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The Black Calhouns

Page 37

by Gail Lumet Buckley


  at Southern Negro Youth Congress, 257

  Robinson, Clarence, 171

  Rollock, Laura, 151–152

  Romanoff, Mike, 193

  Romanoff’s, 193

  Roosevelt, Eleanor, 158, 166, 167, 195–196, 225, 237

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.

  antilynching bill and, 264

  “Black Cabinet” of, 149–150

  diversity in administration of, 81

  Federal Council of Negro Affairs

  (“Black Cabinet”), 150, 166–167

  NAACP and, 158

  Nash, Sr. and, 215

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 64, 75–76, 112

  Rosenwald Fund schools, 145–146

  Royal Poinciana Sextet, 118

  Rutledge, Edward, 243

  Sanbonmatsu, Yoshiro, 237

  Sands Hotel (Las Vegas), 229–231

  Saving the Soul of Georgia (Daniels), 256, 267–268

  Savoy-Plaza Hotel, 176–177, 179

  Schlitz, 254

  Schurz, Carl, 20

  Schwerner, Michael, 298

  Scottron, Cyrus, 81

  Scottron, Edna. See Horne, Edna

  Scottron

  Scottron, Samuel, 81

  Screen Actors Guild, 192

  Screen Writers Guild, 219

  segregation. See also civil rights movement

  Civil Rights Message (Truman) and desegregation, 228

  desegregation of military, 210–212, 213–214, 256, 258 (See also U.S. Army)

  interracial marriage laws, 227–228

  Jim Crow laws and, 46–47, 51, 78, 90, 92–95, 108, 167–168

  northern migration and, 108

  Wilson and, 75–76

  Selma-to-Montgomery march, 298–299

  Selznick, Danny, 193

  Selznick, Irene Mayer, 193

  Shack, Dorothy Nash, 204, 208

  Shack, William, 208

  Shakespeare, William, 195–196

  Shaw, Artie, 170, 172

  Sherman, William, 13–15, 18

  Show, 285–286

  Shuffle Along (play), 117–118, 119, 121

  Sidney, Robert, 229–230

  Siegel, Benjamin “Bugsy,” 221

  Silent Protest march (July 28, 1917), 84

  Sinatra, Frank, 287–288, 303

  Sissle, Noble, 87, 118–120, 121, 122, 159–160, 171–172

  sit-in movement, 269–275

  Sixteenth Street Baptist Church (Birmingham, Alabama), bombing of, 283–284, 286

  Slapsie Maxie, 197–198, 199

  Slaton, John M., 107

  slavery. See also Civil War; Reconstruction

  “Contrabands,” 15

  Emancipation Proclamation, 1, 15, 16, 17, 295

  “freedmen” and, 17

  house slaves, 10, 11

  sale of family members, 12–13

  Slave Schedule (1850), 10–11

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe) on, 39

  Smart Set Athletic Club (“Grave Diggers”), 69–70

  Smith, Edwina, 58, 172, 178, 181–182, 194

  Smith, Ellison DuRant “Cotton Ed,”

  161

  Smith, Frank, Jr., 58, 128

  Smith, Gerald L. K., 287

  Smith, Jerome, 282

  Smith, Lena Calhoun

  childhood of, 1–2, 4–5, 16, 23–24, 39

  child of, 172

  death of, 202–203

  Du Bois and, 4–5, 52

  education of, 4–5, 52

  family’s prominence, during Reconstruction, 39–40

  marriage of, 56, 58

  move to Birmingham by, 56

  Smith, M. Hoke, 96

  Smith, Sam, 25

  Smith, W. Eugene, 279

  Snipes, Maceo, 255

  Society of Friends (Quakers), 237–238

  Society Orchestra, 118, 159–160

  Sojourner Truth Housing Project

  (Detroit), 82, 212

  Sokolsky, George, 243

  Souls of Black Folk, The (Du Bois), 91, 226

  Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), 267, 269–275, 291, 301

  Southern Negro Youth Congress, 257

  Southern Poverty Law Center, 284

  Spanish-American War, African

  American soldiers in, 64

  Spanish Civil War, 162–163, 225

  Spartacus (Fast), 225–226

  Special Field Order No. 15, 15

  Spellman, Francis Cardinal, 275

  Spingarn, Joel, 113

  spirituals, 38–39

  Stanton, Edwin M., 15

  Steichen, Edward, 121

  Stevenson, Adlai, 239, 263

  Storey, Moorfield, 70

  Stormy Weather (film), 226

  “Stormy Weather” (Arlen), 154

  Storrs, Reverend Henry Martin, 20, 22

  Storrs School, 4, 20, 24

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 18–19, 20, 39

  St. Peter Claver Church and School

  (Brooklyn), 311

  St. Peter Claver School (Brooklyn), 127

  Strayhorn, Billy, 282

  Strong, George Templeton, 65

  Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), 269–275, 282, 287–288, 291–293, 298–299

  Styne, Jule, 286

  Sumner, Charles, 31–32, 51

  Suspense (radio show), 194

  Sutton, Percy, 211–212

  Swig family, 232

  Tablet (Brooklyn), 310–311

  Taft, William Howard, 76

  “Talented Tenth,” 5, 63–64, 91, 138

  Taney, Roger B., 2, 37

  Thirteenth Amendment, 1, 8–9, 15–16, 32–33

  Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States (NAACP), 88, 116

  This Is the Army (play), 180

  Thompson, Blanche B. S., 202

  Thompson, Kay, 184–185, 190, 197, 245, 276, 277

  369th Regiment (“Harlem Hellfighters”), 72, 85–87

  Thurmond, Strom, 259

  Tilden, Samuel, 35–36

  Till, Emmett, 265

  Time, 312

  Time Inc., 277–280

  Today (NBC), 283

  “Tom” shows, 39

  Tony Awards (1983), 310

  Torn, Rip, 281

  Trotman, Minta, 151

  Truman, Harry, 217, 228, 256, 258–260

  Truth, Sojourner, 212

  Turner, Mary, 116

  Tuskegee Airmen, 214, 278, 311–312

  Tuskegee Institute, 48–49, 108

  Tuskegee University, 300

  Twain, Mark, 2, 18, 38, 89, 275

  Twichell, Sarah Jane, 23, 35

  Two Girls and a Sailor (film), 190

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin (Stowe), 20, 39

  Union Mutual Insurance Company, 92–94

  United Colored Democracy (“Black

  Tammany”), 66, 81

  United Negro College Fund, 218

  University of Georgia, 27, 104, 265–266

  University of Maryland, 265

  University of Mississippi, 281

  University of Wisconsin at Madison, 269–270

  Urban League, 82, 132–134, 159

  U.S. Air Force, advent of, 211

  U.S. Army. See also Civil War; Vietnam War

  Air Corps, first African American squadron, 211

  Dental Officers’ Reserve Corps, 140

  education during Reconstruction and, 17

  segregation of, 210–212 (See also segregation)

  369th Regiment (“Harlem Hellfighters”), 72, 85–87

  Vietnam War and, 279, 298

  World War I and treatment of

  African American soldiers, 72, 78–80, 84–87, 113–114

  World War II and treatment of

  African American soldiers, 170, 187–189, 191–192

  U.S. Colored Troops (USCT), 19

  U.S. Constitution

  Thirteenth Amendment, 1, 8–9, 15–16, 32–33

  Fourteenth Amendment, 1, 8–9, 32–33, 37, 321

  F
ifteenth Amendment, 1, 8–9, 37, 321

  USO, 192

  U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, 30–31

  U.S. War Department, 113, 211, 213–214

  Vanderbilt, Gloria, 289

  Vanderbilt, William H., 42

  Van Horne, Harriet, 283

  Van Vechten, Carl, 187

  Variety, 119

  Victor Records, 172

  Vietnam War

  military integration during, 298

  protests against, 279

  Villard, Oswald Garrison, 70

  voting rights

  in Atlanta, 96, 111

  civil rights movement and, 254–255, 258–260, 265, 266–267, 291–301

  Crusade for Citizenship, 268

  Mississippi Summer voter registration project, 298

  modern-day threats to, 321

  Reconstruction and, 25–26, 37

  suffrage of African American men, 16–17, 21, 25–26, 37

  suffrage of women, 68

  Voting Rights Act of 1965, 300

  Waddel, Catherine Calhoun, 10

  Waddel, Moses, 10

  Wadleigh Secretarial School (Bronx), 154

  Wagner, Robert, 243

  Walker, “Gentleman” Jimmy, 131

  Walker and Williams, 72

  Wallace, Henry, 228, 259

  Walton, Carrie, 51

  Ward, Samuel Cutler, 31, 50

  Ware, Edmund Asa, 4, 20–23, 35, 38, 48, 51–52

  Ware, Edward Twichell, 103, 104

  Washington, Booker T., 19–20, 48–49, 59, 70, 92, 93, 108

  Washington Bee, 51

  WAVEs, 189

  Weaver, Robert C., 166

  Webb, Katie. See Graves, Catherine “Katie” Webb (Moses Calhoun’s niece; Antoine Graves, Sr.’s wife)

  Webb, Preston, 13, 21, 24

  Welch, Elisabeth, 236

  Welles, Orson, 186, 234

  Wells-Barnett, Ida, 51

  Wells-Barnett, Ida B., 109

  WERD (radio station), 260

  Wesley, Cynthia, 283

  Western Reserve Eclectic Institute, 42

  What Do We Want? (Horne), 71–72

  White, Mildred, 309–310

  White, Walter

  Anderson and, 167

  characterization of, 182–183

  childhood of, 98–100

  death of, 263–264

  on Democratic Party platform

  (1944), 216–217

  on Detroit riot (1943), 213

  in Federal Council of Negro Affairs

  (“Black Cabinet”), 166

  on Franks case, 106

  Horne’s film career and, 175, 182–183

  Horne’s political views and, 219

  marriages of, 264

  NAACP Atlanta chapter and, 109–111

  Truman influenced by, 256

  on Turner’s lynching, 116

  White Citizens’ Councils, 263

  White Paper (NBC), 293

  Wilkins, Roy, 168, 294, 297

  Wilkinson, Ed, 311

  Willard, Jess “Great White Hope,” 108–109

  Williams, Bert, 64, 72–73

  Williams, Robert, 294

  Willkie, Wendell, 175, 182

  Wilson, Josephine, 45

  Wilson, Woodrow, 75–76, 77, 82, 84

  Winters, Aida, 238

  With Malice Towards Some (Sidney), 229–230

  Wiz, The (film), 304

  “Wobblies,” 92, 158

  women

  African American working mothers, 90

  suffrage of, 68

  treatment of, in workplace (1960s), 278–280

  Woodward, C. Vann, 47, 167

  WOR (radio station), 173

  World Telegram, 283

  World War I

  African American officers’ training and, 113–114

  African American soldiers in, 72, 78–80, 84–87, 113–114

  Crisis on, 80

  369th Regiment and, 72, 85–87

  World War II

  Du Bois on, 156

  Nazis influenced by Jim Crow, 167–168

  Wormley, James, 31

  Wormley Compromise, 36–37

  Wormley House (Washington), 31

  X, Malcolm, 298

  Yale University, 18, 20–21, 104

  YMCA, 77, 272–273

  Young, Charles, 78

  Young, Reverend Andrew, 300–301, 310

  Young Americans for Freedom (YAF), 272

  “You’re My Thrill” (Bluebird Records), 172

  YWCA, 77, 272–273

  Ziegfield Follies, 73

 

 

 


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