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184417156Boston: Munroe and Francis 1844 First edition fourth printing. Originally published by Munroe and Francis in 1838. All printings are uncommon. OCLC records eleven copies of this printing fifteen of the 1839 and no more than a few copies of any other printing. Contemporary black cloth wrappers rubbed with spine of text block partially detached from gutter. . 4 in. x 5 in. . With seventy engraved vignettes illustrating educational rhymes e.g. a boy fishing to accompany "Four times eight are forty-eight / I wish that I could get some bait". Also with an additional engraved title and printed floral borders on each page. Engraved title loose laid in at original position. Some foxing as usual. A good sound copy of an uncommon and fragile educational item for children. Uses instructive vignettes to illustrate the times tables from one through twelve. The simple rhymes include "Six times nine are fifty-four / My little boat has come ashore" and "Nine times nine are eighty-one / See how fast the horses run." Munroe and Francis, hardcover
189917833<p>Leeds: E.J. Arnold & Son n.d. ca. 1899. Fourth edition revised and expanded. Rare. OCLC records only 2 copies in libraries worldwide. Green cloth-colored boards. Title and paper-folding decorative design in black. . Small quarto. . With 27 full-page color diagrams and numerous half page diagrams. Upper right corner of first few leaves and last leaf clipped but text is unaffected. Minor edge wear. A few folding paper samples laid in and sample sheets at rear. Endpapers feature the publisher's logo. Very good copy. Z. Ford was a Froebel Kindergarten teacher during the end of the 19th-Century. We could not locate much more information on him in the sources available to us. The present work gives detailed instructions and diagrams for kindergarten students studying the Froebel gifts with colorful illustrated examples. According to the preface: "There is no Kindergarten occupation more pleasing and interesting to children than that of paper-folding … This little work is intended to show how the paper-folding occupation lends itself to the cultivation of the designing powers in children." It is also noted that "Juniors" can use this book as preparation for the study of geometry. The A.L. Educational Series focused on children's creativity and learning-through-play concept that was one of the central tenets of Froebel's educational method. Other titles in the series include Guide to the Drawing Examinations 1892 by D.E. Hillier and Paper-Flower Making 1897 by I.A. Williamson.</p> E.J. Arnold & Son, hardcover
192817241Chicago: Laurel Book Company n.d. 1928 First edition. All enclosed in a brown paper envelope printed with a woodcut of two children practicing penmanship. . Folder 8 x 8 " with a packet of fifty-six printed copy slips 8 x 1" mounted with cord. Includes fifteen original sheets of lined paper 7 x 8 ". Brown paper folder is printed with a list of "Hints to Pupils" in a floral border. Copy slips are printed on both sides so the directions for a copying activity appears alongside its example text. The position of the mounted copy slips on the folder allows a sheet of paper to be slipped underneath the packet which turns the folder into a sort of clipboard. Some wear and chipping to creases of envelope. A few pencil ownership signatures to envelope seemingly written by a child of a Janice Charlier. The folder slips and leaves of paper are very bright. A very good clean copy of a scarce item. The present item teaches children the proper steps for good penmanship for example: "'Swing out' the strokes of capital 'W' and pause between strokes until you can make the letter well; then take up each word separately" card 33. Text printed on the folder instructs students to pay attention to posture and hand position while writing and to "Do your best. Do it every time. Practice makes perfect." Laurel Book Company,
17554<p>St. Paul Minn.: Webb Publishing Co. Webb Publishing Co. Fourth edition of both items. All editions and all entries in the series are rare with only a few physical copies of each in OCLC. None of the copies recorded in OCLC are first editions. . Each volume in brown paper front cover stapled to stiff board backing at top edge. . Two volumes 6 in. x 10 in. . No. 1 with forty-seven text figures and six fabric samples laid in plus needles thread and some lace. No. 2 with forty-four text figures and eight fabric samples laid in with needles and thread. Also with a large fold-out paper bodice pattern and a small brown paper envelope containing two buttons. Some toning to leaves from the laid-in cloth samples. With a teacher's signature on one page of the workbook for No. 1. Near fine copies in their original envelopes. Instructs students in both basic and complex stitches; sewing hems seams and buttonholes; attaching buttons; and sewing cuffs sleeves ties collars bodices and petticoats. The workbooks also include instructions for teachers and parents.</p> Webb Publishing Co.,
182817578<p>Philadelphia: American Sunday School Union n.d. ca. 1828 Early edition. The earliest copy noted by OCLC apparently has 1828 on the title-page and this copy can't have been published much later. OCLC also only lists copies that claim to be revised as ours does. A scarce book regardless as OCLC lists only thirteen physical copies of any edition. We could find no indication of who the author is. Quarter red roan over marbled boards gilt-lettered spine. Twelvemo. Engraved frontispiece. Binding extremities a bit worn and rubbed. Lacking blank preliminary and terminal leaves. Very light foxing the occasional minor stain. A very good copy of a rare fragile book. The present work consists of four dialogues each between two characters that wish to instill morality in young readers by addressing the following topics: keeping good company reading the Bible on collecting donations for church rising early regular and punctual attendance at Sunday school animal cruelty dog fights cock fighting etc. violence for sport fist-fighting and more.</p> American Sunday School Union, hardcover
18836237New York & Cincinnati: Phillips & Hunt / Walden & Stowe 1883. First edition. Paperback. Good. 24mo 44 pages pictorial series cover chipped at fore-edge and spine rear cover lists Chautauqua books through no. 40. <br/><br/>Issued as Chautauqua Text-book no. 43. This likely precedes the Hunt & Eaton edition of 1883 because the firm of Hunt & Eaton was not formed until 1889. Phillips & Hunt / Walden & Stowe paperback
196916973<p>Princeton New Jersey: Princeton University March 1969 Pale bule printed paper wrappers. . Octavo. With a full-page table comparing educational models. Fading and light foxing to front cover. Very bright and clean throughout. A very good copy of an uncommon item reporting the results of a study on how Princeton University could implement their decision to admit women. A committee of Princeton students faculty and administrators considered five models for incorporating women into the college: 1 "Separate educational institutions joined by a 'treaty' which makes possible some sharing of facilities and faculty"; 2 "Two institutions with separate formal identities but with one faculty identified with the men's college"; 3 "A separate women's residential college or zone within the University"; 4 "A single institution with an established ratio of women to men students but with no separate residential college"; and 5 "A single institution with no established ratio of women to men students." The present item summarizes the characteristics advantages and disadvantages of the five models. Princeton began admitting undergraduate women in the fall of 1969 under the fourth proposed model. The model allowed women to choose between living on campus in designated spaces women-only dorms or women's sections in larger dorms or living off campus and between eating and socializing in communal spaces with men or in their own dorms and private residences. The text reads: "This model avoids any connotations of 'segregation' and thus is attractive on grounds of principle to those who believe it is important that men and women students learn how to know each other simply as 'people'" p. 9.</p> Princeton University,]
1967172500上海.Shanghai.: 上海交通大学反到底兵团.Shanghai jiao tong da xue fan dao di bing tuan. 上海交大教育革命联络站.Shanghai jiao tong da xue ge ming jiao yu lian luo zhan. 1967. 4pp Chinese Cultural Revolution newspaper jointly issued by the "Fight to the End" Corp and Education Revolution Liaison Station Shanghai Jiao Tong University. A quotation from Chairman Mao is accompanied by three lines of propaganda slogans on the first page. This paper features Lin Biao and Chen Boda's directives on education reforms on the first two pages. Light even browning little stained at staples light wear generally good. Text in Chinese. 24.8 x 18.1cm. . 上海交通大学反到底兵团.[Shanghai jiao tong da xue fan dao di b unknown
1960214619Sydney.: Australian Visual Education. circa 1960. Edited by Sydney A. Field. Three Asia related issues of Pictorial Social Studies: Interesting Eastern Peoples; India Astir; Peoples of South-East Asia. Each issue is illuatrated with maps and line illustrations mainly in black and white but with some colour. Presented as 32 page booklets with folding card covers. Minor wear covers all in very good condition.<P> Aimed at late primary school or early high school Australian students these works express views of the region's people that would not be acceptable today. An interesting example of 1960s Australian education.<P> <b>When referring to this item please quote stockid 214619</b> . Australian Visual Education. unknown
19554097Enterprise Alabama 1955. Very good. 32pp. Original red wrappers decoratively stamped in gilt on front cover stapled. Minor rubbing along spine. A seemingly unrecorded yearbook for a segregated African American elementary school in Alabama. Enterprise Academy taught first through sixth grade to the African American community in Enterprise Alabama near Dothan in the southern portion of the state. Coffee County Training School opened in 1928 after Alabama finally began supporting public education for African Americans. Elementary students were moved to Enterprise Academy in 1947. The present work pictures the principal staff teachers and students at Enterprise; fifty-seven sixth graders are pictured individually. Fourth and fifth grades are each pictured in two group photos; second and third grades in three group photos each and first in four group photos. The school appears to have had no kindergarten though the present yearbook also pictures the school's Student Council cheerleaders choir and Boy Scouts. We could locate no other examples of this or any other yearbook for Enterprise Academy. unknown
18804993N.p. but likely Live Oak FL 1880. Very good. Albumen photograph 4.5 x 7.75 inches mounted on card. Card trimmed with pinholes at corners remnants of printed caption in bottom margin slight surface soiling and spotting. Penciled annotation on verso. A stunning original photograph featuring Rev. Joseph Leroy Atwell Fish 1828-1890 and his wife and children posed amongst their African-American students at an unnamed "colored school" which was very likely the Florida Baptist Institute. The images captures Fish his wife and probably his daughters in the middle of the frame standing in front of a large two-story schoolhouse surrounded by about eighty young Black men and women in suits and dresses. Revered Fish was a graduate of Amherst College and the Newton Theological Seminary who was ordained a Baptist minister in 1856. Fish was also a teacher who helped found Florida Memorial University Florida Baptist Institute in Live Oak in 1880 where he served as first president of the institution until his death there on March 26 1890. Florida Memorial University is the only HBCU in the southern part of the state. The penciled annotation on the present photograph provides some information on the photograph but is probably ultimately misleading in one regard: "Rev. J.L.A. Fish & wife In Virginia teaching a colored school -- He married my Father & Mother Mr. & Mrs. Milan Hills Lucy M. Williams Dec. 21 1875."<br /> <br /> The latter part of this inscription is indeed true. Reverend Fish married Milan Hills and Lucy Williams on December 21 1875 in Hebron New York where he was serving as a church pastor. But the historical record does not indicate that Reverend Fish ever taught at an African-American school in Virginia if he did it was so brief that it is now lost to history. Fish's first known foray into teaching African American students was a brief six-month stint in Natchez Mississippi in 1879. Immediately thereafter Fish was appointed to the Florida Baptist Institute where he served the last decade of his life. As such it is far more likely that the inscriber here meant to say that Reverend Fish and his wife were "In FLORIDA teaching a colored school."<br /> <br /> Reverend Fish's work at the Florida Institute is covered in the Obituary Record of Graduates of Amherst College for the Academical Year ending June 27 1883: "His chief work was with the Freedmen as he brought Florida Institute out of all its troubles financial and social changed the feeling of the whites from hatred to sympathy with his work and put the school on a permanent foundation. His aim was to educate leaders for the race and the principal effort of his school was to train teachers and preachers to go out through the state and by their example to lift up and educate both intellectually and morally the colored people. His influence was felt throughout the state both through his training of teachers and preachers and through his counsels given at conventions associations and other gatherings of the colored men and in private. He is mourned by both white and black. By the whites because they knew his teachings would help the colored people without causing trouble to them. By the latter because they miss their leader teacher and friend. unknown
19673156Washington D.C.: Plans for Progress 1967. Very good. 41033pp. Quarto. Midcentury blue buckram white spine titles. Minor wear. Ex-University of Iowa with deaccession stamp. An informative directory of 103 American HBCUs produced by the U.S government's Plans for Progress office. The schools are located in seventeen states and the District of Columbia. The directory lists the schools alphabetically and for each includes detailed information on the administration enrollment numbers total and then divided by gender degrees offered recent statistics on degrees granted a sometimes detailed description of the school and its affiliations. Plans for Progress unknown
19363774Birmingham Al: December 15 1936. Good. 4pp. on a single folded sheet. Toning and creasing to paper bit of staining to front cover small holes through center affecting a few letters of text tear to upper margin chip along lower margin affecting a few letters of text. A scarce newspaper published at Industrial High School the first African American high school in Birmingham Alabama. The school is today known as A.H. Parker High School named for Arthur Harold Parker the school's first principal who together with William Pettiford a close friend of Booker T. Washington "led the effort to establish Industrial High School.the school taught domestic skills and crafts rejecting the traditional scholastic curriculum taught in most high schools. The school held its first graduation in 1904." Peebles "The Alabama Knights of Pythias" 22. The newspaper reports on a student visit to a nearby HBCU Miles Memorial College and a speech given to students by an N.A.A.C.P. Field Worker while also printing poetry by students school sports news book reviews articles on school clubs including the Science Museum Club and Junior Red Cross etc. December 15 unknown
192431532Washington D.C.: S.i. 1924. First Edition. Slim octavo 23cm; beige printed wrappers stapled; 12pp. Pamphlet is vertically folded at center wrappers dusty edgeworn and nearly detached along spine fold; 7 brief passages marked in pencil; Good complete copy. Summary of details regarding the salary scale for the academic faculty of Howard University presented to their Board of Trustees. Includes extracts and correspondence from faculty to members of the board including the full text of Dean Kelly Miller's letter to Dr. Michael O. Dumas and hard data as to proposed pay increases for the various positions. OCLC finds a single copy Emory University. S.i. unknown
19584461Montgomery Al 1958. Very good. 92pp. Profusely illustrated from photographs. Quarto. Original textured wrappers printed in blue and gilt stapled. Moderate soiling and minor edge wear. Some foxing to initial and terminal leaves but mostly clean internally. An unrecorded souvenir program from the seventy-fifth annual convention of the Alabama State Teachers Association. The text includes extensive program notes biographical sketches of guest speakers lists of local association officers reprinted letters of support from various officials well wishes and congratulatory greetings from practically every Black school and college around Alabama lyrics to selected songs including James Weldon Johnson's "Life Every Voice and Sing" a handful of advertisements and more. The program is profusely illustrated with portraits of the association's officers guest contributors teachers of the year and recently retired members photographs from schools around the state line drawings. The cover title reads "Official Souvenir-Convention Program of the Alabama State Teachers Association in its Seventy-Fifth Annual Session." Just a single copy in OCLC at the University of Alabama. unknown
19503467Nashville 1950. Very good. Two yearbooks: 244; 208pp. The first bound in blue textured cloth the second in maroon textured cloth each front cover stamped in gilt with a mounted photograph. Some scuffing to edges. Light thumb-soiling to texts previous owner's inscription in each volume. A pair of yearbooks once belonging to Dr. James L. Hutchinson of Shreveport Louisiana while a medical student at Meharry Medical College in Nashville in the mid-20th century. The yearbooks - the Meharrian for 1949 and 1950 - cover Hutchinson's last two years at the school and are chock full of photographs and information on the administration faculty students student organizations and campus life at the pioneering college. The last sections in each yearbook are comprised of advertisements from local vendors mostly medical suppliers. Meharry Medical College opened in 1876 as the first institution in the South designed to train African American doctors. At the time Hutchinson attended the school Meharry also trained dentists nurses dental technicians and medical technologists all of whom are represented in the yearbooks.<br /> <br /> Meharry remains the largest private HBCU dedicated to training healthcare professionals. Dr. James L. Hutchinson established a medical practice in San Mateo California in the 1950s becoming one of the very first African American doctors to work in the Golden State. In addition to his family practice Dr. Hutchinson was one of the founding doctors of both Planned Parenthood and Project 90. Amazingly he is still practicing medicine today in his early 90s. Editions of the Meharrian from any year are rather rare. OCLC records a smattering of yearbooks at about a dozen institutions. unknown
195412810Baltimore 1954. 17 leaves illustrated with twenty-seven original photographs most in corner mounts and numerous ephemeral items and periodical clippings. Folio. Original black cloth embossed in blind on front cover with titles and decoration in gilt string-tied. Moderate chipping to edges of leaves text leaves tanned and somewhat fragile several leaves detached. Good condition. An informative photographically-illustrated and annotated scrapbook assembled at Morgan State College now university in Baltimore in the Eisenhower years and documenting the campus activities of the Omega Psi Phi fraternity. The compiler is not identified but was surely a member of the fraternity. Most of the photographs shoe Lambados Club members engaged in pledge activities capturing pledges holding light bulbs while standing in heavy topcoats at various campus locations posing in formations while dressed in matching suits and berets while holding canes and placards identifying the subjects as "Dog No. 1" "Dog No. 2" and so forth and chanting as they march a cross campus in close single file while dressed identically in white oxfords khaki pants white tennis sweaters dangling chains and dark-billed caps. Other photos depict pledges at a Morgan State-Howard football game with "The ques of Howard & Morgan singing at halftime."<br /> <br /> The ephemeral items include tickets invitations ribbons programs broadsides a gold & purple patch and more. These items include a manuscript copy of a Rudyard Kipling's poem "If" that pledges were expected to memorize a "Summons" to appear at a party in New York City a ticket for an event called "Lamp Leap" programs for memorial services a group of clippings photos and other material featuring "Big Brothers" who became successful in the military politics and sports and two large broadsides. Respectively the latter two items advertise a charity benefit aboard the "Omega Showboat" actually the S.S. Robert Fulton with music by Don Wilson and His Orchestra measuring 14 x 19 inches and a chapter-sponsored "Bi-Annual Skating Party at the Coliseum" measuring 14 x 11 inches.<br /> <br /> A wonderful record providing a rare peek into African-American Greek life within one of the Divine Nine at a Baltimore HBCU in the mid-1950s. unknown
19692884Warrenton Va 1969. Very good. 54pp. Original light blue front wrapper stapled rear wrapper lacking. Minor wear and dust-soiling. A rare conference report sponsored by the Scholarship Education & Defense Fund for Racial Equality in New York. The conference took place over three days in early 1969 in Warrenton Virginia. The specific goal of the conference was to help Black school officials become more accountable to their constituents by bringing them up-to-date on urban problems the dynamics of collaboration and techniques related to educational policy-making. The report lists general background information on the conference the participants highlights of the proceedings and more followed by recommendations an evaluation and follow-up resulting from the conference. The report is occasionally illustrated with photographs from the conference featuring SEDFRE staff members and conference attendees in conversation. The conference issued eighteen recommendations in this report among them infrastructure for Black school board officials to communicate with each other the publication of books on supportive services for attendees and their communities and a national public school holiday celebrating the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr.<br /> <br /> We could locate no copies of this report in OCLC but the University of South Carolina has their copy digitized. unknown
19395499Oxford N.C. 1939. Very good. 32 leaves illustrated with many dozens of ephemeral items mostly school-related printed materials newspaper clippings and greeting cards pasted in or laid in. Folio. Contemporary dark green cloth backstrip light green boards with floral illustration inset into front cover string tied. Moderate scuffing and edge wear to boards. An intriguing scrapbook assembled by a young Black woman named Willia Lucille Pettiford of Jamaica Long Island while attending the African-American Mary Potter Academy in Oxford North Carolina in the late-1930s. The scrapbook is populated with dozens of newspaper and magazine clippings of notable African Americans as well as famous performers a combination of Black and white stars of the stage and silver screen. Willia pasted in excerpts about W.E.B. Du Bois Ella Fitzgerald Gladys Bentley Florence R. Beatty Mary McLeod Bethune Paul Robeson and others. Willia also included several printed event programs invitations and notices from the school including a hand-made program for the Mary Potter Athletic Banquet on April 25 1938; a May 3 violin recital sponsored by the Oxford Music Lovers' Club; a May 13 1938 "Oratorical Contest" at the school; an April 17 1939 performance of the "Oxford Music Lovers' Club;" a May 13 1939 meeting of the Young People's League of the Cape Fear Presbytery; and the Mary Potter School's baccalaureate exercises for both 1938 and 1939. She also cut out portions of the school newsletter or yearbook and used them in the scrapbook.<br /> <br /> "Mary Potter Academy was launched in 1889 with George Clayton Shaw as principal a post he held until 1936. Shaw was born to slaves in Louisburg in 1863. His mother Mary Penn Shaw had been provided what he described as 'a fairly good education' and she instilled the importance of education in her six children all of whom became educators. George Shaw graduated from Lincoln University in Pennsylvania in 1886. He studied at Princeton Theological Seminary before completing studies at Auburn Theological Seminary New York in 1890. While in New York Shaw met Mary Potter secretary to the Presbyterian Freedmen's Board and benefactor of the educational improvement of freedmen. Potter provided funding to establish the first school for African Americans in Granville County Oxford where in 1888 he founded Timothy Darling Presbyterian Church. Called Timothy Darling for Shaw's teacher until 1892 the school was funded by the Board of Missions for Freedmen New York Synodical Society and Albany Presbytery. It would later serve as a private boarding school until the 1950s then as a public high school until 1969. In 1970 Mary Potter became an integrated middle school" - NC.gov. unknown
18863856Hampton Va: Normal School Press Print 1886. Good. viii75pp. Original green printed wrappers. Some chipping to spine and edges of wrappers a handful of earnest cello tape repairs. Internally rather clean. A rare session catalogue for the Hampton Institute printed at the school during the middle portion of the school's second decade. The work includes a brief history of the school a list of trustees courses of study a report on the school from the principal Samuel Chapman Armstrong to the trustees that incorporates detailed reports on the various school departments each written by a department head and more. A four-page supplement dated November 1886 is laid in. Though the teaching foundations of this school for freedmen were laid during the Civil War Hampton didn't open until the end of the decade; a division dedicated to teaching Native American youth began in 1878 and operated until 1923 and the principal's report here contains much on "The Indian School" at Hampton.<br /> <br /> OCLC only explicitly reports two copies of this particular Hampton Institute catalogue located at the Clements Library and the Roanoke City Public Library though there may be additional copies in serial runs of the catalogue at other places. Normal School Press Print unknown
19354044Nashville: State Department of Education 1935. Very good. 22pp. Original gray printed wrappers stapled. Light discoloration to front wrapper minor creasing. Internally clean. A scarce state publication designed to guide teachers and librarians in segregated Tennessee in assembling a collection of works related to the African American experience. The Foreword reads in part: "Teachers in the Colored Schools of Tennessee have felt a need for a list of books by and about the Negro which are especially adapted to the comprehension of the pupil. Every Negro school in Tennessee should have in its library representative books on the literature of the race." The work was compiled by the Director of the Division of School Libraries Martha Parks and includes an Introduction by her. The listing of about 150 books is divided into two parts: "Books for the Elementary Grades" and "Books for High School." The latter section presents books by subject categories such as "General Reference" "Biography" "History" "Literature" and "Social and Economic Problems." There is also a section on "Important Books Now Out of Print" which includes works by such luminaries as Frederick Douglass Booker T. Washington Phillis Wheatley and many others. Most of the books throughout the work include at least a brief annotation below the bibliographical information. State Department of Education unknown
19395722N.p. likely Washington D.C. 1939. About good. 476pp. of mimeographed text plus one leaf of sheet music. Original red printed wrappers brad bound. Substantial edge wear reinforced with cello tape repaired tear and large area of loss to rear wrapper some dust-soiling to covers. Ink ownership inscription on front blank belonging to Ruth W. Lee otherwise internally clean. A delightfully homespun pamphlet containing the revised edition of the various rituals of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority one of the "Divine Nine" sororities of the HBCU community founded at Howard University in 1913 and still active today. According to the organization’s own website Delta Sigma Theta is "committed to sisterhood scholarship service and addressing the social issues of the time.and has become one of the preeminent service-based sororities with more than 350000 initiated members and over 1050 chartered chapters worldwide." The present work was issued by the Ritual Revision Committee whose names are listed here along with a note from the committee chairman Edna B. Johnson-Morris and a Preface from the committee which includes notes of gratitude to various members including honorary member Mary McLeod Bethune thanking her for "The Beacon Light." The body of the work contains chapters on conducting both grand chapter sessions and regular meetings the initiation ceremony the establishment of new chapters conferring honorary status the process of reinstatement the pledge ceremony the funeral ceremony the observance of memorials dedication exercises the order of business for chapter meetings and closing ceremonies for both types of meetings. Much of the work is literally comprised of the scripts for these various processes and ceremonies. These chapters are followed by the text of the DST "National Hymn" sheet music for "How We Love Thy Name" and the text for the sorority's prayer oath and the "Sorority Charge."<br /> <br /> "As a sisterhood comprised primarily of Black college-educated women the Sorority seriously considers the issues impacting the Black community and boldly confronts the challenges of African Americans and hence all Americans. Over the years a wide range of programs addressing education health international development and the strengthening of African American families have evolved. The major programs of the Sorority are based upon the Five-Point Programmatic Thrust: economic development educational development international awareness and involvement physical and mental health and political awareness and involvement" - Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. website. Printed works issued by the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority are exceedingly rare. OCLC reports just a few items of any type printed before 1970 along with just a few institutional collections relating to various chapters of the sorority containing material before 1950. The present work is not separately listed in OCLC and very likely not present in the chapter collections. unknown
194930485Nashville: African Methodist Church 1949. Wraps. Good. Stapled pictorial wraps. 64 pages. Light edge wear to the covers. Light toning to the contents. Map illustration inside the back cover. African Methodist Church unknown
194830486Nashville: African Methodist Church 1948. Wraps. Good. Stapled pictorial wraps. 64 pages. Light edge wear and toning to the covers. Light toning to the contents. Map illustration inside the back cover. African Methodist Church unknown
195030482Nashville: A.M.E. Sunday School Union 1950. Wraps. Good. Stapled pictorial wraps. 64 pages. Covers lightly rubbed. Very small tear upper spine. Light toning to the covers. A.M.E. Sunday School Union unknown