976
39
Box Folder
31 23 Yansane, Aquibou Y., 1976-1979
24 Yarborough, Richard, 1979
25 Zwana, Japhet M. (Manuscript, “Muzorewa, Bishop With a Collar”), 1979
Series 7. Conferences, 1958-1981
Box Folder
32 1 African Heritage Studies Association, 1981
2 Africana Studies, Cornell University, 1978
3 Air Afrique (Trans World Airlines, Menus)
4 Alabama’s Writers Conference, 1965
5 “Amanda” (Manuscript), 1957
6 American Festival of Negro Arts, 1964
7 American Society of African Culture Newsletters (Vol. II, No. 11, Vol. III,
Nos. 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, Vol. IV, Nos. 9, 10), 1960-1961
8 American Society of African Culture (Vol. V, Nos. 4, 5, 6, 10), 1962-1963
9 American Society of African Culture (Vol. VI, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10,
Vol. VII, No. 4), 1965
10 American Society of African Culture (Correspondence), 1965
11 American Society of African Culture (Press Release), 1965
12 Amistad, One, 1970
13 Amistad Society, Chicago, 1965
14 “The Apostle” (Manuscript)
15 Armah, Ayi Kwei
16 Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (Chicago, IL,
Schedule), 1976
17 Atlanta Symposium, 1979
18 Brown, Frank London (Negro History Club), 1968
19 Brazil, Bahia Information Kit (United States Consulate), 1978
20 Black Writers and Western Cultural Aesthetic (Notes), 1965
21 Black Southern Writers Conference, 1980
22 Black Scholars Conference, Chapel Hill, NC, 1981
23 Black Media Representatives, 1971
24 Black “Leadership” and the Black Jewish Debacle, 1977
25 Black Cultural Council, 1970
26 Billingsley, Andrew (Correspondence), 1972
Box Folder
33 1 Cleaver, Eldridge (First Pan African Festival, Algiers, Algeria)
2 Center for Afro American Studies, Los Angeles, CA (Newsletter, Vol. IV,
No. 2), 1980
3 Cesaire, Aime (Mayor Fort de France, Martinique), 1979
4 Chicago Committee for the Arts, 1960
5 College Language Association, 1974
40
Box Folder
33 6 Colloquium on Negritude, 1971
7 Colloquium on Negritude (Dakar, Senegal), 1971
8 Conference of Black Educators (Future of Black Education, Manuscript
and Speech), 1972
9 Conference on African and American Studies, Atlanta, GA, 1969
10 Conference on Black Studies, Knoxville, TN, 1979
11 Conference on Black South Literature and Art
12 Conference on the Negro Writers Vision of America, 1965
13 Conferences, 1965
14 Conferences, 1968
15 Conferences, 1968
16 Conferences, 1968
17 Conferences, 1968
18 Conferences, 1969
19 Conferences, 1969
20 Conferences, 1969
21 Conferences, 1969
Box Folder
34 1 Conferences, 1970
2 Conferences, 1970
3 Conferences, 1970
4 Conferences, 1971
5 Conferences, 1971
6 Conferences, 1972
7 Conferences, 1972
8 Conferences, 1973
9 Conferences, 1973
10 Conferences, 1973
11 Conferences, 1973
12 Conferences, 1974
13 Conferences, 1975
14 Conferences, 1975
15 Conferences, 1976
16 Conferences, 1977
Box Folder
35 1 Congress of African People
2 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines (Editors Fellowship), 1980
3 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines (Press Release), 1972
4 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines (NOMMO Magazine), 1972
5 Cultural Liberation is Political Power
6 Dee, Ruby (Ebony Magazine Article)
7 Davis, John (Editor, Africa Forum), 1965
8 Dialogue of the Deaf (Manuscript, North American Review)
9 Diasporian Festival, Detroit, MI, 1980
41
Box Folder
35 10 “Dinner at Diop’s”
11 “Dinner at Diop’s” (Manuscript)
12 Dixon, Melvin (“The Boy With Beer”)
13 Documents (re: Travel and Press)
14 “The Drowning Man” (Manuscript), 1970
15 DuSable Museum of African American History
16 Ebony Hall of Fame (Johnson Publications), 1971
17 Failures of the Black Press
18 Fifth Annual State of Black America Conference, 1981
19 First Pan African Cultural Festival (Al-Fatah Press Conference), 1969
20 First Pan African Cultural Festival (Delegate Pamphlet), 1969
21 First Pan African Cultural Festival (La Guma, Alex), 1969
22 First Pan African Cultural Festival (Guinean Delegation), 1969
23 First Pan African Cultural Festival (News Bulletin, Nos. 3, 5, and 6), 1969
24 First Pan African Cultural Festival (North Vietnam), 1969
25 First Pan African Cultural Festival (Notes, Postcard)
26 First Pan African Cultural Festival (Program of Events)
27 First World Festival of Negro Arts, Angola and Mozambique, 1965
28 Howard University, Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture, 1974
29 “Hustler” (Book Review)
30 Iowa, University of, Institute for Afro American Culture, 1978
Box Folder
36 1 Kuumba Award, 1972
2 Kuumba Workshop, Chicago, IL (Correspondence), 1971
3 Long, Richard A.
4 “A Letter From Home” (Manuscript)
5 Little Rock, Take It Away
6 The Medina and the Village
7 Metro Area Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA), 1981
8 Miles College (Conference), 1968
9 Modern Language Association, 1971
10 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Black
Perspective), 1972
11 National Association of Third World Writers, 1980
12 National Black Agenda, Richmond, VA, 1980
13 National Conference of Black Newsmedia Workers, 1970
14 Negro Writer in the United States (Ebony), 1964
15 Negro Writers Conference, Asilomar, University of California, Berkeley,
1964
16 Negro Writers Conference, Asilomar, University of California, Berkeley,
1964
17 New York State Teachers Association, 1972
18 Nkosi, Lewis (“A Question of Literary Stewardship” Africa Report), 1969
42
Box Folder
37 1 North Carolina at Charlotte, Conference on Black Studies, 1979
2 Operation Solidarity, 1969
3 Organization of Black American Culture (Cumbaya Newsletter, Vol. I, No.
4), 1976
4 Palma to Abidjan (Correspondence and Itinerary), 1958
5 Presence Africaine (Synopsis and Catalog), 1962
6 Publishing and the Struggle for Autonomy: A Documentary (American
Booksellers Convention, Atlanta, GA), 1979
7 Report from Black America: Key Elections in Black America, ca. 1971
8 Rockford College Art Festival, 1965
9 Rockford College (Clippings and Collegian, Vol. VII, Nos. 12 and 14)
10 Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture, 1977
11 Senegal, First World Festival of Negro Arts, 1966
12 Senghor, Leopold Sedar (Dinner, University of Vermont), 1971
13 Senghor, Leopold Sedar, President, Senegal (University of Vermont,
Address, Citation and Program), 1971
14 Southern Collective African American Writers (Correspondence), 1978-
1979
15 Southern Collective African American Writers (Developing the Writer),
1978-1979
16 Southern Collective African American Writers (Newsletters), 1978-1979
17 Southside Community Art Center, Chicago, IL (1971)
18 Speaking Engagements, 1976-1981
19 Touré, Sekou, President, Republic of Guinea (Interview and Article), 1969
20 Travel Information, 1958
21 Writers Conference, Lincoln and Fisk, 1966-1967
22 Writers Workshop Project, 1981
Series 8. Teaching and Research, 1965-1981
Box Folder
38 1 “Africa, Africa”, 1967
2 Africa Forum, 1965
3 Africa Research Group, 1970
4 African Art, 1970
5 African Heritage Studies Association (Conference), 1972
6 African Liberation (Angola), 1975-1976
7 African Studies (Library Memos), 1978
8 Africana Studies (Announcement of Courses), 1972
9 Africana Studies (Carter, Lisle), 1972
10 Africana Studies (Class Schedules), 1972
11 Africana Studies (Cornell), 1969
12 Africana Studies (Class Schedules, Correspondence), 1979
43
Box Folder
38 13 Africana Studies (Correspondence), 1972
14 Africana Studies (Graves Correspondence), 1978
15 Africana Studies (Student Evaluations), 1969-1970
16 Africana Studies (Examination Books, Term Papers), 1978
17 Africana Studies (Richard Fulani, Afro American Literary Criticism)
18 Africana Studies (Grades, Forms, Evaluations and Correspondence), 1978
19 Africana Studies (Heinemann Educational Books), 1978
20 Africana Studies (Pan African Institute, Statement of Purpose), ca. 1970
21 Africana Studies (Rasheed, Abdul, Jaleel Student), 1978
22 Africana Studies (Schedules, Air Service)
23 Africana Studies (Syllabus), 1969-1970
24 Africana Studies (Ujamaa Lecture Series), 1978
25 American Association of University Professors (Salary Schedule), 1977-
1978
26 Atlanta Junior College (Contemporary Afro American Literature, Essays)
28 Atlanta Junior College (Journalism 101, The Other San Francisco,
Reviews)
29 Atlanta Junior College (Introduction to Journalism), 1977
Box Folder
39 1 Atlanta Junior College (Journalism 101, Student Reaction), 1977
2 Atlanta Junior College (Introduction to Journalism 101, Assignment),
1977
3 Black Study Programs, 1967
4 Bruce, James C. (Afro American Force on Language Study), 1968
5 Central Intelligence Agency, 1969
6 Clarke, John Henrik (African Heritage Studies Association), 1972
7 Cultural Pluralism and the Revolutionary Black Theater (Mars A. Hill)
8 Cunningham, James (Seminar Advanced Study, Black Literature)
9 Davis, Ronda, 1969-1970
10 Emory University (Correspondence), 1978-1979
11 Emory University (Modes of Practical Writing), 1979
12 Emory University (English 150G), 1979
13 Emory University (Library and Traffic Regulations), 1979
14 Emory University (Notes, Modes of Practical Writing), 1979
15 Emory University (Grades, English 150G, Modes of Practical Writing),
1979
16 Emory University (English Department, Correspondence), 1979
17 Emory University (Syllabus and Assignment, English 150G), 1979
18 Emory University (Catalog), 1978-1979
19 Emory University (English 150G, Student Essays), 1979
20 Emory University (Employment), 1978
21 Engagements, 1980
22 Great Goodness of Life, 1966
23 Henderson Travel Service, 1979
44
Box Folder
39 24 Hill, Mars A. (Vita), 1973
25 Mellon Foundation Institute (United Negro College Fund, Richard Long,
Houston Baker), 1981
26 Lockard, Jon O., 1975
27 Long, Richard A. (Address and Article, Afro American Studies, AU,
Black Studies: International Dimensions), 1960-1980
28 Northwestern University (Studies in Black Literature, English C 51-5),
1969
29 Northwestern University (English C 51-5), 1969
30 Southern Arts Federation, 1979
31 Turner, James E., 1978
32 Wisconsin University, 1978
33 Yoruba, Culture
Series 9. Resource and Clippings File, 1953-1981
Box Folder
40 1 Aaron, Henry, 1979
2 African Agenda, 1974
3 African American Politician, 1979
4 African Affairs, 1979
5 Arabs and Jews (Sartre), 1969
6 Army Specialized Training Program (April), 1964
7 Art, Social, Revolutionary, 1971
8 Atlanta Politics, 1981
9 Atlanta’s Black Society, 1979
10 Atlanta’s Black Society, 1979
11 Atlanta’s Murdered Children, 1981
12 Baldwin, James, 1961-1962
13 Baldwin, James, 1963
14 Baldwin, James, 1963
15 Baldwin, James, 1964
16 Baldwin, James, 1965
17 Baldwin, James, 1967
18 Banks, Jerry, 1981
19 Bennett, Louise, 1970
20 Birmingham, AL, 1963
21 Black Aesthetic, 1969
22 Black Businesses, 1956
23 Black Center for Strategy, 1978
24 Black Criticism, 1967
25 Black Drama, 1971
26 Black Journalist, 1969
45
Box Folder
40 27 Black Leadership, 1980
28 Black Leadership, 1981
Box Folder
41 1 Black Literature (History), 1968-1978
2 Black Literature (White Opinion), 1963
3 Black Literature (White Opinion), 1963
4 Black Literature (White Opinion), 1963
5 Black Mayors, 1975
6 Black Music, 1971
7 “Black Panther Thrust” (Robert Chrisman), 1971
8 Black Panthers (Chicago Defender), 1970
9 Black Political Situation, 1980
10 Black Position Paper, 1973
11 Black Position Paper, 1976
12 Black Poverty and Powerlessness, 1979
13 Black Press, 1970
14 Black Women’s Committee, 1969
15 Black Women Writers, 1969
16 Black Writers (Literature), 1981
17 Black Writers, 1970
18 Black Writers (Literature), 1970
19 Blacknews (Vol. 2, No. 20), 1974
20 Blacks and Chicago Newspapers, 1957-1963
21 Blacks and Jews, 1979
22 Blacks and Jews, 1979
23 Blacks and Jews, 1979
24 Blacks and Jews, 1979
25 Blacks and Jews (Midstream), 1976
Box Folder
42 1 Blacks and the World, 1981
2 Blacks in America, 1980
3 Blacks in Carolina, Soul City, 1979
4 Blacks in Television, 1968
5 Blacks, New York Situation, 1980
6 “Blacks, Why Did the Lights Go Out?” (Wilkins, Roger), 1970
7 Boles, Robert, 1968
8 Bond, Julian, 1979
9 Book Reviews (Current), 1975-1980
10 Boykins, Randsom, 1980
11 Brazil, 1978
12 Brazil, 1979
13 Brown, Cecil M., 1970
14 Bullins, Ed, 1968
15 Bullins, Ed, 1968
46
Box Folder
42 16 Cajun Culture, 1968
17 Caribbean, 1979
18 Center for Inner City Studies, 1969
19 Chicago Poets, 1971
20 Chicago Politics, 1978
21 Chicago Sun-Times Controversy, 1970
22 Chicano Literature, 1971
23 Cleaver, Eldridge, 1968
24 Commission on Campus Unrest, 1970
25 Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines, 1967
26 Council on Interracial Books for Children, 1971
27 Crawford, Mark, 1962
28 Crisis (Articles), 1929
29 Dabh, Halim El, 1971
30 Detroit, MI, 1965
31 Drama, White Opinion (New Republic), 1970
32 Draper, Theodore, 1969
33 Eaves, Reginald, 1981
34 Economics (New York Times), 1979
35 Education, 1979
36 Education, 1979
37 Elder, Lonne, III, 1969
38 Ellison, Ralph, 1963-1970
39 Fair, Ronald, 1966
40 Fanon, Frantz, 1970-1971
Box Folder
43 1 “Farewell” (Fuller), 1950
2 “Farewell” “The Prophecy”, 1950-1951
3 Films/Theatre (Fuller), 1979
4 Foods, Foreign, 1964
5 Foundations, 1969
6 Friends of Fuller, 1960
7 Friends of Fuller, 1961
8 Fuller, Hoyt W., 1960-1972
9 Fuller, Hoyt W., 1957-1965
10 Gardner, Barbara, 1965
11 Gulliver, Hal, 1981
12 Haagse Post, 1959
13 Haiti, 1970
14 Hall, Myrtle, 1963
15 Hadrian, Ernest, 1912-1967
16 Harlem, NY, 1966
17 Harlem Renaissance, 1965
18 Historical Research, 1979
47
Box Folder
43 19 Holder, Geoffrey, 1963
20 Hooks, Benjamin, 1978
21 Humane Society, 1978
22 Inside Michigan, 1952
23 International Politics, 1979-1980
24 “It Also Happens Here”, 1954
25 Ithaca, NY, 1979
26 Jackson, Jesse, 1971-1979
27 Jackson, Jesse, 1979-1980
28 Jordan, Vernon, 1980-1981
29 King Alfred Plan, 1970
30 M.L. King Center, 1979
31 Kirkpatrick, Jeanne, 1980-1981
32 Klan, Nazis and Neo Fascist, 1981
33 Kriegal, Leonard, 1968
34 Ku Klux Klan, 1978-1980
35 Kunjufu, Jawanza, 1975
Box Folder
44 1 Levinson, Stanley, 1979
2 Literary Criticism, 1966-1968
3 Literary Research Notes, 1964-1972
4 Literature As Propaganda, 1971
5 Lomax, Michael, 1981
6 Lowe, Walter L., 1972
7 McIver, Ray, 1971
8 Magazine Publishing, 1969
9 Makonnen, Ras, 1974
10 Mallorca, 1962-1963
11 Mallorca, 1964
12 March on Washington, 1963
13 March on Washington (Notes), 1963
14 Marley, Bob, 1978
15 Marshall, Paule, 1969
16 MARTA, 1980
17 “Mile Post” (Mementos from Detroit), 1946
18 Miller, Arthur, 1965-1971
19 Mitchell, Loften, 1970
20 Montgomery, Lucy, 1968
21 Motley, Archibald, 1971
22 Motley, Willard, 1963-1965
23 Moynihan, Daniel P., 1966
24 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 1980
25 National Black Political Assembly, 1980
26 National Endowment (Business Committee), 1967
Box Folder
48
44 27 National Urban League, 1980
28 Negro in Literature (Crisis), 1929
29 New Directions, 1974
30 New Black Literature, 1969
31 Palmer, Paul, 1956
32 Peeples, Melvin Van, 1971
33 Police, 1979
Box Folder
45 1 Politics and Race, 1980
2 Politics and Race, 1980
3 Politics in Atlanta, GA, 1980
4 Press (West vs. Third World), 1981
5 Publications, 1971
6 Race Relations Reporter (Vol. 5, No. 15), 1975
7 Reading Dynamics Institute, 1965
8 Red, White and Black (Bibliographies), 1969
9 Rexroth, Kenneth, 1964
10 Right Wing, 1981
11 Royko, Mike, 1973
12 Royko, Mike, 1976
13 Sartre, Jean Paul, 1964
14 Seberg, Jean, 1979
15 Seigel, J.E. (On Frantz Fanon), 1967
16 Southern Christian Leadership Conference, 1979-1980
17 Spain, 1966
18 Spirit (Vol. 1, No. 1), 1975
19 State of the Nation, 1981
20 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, 1963
21 Thompson, Jo, 1955
22 Touré, Sekou, 1968
23 Turner, Darwin T., 1969
24 United States, Right Wing (1979)
25 Unity and Struggle (Vol. 3, No. 7), 1974
26 Vietnam (Map), 1967
27 Vitabu, Kuhusu (Vol. 1, No. 1), 1971
28 Ward Francis and Val Gray, 1970
29 Watts, Nellie, 1967
30 White Aesthetic, 1965
31 White, Charles W., 1979
32 Wright, Richard, 1969
33 Young, Andrew, 1979-1980
49
Series 10. Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1946-1981
Box Folder
46 1 “Africa and Black America: How the U.S. Media...” (Forum), 1978
2 “The African Actuality: A Personal Journey”
3 [“African Ballet Company”] (Fodeba, Keita)
4 “The African Reunion: A Surpassing Urgency”, 1981
5 “Afro-American Literature: Toward Affirmation and Fulfillment”
6 “After Dinner Talk”
7 “Amanda” (Light and Life Evangel), 1958
8 “Amanda and the Beatniks”
9 “America”
10 “...and Forbid Them Not...”
11 “Another Angle of Feeling” (The Chicago Jewish Forum)
12 “Anthologies and Literature by Afro-Americans”
13 “An Aperitive in the Plaza” (Negro Digest), 1961
14 “The Apostle”, 1972-1973
15 Appointments, ca. 1972-1973
16 [Saul Bellows], 1976
17 [”The Bitter Path to Love”]
18 “Black Art and Culture: The 70's”
19 “The Black Arts Argument in Perspective”
20 “Black Leadership and the Black-Jewish Debacle” (First World), 1979
21 “The Black Prince”
22 “The Black Temper”, 1968
23 “Black Writers and the Vision of the New World”
24 “A Bottle of Cold Perrier” (New Yorker), 1963
25 [Frank London Brown], March 29, 1963
26 [Gwendolyn Brooks]
27 [Jim Brown]
28 “The Burning Question” (Book Week/Chicago Sun-Times), September 24,
1970
29 “Chicago: 1970"
30 Chicago School Boycott, 1964
31 “Chicago: Rise of the Negro Militant” (Nation), September 14, 1964
32 “Come the Jonquils”, 1951
33 Conakry
34 “Confessions of a Gigolo” (Tan Magazine), 1958
35 “Courage - and Five Hundred Dollars - Built a Chain of Stores” (Inside
Michigan, Feature Story on Sidney Barthwell), 1952
36 “The Crossed Line”
37 “A Cry on the Wind”
38 “Cultural Notes” (Reverberation from a Writer’s Conference)
50
Box Folder
47 1 “Dakar - The Paris of Africa”
2 [Danner, Margaret]
3 “A Day to Remember”
4 Death of Patrice Lumumba (Notes)
5 “Death Wore a Pickpocket’s Face”, 1957
6 “The Declining Significance of Race”
7 Detroit, 1957
8 “Detroit: Shirtsleeve City or Cultural Center?”
9 “Dialogue of the Deaf” (The North American Review), 1964
10 “Dinner at Diop’s” (Southwest Review), 1965
11 “Diplomatic Exchange”
12 “The Dogs of Mallorca”
13 “The Dream House” (The North American Review), 1965
14 “Drowning Man”
15 “The Edge of Living”
16 Ellison (Ralph W.)
17 “Encounter”
18 “Exiles at Le Nuage”(The North American Review), 1966
19 “Famous Writer Faces a Challenge...Frank Yerby Now Wants to Write
Novels” (Ebony), 1966
20 “Farewell” (Courier Magazine Section), 1950
21 “Farewell the Hateful Lord”, 1946-1960
22 “The Forms and Focus of Black Literature”
23 “From a Decade of Triumph to the Next Stage: Where We Were; Where
We Must Go”, 1976
24 “From the Hill” (Sunday Digest), 1961
25 “A Haircut in Conakry” (Negro Digest), 1963
26 [”Hannibal Edward Beavers”]
27 “Home”
28 “I Love You”, “Loneliness”, “Longing”
29 “Identity, Reality and Responsibility: Elusive Poles in the World of Black
Literature”
30 “Imagine the Unimaginable”
31 “Impressions”, “Mallorca is Haven for Ex-Clevelander”
32 “In a Foreign Place”, 1963
33 “An Interview With the President”
34 “Introduction to To You...Black Man With Love”, 1972
35 “Join the Black Revolution: An Invitation”
36 [Jordan, Vernon]
37 “Josephine Baker and Me”
38 “A Journey to Africa”
39 “Just Throwing the Bull”
40 “Kaleidoscope”
51
Box Folder
48 1 “Langston Hughes”
2 “The Lesson”
3 “A Letter From Home”
4 “A Letter From the South Side”
5 “Letters to a Young Poet” (Selections)
6 “The Linguist”
7 “Literature and Black Identity”
8 “The Little Black Boy”
9 “Little Rock: A Challenge and a Warning”
10 “Little Rock, Little Rock, Take It Away”
11 “The Lost Wise Man”
12 “Love Healed My Bitter Wounds”
13 “Luvonia”
14 “The Man Who Hated Sin”
15 “Maria”
16 “The Miracle of the Voice”
17 “Miss Honicut Discovers the Day”
18 “Mrs. Brady in Ginghan”
19 “My Grandmother’s Obstinate Faith”
20 “The Myth of the New Negro”
21 [”Myth of the White Backlash”]
22 “The Negro Writer in the United States”
23 “Negro Writers and White Critics”
24 “Nellie Watts”
25 “Neo-African Literature - A History of Black Writing”, “The Militant
Black Writer in Africa and the United States” (Reviews)
26 “Never a Dull Moment”
27 “Never Too Far Away”, 1957
28 “The New Black Literature: Protest or Affirmation”
29 “The New Black Renaissance: An Added Dimension”
30 “New Directions and Materials of the Black Writer”
31 “Nina”
32 Notes [The Dude; The Gent]
33 Notes (African Journey)
34 Notes
35 Notes (Palma de Mallorca)
36 “Notes From an African Journal”
Box Folder
49 1 “Of Fondue and Faubus”, March 1958
2 “Of Integrity, Hope and Dead Dialogue” (The New School Bulletin, Negro
Digest), 1966
3 “The Old-Line American”
4 “On History Power and the New Challenge Facing the Black Press”
5 “On the Death of Richard Wright” (Southwest Review), Autumn 1961
52
Box Folder
49 6 “The Ordeal of Elijah Wingate”
7 “Our Maid Taught Me to Pray” (Sunday Digest), 1960
8 “Palma de Mallorca”, 1958
9 “Paris”
10 Patrons of the Arts (Watts, Miss Nellie)
11 “People”, 1959
12 “The Perfect Squelch”
13 “A Plundered World”, 1958
14 “A Plundered World” (Original Version)
15 Poetry (Unpublished), 1947-1976
16 Poetry (Unpublished), 1948-1972
17 “...Politics, Literature and Colonial Control”
18 “Poverty and Black Leadership: A Losing Game”
19 “The Professor”
20 “The Prophesy”
21 [Racism]
22 “Rebecca”
23 “Rediscovery”
24 “Reflections on the Death of Richard Wright”, November 29, 1960
25 “Reflections on the Past for the Future/From Then to Now: The Circle
Remains Unbroken”
26 “The Reluctant Wise Man”
27 “Reverberations From a Writers Conference” (African Forum), 1965
28 “Richard Wright: Ordeal of a Native Son” (Book Review, The Black
Collegian), 1981
29 [Lloyd G. Richards]
30 [Gene Robinson]
31 “The Role and Responsibilities of Afro-Americans in the Pan African
Movement”
32 “Saba” (Exiles in Palma)
33 “The Sengalese” (Midstream), Autumn, 1960
34 “Sigrid”
35 Submissions/Publications, 1958-1960
36 “Summer Madness” (Jive Magazine), 1958
37 “The Sun-Burned Soldiers”
38 “The Swedish Sphinx”
39 “The Sympathetic Censors”
Box Folder
50 1 “Tessie”
2 “Toward a Black Aesthetic” (The Critic), 1968
3 “The Turning of the Wheel” (The Black Position, Institute of Positive
Education Publication), 1971-1972
4 TV Play Idea
53
Box Folder
50 5 “Type-Case as Young Woman-Next-Door Actress Longs for More Meaty
Roles”
6 “U.S. Negro Writer Aids Exiled Indian Dancer”
7 “The View”
8 “A Walk on the South Side” (With Apologies to Nelson Algren)
9 “A Walk on the West Side” (With Apologies to Nelson Algren)
10 “The Watering Place” (“A Bottle of Cold Perrier”)
11 “When It Comes to Race, Give Me a Negro Man”
12 “Where’s Curtis?”
13 “Where’s Curtis” (Correspondence, Manuscript Missing), 1961-1965
14 “Who Will Fill the Black Leadership Vacuum?” (In These Times),
September 07-13, 1977
15 “With Apologies to Pepito” (Negro Digest), 1962
16 Untitled
17 Untitled
18 Untitled
19 Untitled
20 Untitled
21 Untitled
22 Untitled
23 Untitled (Article)
24 Untitled (Plays)
25 Untitled (Poetry)
26 Untitled (Short Stories)
27 Untitled (Short Stories)
28 Untitled (Short Stories, Notes), 1952-1965
29 Untitled (Short Story)
30 Untitled (Short Story)
Series 11. Non-Fuller Manuscripts, ca. 1940-1981
Box Folder
51 1 Ajanaku, Amanu M. (“The Hyena People”)
2 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL, 1940
3 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 1-5), 1940
4 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 6-9), 1940
5 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 10-13), 1940
6 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 14-16), 1940
7 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 17-19), 1940
8 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 20-23), 1940
9 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 24-27), 1940
10 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 28-31), 1940
11 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 32-36), 1940
54
Box Folder
51 12 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 37-40), 1940
13 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 41-45), 1940
14 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 46-50), 1940
15 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 51-53), 1940
16 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 54-58), 1940
17 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 59-63), 1940
18 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 64-68), 1940
19 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 69-73), 1940
20 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 74-78), 1940
21 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 79-83), 1940
22 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 84-87), 1940
23 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 88-91), 1940
24 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 92-96), 1940
25 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 97-101),
1940
26 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 102-107),
1940
27 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 108-112),
1940
28 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 113-117),
1940
29 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 118-123),
1940
30 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 124-128),
1940
31 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 129-133),
1940
32 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 134-138),
1940
33 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 139-143),
1940
34 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 144-148),
1940
35 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 149-153),
1940
36 American Negro Exposition, Chicago, IL (Photographs, Nos. 154-157),
1940
37 Amini, Johari M. (“The Black Aesthetic-The Values and Psychology of
Oppressed People”), 1971
38 Arnold, Matthew (“The Function of Criticism at the Present Time”), 1964
39 Austin, Bobby Williams (“An All-American Boy”)
40 Barnett, Claude A. (“Fly Out of Darkness”), 1962
41 Bass, Adrian (“How the Networks Got Started”)
42 Bontemps, Arna (“The Negro in American Literature”)
55
Box Folder
51 43 Boyd, Herb and Melba (“Andy, We’s Regusted!”)
44 Brooks, Gwendolyn (“We Real Cool”), 1959
Box Folder
52 1 Chinweizu (“The U.S. in Southern Africa in the 1970's”), 1977
2 Ciardi, John (“Manner of Speaking”), 1964
3 Clark, Lydia (“Confidence”), 1971
4 Cosby, Bruce (“On the Christ Color Controversy Or an Analysis of W.D.
Muhammad’s Position of Ethnic Imagery in Worship”)
5 Dongo, Malika [Poem for Hoyt Fuller], 1972
6 Dumas, Henry L. (“Devil Bird”)
7 Dunbar, Beverly (“Tuesday’s Dagger”)
8 Fisher, James (“The Black Experience in America”), 1969
9 Gaga (Mark S. Johnson) (Correspondence, Poem), 1974
10 Gattin, Halmarita (“Concentricity”), 1977
11 Gayle, Addison (“Abstract for Art and Culture Festival, The Black
Aesthetic: The Cultural Arm of the Pan-Africanist Movement”)
12 Gibson, P.J. (“Konvergence”, “Void Passage”)
13 Gonzalez, Lelia (“Racism and Its Effects in Brazilian Society”), 1979
14 Harrington, Ollie (“The Last Days of Richard Wright”)
15 Harris, Shelia (“A Typical High School Graduation Day”), 1971
16 Higgins, Bob (“The International Financial Crisis”, 1980
17 Hopkins, Stephanie (“Moribund”), 1972
18 Hughes, Langston (“The Backlash Blues”), 1966
19 Jackson, Angela (Correspondence, Press Release), 1979
20 Jamison, Angelene (“Teaching Afro-American Literature as a
Revolutionary Force”), 1976
21 Jenkins, Jeff and Wayne, Marie R. (Poetry)
22 Knight, Etheridge (“2 Poems for Black Relocation Centers”), 1968
23 Lott, Johnnie (Poetry), 1978
24 Lum, Eric F. (“Party”), 1977
25 Lumpkin, Benjamin S. (“A New Day?”), 1972
26 Mackey, William Wellington (“Billy Noname”), 1969
27 McWhorter, Gerald (Correspondence and Manuscript, “Political Sociology
of the Negro”), 1972
28 Malcolm X Institute, 1969
29 Malcolm X Speech, Howard University, 1961
30 Milner, Ronald (“The Monster”), 1972
31 Muhammad, Elijah (“Speech by the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad”),
1959
32 Newton (“Only Children, Only Child, Only One”), 1971
33 Ozick, Cynthia (“Literary Blacks and Jews”), 1972
34 Philombe, Rene (“The African Writer Facing a Tumultuous Africa”), 1977
35 Plumpp, Sterling D. (“For Hoyt Fuller”), 1976
56
Box Folder
53 1 Randall, Dudley (“Ballad of Birmingham”), 1965
2 Randall, Dudley (“Booker T. and W.E.B.”), 1952
3 Reid, Sharron (“Home Coming”), 1971
4 “Report Card on Black Studies”, 1974
5 Robinson, Julie [”Good Morning Class”], 1971
6 Rodgers, Carolyn (“Black Poetry - Where It’s At”, “Literature of Black”),
1970
7 Rutgers News Service (Minority Businesses), 1974
8 Sayles, James (Correspondence and Poetry), 1973
9 Scott, Melvin Lacey (“Inez”), 1969
10 Simama, Jabari (Black Writers Experiencing American Communism,...
1920-1954), 1978
11 Singh, Ramon (“Black Literature and the Crisis in Contemporary Culture”)
12 Smith, Milton (“To Go On”), 1973
13 Sowell, Thomas (“Blacker Than Thou”) and Harris, Patricia (“Who
Speaks for Black People”), 1981
14 Stembridge, Jane (“Don’t Ask Me to Sing If You Don’t Want to Hear”),
1966
15 Swanson, Howard and Hughes, Langston (“Night Song”), 1977
16 Tolson, M.B. (“The Sea Turtle and the Shark”), 1965
17 Turner, Darwin (“A Meditation About the Past”), 1976
18 Van Lierop, Robert (“Historic Delegation Returns From the People’s
Republic of Mozambique”), 1978
19 Van Lierop, Robert (“Interview with H.E. Lopo do Nascimento, Prime
Minister of the People’s Republic of Angola”), 1978
20 Van Lierop, Robert (Nothing Could Be Finer, by Michael Myerson), 1978
21 Van Lierop, Robert (In Search of Enemies: A CIA Story, by John
Stockwell. Interview with John Stockwell, Former Head of the CIA’s
Angola Task Force), 1978
Box Folder
54 1 Walker, Margaret (“The Ballad of the Free”), 1966
2 Williams, Fred Hart (Correspondence re: “Detroit Heritage”), 1957-1962
3 Williams, Fred Hart (“Detroit Heritage”, Folder 1 of 3), 1957
4 Williams, Fred Hart (“Detroit Heritage”, Folder 2 of 3), 1957
5 Williams, Fred Hart (“Detroit Heritage”, Folder 3 of 3), 1957
6 Williams, Fred Hart (Correspondence: Negro Digest), 1952-1956
7 Williams, Peggy (“And the Beat Goes On”)
Box Folder
55 1 Winks, Robin W. (The Blacks in Canada; A History, Book I), 1971
2 Winks, Robin W. (The Blacks in Canada; A History, Book II), 1971
3 Wright, Rachel (“Tissue of Memory: A Daughter’s Reflections” Negro
Digest), 1968
4 Yerby, Frank (Interview), 1966
57
Box Folder
56 1 Untitled (Novel, by , Dorothy, Critical Comments by Fuller) (834p.)
2 Untitled (Short Story, “Charity”)
Series 12. Photographs, 1945-1981
Box Folder
57 1 Alexander, Margaret Walker
2 Algeria (Carmichael, Stokley), 1969
3 Algeria (Makeba, Mariam), 1969
4 Ali, Muhammad (Cassius Marcellus Clay)
5 Allen, John
6 Alorda, Miguel Salom
7 Banks, Douglas and Kay
8 Banks, Douglas and Kay, 1975
9 Bennett, Lerone
10 Black Spirits Book Party, 1972
11 Black World (Publicity Photos)
12 Booker, Simeon
13 Brazil
14 Brazil
15 Brazil
16 Breman, Paul, 1966
17 Britt, Leroy
18 Brock, Brenda (Fuller’s niece), 1971
19 Brooks, Gwendolyn (Autograph Party, Chicago), 1971
20 Brooks, Keziah
21 Brown, H.H. (Butch), II, (Charleston, WV), 1968
22 Brown, Floyd
23 Brown, Sonya Holmes
24 Burroughs, Margaret
25 Capahosic, 1967
26 Carmichael, Stokley
27 Carter, William, 1966
28 Cayton, Horace
29 Cesaire, Aimes (Messel, Germany)
30 Chapman, Carlos (April-May), 1967
31 Chester, PA (Philadelphia, PA), 1976
32 Chicago
33 Chicago Freedom Rally, 1966
34 Cobb, Charlie
35 College Park, GA (Negatives) [missing negatives? 03/31/00]
36 Coombs, Orde, 1968
37 Cruse, Harold, 1970
58
Box Folder
57 38 Dakar, Senegal, 1966
39 Danner, Margaret (Evans, M., Henderson, J.)
40 Danner, Margaret (Fisk), 1966-1967
41 Davis, Ossie (Brown, Tony)
42 DePillars, Murry
43 Donaldson, Jameda Kanecka (Jeff and Arnicia’s Baby), 1973
44 DuBois, Shirley Graham
45 Ellis, Curtis, 1968
46 Eva L. Thomas High School (Church, unidentified)
47 Festival of Negro Art (Bahia, Brazil)
48 First World Publicity
49 First World Tribute (Ivey’s, Atlanta, GA), 1980
50 Foster, LaDoris
51 Franklin, John Hope (Wesley, Charles)
Box Folder
58 1 Fuller, Beatrice E. Thomas (Fuller’s Mother)
2 Fuller, Hoyt W.
3 Fuller, Hoyt W.
4 Fuller, Hoyt W., 1966-1970
5 Fuller, Hoyt W., 1966-1970
6 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Chicago)
7 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Clark, Ron, Sketch)
8 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.)
9 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.)
10 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.)
11 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Mother’s Funeral, negatives, Avon), 1980
12 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Negatives) [empty folder, 03/31/00]
13 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Nigeria)
14 Fuller, Hoyt W. (OBAC), 1968
15 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Passport Photo and Press Card)
16 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Peoria, IL), 1967
17 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Portraits)
18 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Prairie Shores Apartment, Chicago, IL)
19 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Prairie Shores), 1967
20 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Publicity)
21 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Publicity)
22 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Publicity, Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.)
23` Fuller, Hoyt W. (Publicity, Johnson Publishing Company, Inc.)
24 Fuller, Hoyt W. (Washington, D.C.)
25 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others
26 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others
27 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others, 1971-1979
28 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others (Haiti), 1974
29 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others (Malcolm X College, Chicago, IL)
59
Box Folder
58 30 Fuller, Hoyt W. and others (Peoria, IL)
Box Folder
59 1 Gardner, Isabella
2 Garner, Erroll
3 Goreleigh, Rex
4 Greenlee, Sam
5 Grosvenor, Verta Mae Smart
6 Guffy, Ossie
7 Guinea, Republic of (Government, Photo with List), ca. 1961-1962
8 Guinea, Republic of (Olin Mathison, Chemical Corporation, Photos and
Letter), 1961
9 Haiti
10 Haiti, 1974
11 Haiti, 1975
12 Haiti, 1979
13 Harding, Vincent
14 Hare, Nathan (Stokley Carmichael. Dakar, Senegal)
15 Held, Wolf, 1967
16 Henderson, Steve
17 Houses (Atlanta, GA)
18 Janheinz, John, 1965
19 Joans, Ted (Gwendolyn Brooks, New York City), 1967
20 Johnson, John and Eunice
21 Johnson Publishing Company
22 Johnson Publishing Company Employees
23 Johnson Publishing Company Employees, 1966-1967
24 Jones, Morris and Beverly
25 Journey to Africa Book Party, 1969
26 Kallister, Thomas and Ron (Peoria, IL)
27 Kallister, Thomas and Wedig, T.
28 Kennedy, Flo and Gloria Steinem
29 Kgositsile, Keorpetse
30 Killens, John O. (Wilmer Lucas, Ron Milner and Loften Mitchell)
31 King, Woodie, Jr.
32 Kuumba Awards (Chicago), 1972
33 Lake Meadows/Prairie Shores (Fuller’s Chicago, IL Residence)
34 Lake Meadows/Prairie Shores (3001 South Park, King Drive, Chicago, IL)
35 Lee, Don L.
36 Llorens, David
37 Long, Richard A.
38 Long, Richard and Collier, Eugenia (Book Party)
39 Lumumba, Patrice (Birthday Commemoration, Washington Park, Chicago,
IL), 1979
40 Lusaka, Zambia
60
Box Folder
60 1 Mackey, Robert (Bobby) (at 4 years, 10 Months), 1975
2 Mahabuti, Haki (Haki-Safisha Wedding, Don L. Lee)
3 Mallory, Mae
4 Marnat, Marcel (Paris), 1971
5 Mazel, Jean, 1979
6 Miscellaneous negatives and photographs
7 Moore, Melba
8 Morrison, Toni
9 Murray, Fernley
10 Murray, Fernley, 1972
11 Murray, Fernley (Fuller, Chicago/Haiti/New York)
12 Murray, Fernley (Fuller, New York), 1970
13 New Fairfield, CT
14 Nigeria
15 Nigeria (Hughes, Langston)
16 Oba of Benin, 1973
17 Oliveira, Edouardo de
18 Onuacai, Chike
19 Palma de Mallorca
20 Parks, Alma (Chicago, IL), 1972
21 Parks, Carole
22 Petrie, Phil
23 Picott, Rupert
24 Randall, Dudley
25 Rivers, Conrad Kent
26 Roberts, Lucille
27 Royster, Philip
28 Saba and Mama
29 Sanchez, Sonia, 1975
30 Saunders, Ann
31 Senghor, Leopold Sedar (President of Senegal, at University of Vermont
Conferring Degree), 1971
32 Shange, Ntozake
33 Sixth Pan African Congress (Lagos, Nigeria)
34 Sixth Pan African Congress (Lagos, Nigeria)
35 South Side Community Art Center (Chicago, IL)
36 Stockholm, Sweden, 1969
37 Tangier, Morocco, 1971
38 Tesch, Otto (Mallorca), ca. 1958-1962
39 Thomas, Gerald Lee
40 Thomas, Joyce Carol
41 Thorburn, Melba Rouse (Chicago), 1972
42 Tsitsopoulas, Stavros
43 Turman, Glynn
61
Box Folder
60 44 Turner, Tina
45 Tuskegee Institute (Literary Arts Festival)
Box Folder
61 1 Unidentified
2 Unidentified Couple
3 , Veronica (Graduation Photograph), 1975
4 Walker, Wyatt T.
5 Wall of Respect (Chicago, IL), 1967
6 Wiggins, Mattie and Rose Overton Stokes
7 Williams, John A.
8 Wrightsville, GA, March 1980
9 Zambia
10 Fuller, Hoyt W. and Other (Oversized)
Series 13. Memorabilia, 1943-1981
Box Folder
62 1 Address Book
2 Address Book
3 Address Book (Africa)
4 Address Book (Atlanta, GA)
5 Address Book (Chicago, IL)
6 Address Book (New York, NY)
7 Address Book (Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, MD)
8 Address Books
9 Autograph Book, 1943
10 Book Plates, Library Plaque, Wooden Post Card
11 Jackson, Jesse L. (Notebook), 1966
12 Press Credentials and Other Identification, 1957-1965
Series 14. Slides, 1958-1981
Box Folder
63 1 Art-Humanities, Inc. (Slides 1-15)
2 Brazil (Slides 1-16)
3 Chicago, IL (Slides 1-43)
4 Dakar, Senegal (Slides 1-60)
5 Dakar, Senegal (Slides 61-114)
6 Famous People (Slides 1-15)
7 Miscellaneous (Slides 1-43)
8 Portugal (Slides 1-40)
9 Washington, D.C. (Slides 1-14)
62
Series 15. Posters, 1953-1981
Note: Information in brackets [ ] provided by the Archives staff. An asterisk (*) indicates Fuller
is listed as a participant.
Events (plays, lectures, conferences)
The Amen Corner (a play with gospel music)
By James Baldwin. Presented by Kuumba Repertory Company. Featuring Vale Grey
Ward. Directed by Mical Whitaker. World Playhouse, Chicago, IL.
December 10, 1980- January 4, 1981 16" x 21"
*Amherst College Black Cultural Center (Fall program series)
Hoyt Fuller, Editor of First World Magazine - “The Need for Black Criticism in Art”
No year September 21 24" x 18"
Behold! Cometh the Vanderkellans (a play)
By William Wellington Mackey. Presented by Woodie King Associates. Theatre DeLys,
New York City. Autographed- “Warmly & Happy Easter 72 To Big Brother Hoyt from
Bill Mackey”.
No date 22" x 14"
Billy No Name (a musical)
by William Wellington Mackey. Presented by Robert E. Richard and Joe Davis. Trucks
Warehouse Theatre. Autographed - “ More Warm Affection to Big Brother Hoyt Fuller,
From Bill Mackey”.
No date 23" x 15"
[Columbia University] “The Arts and Black Revolution”
The Student Forum presents the ninth in its series on “The Urban Ghetto Today”
with Mr. Romare Bearden, Dr. C. Eric Lincoln, and Mr. John Williams. Located at
Harkness Theatre.
No date 21" x 14" 3 copies
The Devil Catcher (a play)
Lafayette Theatre, Harlem, New York.
No year Nov. 27- Jan. 10 24" x 19"
Howard University Art Department - Join Us
[Advertising for art education]
No date 25" x 19" 2 copies
Jamaica National Dance Theatre Company
Event co-produced by the Brooklyn Academy of Music and the Visual Arts Research and
Resource Center Relating to the Caribbean.
63
No year Nov. 28-30 23" x 18"
Museum of Modern Art -African Textiles and Decorative Arts (an exhibition)
No year October 11 - January 31 46" x 30.5"
National Conference of Artists 13th
Conference - Our Image, Ourselves, Our History
NCBA. Held in Atlanta, GA. Poster artwork by Jon Lockard. includes poem What
Happens to a Dream Deferred? By Langston Hughes. A second copy of poster with just
artwork and poem without conference information. Both posters autographed by Jon
Lockard.
March 22- 25, !978 47" x 36" 1 copy
No date 47" x 36" 1 copy
The 6th
PanAfrican Congress
University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
June 19 - June 29, 1974 30" x 20"
Voting Rights Act March “I was There”
Montgomery, AL Montgomery Democratic Conference.
August 9, 1981 21"x 17"
Festivals
[8th
ANNUAL FESTIVAL DEDICATED TO THE STRUGGLES OF AFRO-AMERICAN
PEOPLE] 8eme Festival De Forte de France Dedie aux Luttes Aux Peuple Afro- Americain]
Ateliers Flute et Percussion - Rhythm Flute.
1979 Julliet 16 -18 31 ½" x 23 3/4"
‘Fleur Creole’ - Ti Emile et son groupe
1979 Julliet 4, 21, 27 31 ½" x 23 3/4"
Pamela Fraley
1979 Julliet 6 - 7 24 3/4" x 16"
Life Force Jazz Ensemble
1979 Julliet 3 - 4 23 3/4" x 15"
La Greve Ou Gran Chimin Chimins Decoupes
1979 Julliet; 11-13 31 ½" x 23 3/4"
Emme Kemp Trio
1979 Julliet 6-7 23 3/4" x 15 3/4"
Retrouvailles
1979 Julliet 9 - 12 23 3/4" x 31 ½"
64
John Ross-Piano Solo
1979 Julliet 5 23 3/4" x 16"
Brother John Sellers-Blues
1979 Julliet 4 23 3/4" x 16"
Uibrations
1979 Julliet 9 - 11 17" x 24 3/4"
FESTAC
Festac ’75 The 2nd
World Black and African of Arts and Culture
Lagos, Nigeria
November 22- December 20, 1975 21" x 16"
Festac ’75 The 2nd
World Black and African of Arts and Culture
Lagos, Nigeria
November 22- December 20, 1975 23" x 17" 2 copies
31" x 21" 1 copy
Festac ’77
Lagos, Nigeria. Henderson Travel Service Inc., Atlanta , Ga.
January 15- February 12, 1977 12 ½" x 29"
Festac ’77 2nd
Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture.
Nigeria - Lagos, Kaduna
January 15 - February 12 , 1977 31" x 21" 2 copies
First PanAfrican Cultural Festival
1er Festival Culturel Panafricain
Arts Et Traditions Populaires. Alger 1969. Musee Des Arts Et Traditions Populaires.
1969 21 Juillet 31- Aout 23 3/4" x 16"
1er Festival Culturel Panafricain
Art Africain Ancien. Alger 1969. Musee National Des Beaux-Arts.
1969 21 Juillet-31 Aout 23 3/4" x 16"
New World Festival
The First New World Festival of the African Diaspora
Rio de Janiero, Salvador da Bahia. Henderson Tours, Atlanta, GA
August 7-17, 1978 22.5" x 16.5" 2 copies
2nd
New World Festival of the African Diaspora - Haiti Viva La Difference
65
Haiti, W.I.
August 5-15, 1979 27" x 17" 3 copies
Organization of Black American Culture (OBAC)
B.S.C.A. presents OBAC Poets
Eileen Cherry, Alfreda Collins, Angela Jackson, Omar Shuayb, Warren
Foulkes, and Luvester Lewis- author. Performing their works and a workshop.
Illinois Room, Circle Center. Funded thru SAFC.
No year April 9 23" x 15"
“Smash Their Jelly - White Justice”, A Benefit for Le Roi Jones presented by OBAC Writers’
Workshop
Affro Arts Theatre. With LeRoi Jones. In person - Gwendolyn Brooks, Lerone Bennett,
Muhammad Ali, Terry Collier, Ronald Fair, Phil Crain, Margaret Danner and others.
February 22, 1968 23" x 15" 3 copies
The Organization of Black American Culture presents “Uh Livin Experience”
(OBAC) Writers’ Workshop. A Du Sable Festival of the Arts Event featuring the OBAC
Writers and the OBAC Drama Workshop in An Afternoon of Black Poetry, Drama, and
Art. Paul Lawrence Dunbar High School. Staged and directed by Ann McNeil. Lobby
Exhibit Courtesy Visual Artists Workshop.
November 10, 1968 18" x 12" 3 copies
The OBAC Writers’ Workshop presents Nommo, A Tribute to Terry Callier
Affro Arts Theatre. An Afternoon of Black Poetry and Song featuring OBAC Poets and
Terry Callier.
March 9, 1969 23" x 15" 3 copies
The Organization of Black African Culture Workshop presents Ossie Davis and Rudy Dee, Stars
of Stage, Films and Television- OBAC’s 6th
Anniversary Benefit Program.
Dunbar High School Auditorium. Also featuring OBAC Poets; Young People’s
Workshop. An OBAC Production.
July 21, 1973 23" x 17" 2 copies
The Organization of Black American Culture Writers Workshop presents “An Evening with
OBAC and Friends”
Featuring “Smile” with Billy “Black Barl” Wallace, Comedian OBAC and Friends
and feature production “When the Revolution Cuums??” performed by Pyramid.
Abraham Lincoln Centre.
October 7, 1973 19" x 12 ½" 3 copies
Prints and Posters (artwork, travel ads, etc.)
“African Men in an Alley Game”
66
[Poem] by Angela Jackson. Illustration by John Youssi. Sponsored by the Illinois Arts
Council and Chicago Transit Authority, Illinois Public Transit Association.
No date 12" x 29"
Bahia Brasil
Travel poster
No date 29" x 23" 4 copies
Bailey, Herman Kofi (artist) - [African woman holding a child with a gun strapped across her
back]
No date 17" x 14 ½"
Bey, Kush (artist) - Brother El CA 1969
Model Brother Danny El. Chicago Society of Black Arts & Crafts. Tazama Uhuru Prints.
Chicago, IL.
Copyright 1969 30" x 24"
Black is Beautiful
black ball, black book, black boy, black eye, black Friday, black hand, black heart, black
jack, black magic, black mail, black market, black maria, black mark, little black sambo.
white lies. Black is Beautiful.
Vince Cullers Advertising, Inc., Chicago, IL
No date 23" x 17 ½"
Bruce, Herb (artist) - Cosmic Lady- Herb Bruce
Image of Janis Joplin illustrates poster. Charisma Productions, Chicago, IL
1970 29" x 23"
Bruce, Herb (artist) - Cosmic Soul
Image of Jimmy Hendrix illustrates poster. Charisma Productions, Chicago, IL
Copyright 1970 29" x 23"
Collins, Paul (artist) - Harriet Tubman (1820 - 1913)
Copyright by Johnson Products Co., Inc.
Copyright 1978 20" x 15"
Confaba
[Image of two hands holding a sphere]
No date 36" x 24"
Delar, Brauford (artist) - Richard A. Long (portrait)
black and white reproduction
1965 37" x 25"
DePillars, Murry N. (artist) - Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix
67
[Image of a militant Aunt Jemima bursting out of a pancake box and a black woman with
an afro hairstyle on a box and background American flag with Chicago police badges as
stars]
No date 25" x 21"
DePillars, Murray N. (artist)
[Image of a Black man, women, and child extending out of a background of faces, with
an eagle, and a confederate flag in the background]
No date 26" x 20"
DePillars, Murray N. (artist) - Malt Dizney’s Songs and Stories of Uncle Remus featuring Brer
Rabbit
“A People of the Sun”, a tribute to the staff and volunteers of the 3rd
World Press, IPE &
NCS, Chicago IL.
Autographed - To Bro. Hoyt Fuller with _____ Respect [signature unclear]
Copyright 1972 32 3/4" x 24 ½"
Japhet, F. (artist) - [Print of a village with huts, palm trees, and people hunting]
No date 20" x 12 3/4"
Japhet, F. (artist) - [Print of a village with huts, palm trees, and people in canoes on water]
No date 12 3/4" x 20"
Ordonez (artist) - [red, black, and orange rooster]
No date 40" x 26"
Otis, Amos L. (artist) - [Faces of little boys]
Autographed - “To Cecil from Amos 6 May 89 111/200 Amos L. Otis”
1970 17 ½" x 23"
“Portugal- The country that has contributed to the most knowledge of the globe. In the course of
the century she discovered and explored nearly two-thirds of the inhabited globe”
Map showing Asia, Australia, Africa, South America, North America
Greenland, Europe, China, and India
No date 19 ½" x 27
“Rio”
[Multiple images of a statue of Jesus]
No date 16" x 26"
Stevens, Nelson (artist) - U R All Everness
[Abstract image of a man] Anon Publications, N. Stevens & Color Papers, Dekalb, IL.
No date 25" x 19"
Stevens, Nelson (artist) - The We In You Is The Nation Calling
68
[Abstract image of a woman] Anon Publications, N. Stevens & Color Papers, Dekalb, IL.
No date 25" x 19"
SNICK
360 Nelson Street, S.W. Atlanta, GA 30313 Copyright by The Student Voice, Inc.
Copyright 1967 28" x 22"
“A Time for United Action - State of Black America 1981
[Map of the United States with tree roots connecting to a map of Africa] artist D.J.C
1981 21" x 16"
*Will the Real Hoyt W. Fuller Step Forward
Bon Vivant, Actor, Lecturer, Teacher, Liberationist, Snob [Newspaper clippings of Fuller
glued on posterboard]
No date 23" x 16"
Wyeth, Andrew (artist) - “That Gentleman”
[Image of an old man sitting in a chair in a room with light reflecting off his back]
Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas, TX. Copyright Aaron Ashley Inc. Yonkers, NY
Copyright 1969 14" x 18