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George Marshall papers

Title
  1. George Marshall papers, 1933-1955.
Author
  1. Marshall, George, 1904-2000

Collection information

Finding aid

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Available by appointment at Schomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives. See the finding aid for details.

Containerbox 36FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 36Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Available by appointment at Schomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives. See the finding aid for details.

Containerbox 35FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 35Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 34FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 34Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 33FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 33Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 32FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 32Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 31FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 31Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 30FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 30Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 29FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 29Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 28FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 28Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 27FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 27Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 26FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 26Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 25FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 25Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 24FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 24Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 23FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 23Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 22FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 22Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 21FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 21Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 20FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 20Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 19FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 19Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 18FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 18Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Containerbox 17FormatArchival MixAccessUse in libraryCall numberSc MG 541 box 17Item locationSchomburg Center - Manuscripts & Archives
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Details

Additional authors
  1. Patterson, William L. (William Lorenzo), 1890-1980
  2. Barsky, Edward K., 1895-1975
  3. Dombrowski, James A. (James Anderson), 1897-1983
  4. Eisler, Gerhart
  5. Boas, Franz, 1858-1942
  6. Knox, Owen A
  7. Yergan, Max, 1892-1975
  8. Hammett, Dashiell, 1894-1961
  9. La Follette, Robert M., Jr. (Robert Marion), 1895-1953
  10. Lamont, Corliss, 1902-1995
  11. Burnham, Louis E
  12. Robeson, Paul, 1898-1976
  13. United States. Congress. House. Special Committee on Un-American Activities (1938-1944)
  14. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities
  15. United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation
  16. United States. Committee on Fair Employment Practice
  17. Civil Rights Congress (U.S.)
  18. American Civil Liberties Union
  19. Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee
  20. International Labor Defense
  21. Council on African Affairs
  22. Robert Marshall Foundation
  23. National Federation for Constitutional Liberties
  24. American League for Peace and Democracy
  25. Contributors' Information Service (New York, N.Y.)
  26. National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners
  27. Southern Negro Youth Congress
  28. National Farmers' Union (U.S.)
  29. Southern School for Workers (Richmond, Va.)
  30. Citizens Emergency Conference for Interracial Unity (1943 : New York, N.Y.)
Description
  1. 13.5 lin. ft. (36 boxes)
Summary
  1. The collection documents George Marshall's involvement in the 1940s with civil rights issues, his legal defense for a contempt citation from the House Un-American Activities Committee, and his management of the Robert Marshall Foundation's grant-making program. Samplings of his correspondence and writings during that period are grouped under Personal papers. His Contempt of Congress files constitute a densely documented archive on the use of subpoena power and contempt citations, and on legal and political opposition to the House Committee on Un-American Activities. His National Federation for Constitutional Liberties files are organized into 13 subseries: Administrative; Action Letters; Conferences and Testimonial Dinners; Activities, including an emergency campaign, The Menace of the F.B.I.," chaired by Franz Boas (1940), and a campaign in favor of federal legislation for a voting program for absentee soldiers; Fair Employment Practice Committee; Labor; Poll Tax; Legal Cases; Discrimination; Anti-Semitism; HUAC, which subdivides into Dies Committee and Rankin Committee files, Correspondence and Printed Matter; and Publications.
  2. Marshall's Civil Rights Congress and CRC Bail Fund files comprise the following subseries: Administrative, Conferences, Legal Cases, Subject Files and Printed Matter. Outstanding case files include the Columbia, Tennessee Riot of 1946, the German Communist Gerhart Eisler, Willie McGee, the Martinsville 7 and the Trenton Six. Other organizations in the collection include the International Labor Defense Fund; the American League for Peace and Democracy; the American Committee for Democracy and Intellectual Freedom, chaired by Franz Boas; the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners; the Contributors' Information Service founded by Corliss Lamont, and the Council on African Affairs. Correspondents include Joseph Gelders, Dashiell Hammett, Max Yergan, Charles Lafollette and Louis Burnham.
  3. The Robert Marshall Foundation awarded grants to trade-unions and labor advocacy groups, progressive research groups and schools, alternative newspapers and civil rights organizations. Its files consist for the most part of correspondence between George Marshall and the funded groups, grant proposals and grant tracking sheets, activity reports, and general information about the organizations involved.
Subject
  1. Marshall, George, 1904-2000
  2. Mooney, Thomas J., 1882-1942
  3. Dies, Martin, 1900-1972
  4. Rankin, John E. 1882-1960
  5. McGee, Willie, 1915-1951
  6. Gelders, Joseph, 1891-1950
  7. Bridges, Harry, 1901-1990
  8. Eisler, Gerhart
  9. Yergan, Max, 1892-1975
  10. Buckhannon, Samuel
  11. Civil Rights Congress (U.S.)
  12. Communist Party of the United States of America
  13. National Federation for Constitutional Liberties
  14. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities
  15. Civil rights -- United States -- Societies, etc
  16. Trials (Political crimes and offenses) -- United States
  17. Trials -- New Jersey -- Trenton
  18. Trenton Six Trial, Trenton, N.J., 1948-1951
  19. Discrimination -- United States
  20. Civil rights movements -- United States
  21. Antisemitism -- United States
  22. Anti-fascist movements -- United States
  23. African Americans -- Segregation
  24. African Americans -- Michigan -- Detroit
  25. Contempt of legislative bodies -- United States
  26. Trials (Contempt of legislative bodies) -- United States
  27. Sleepy Lagoon Trial, Los Angeles, Calif., 1942-1943
  28. Mexican American youth -- California -- Los Angeles
  29. Riots -- Michigan -- Detroit
  30. Riots -- New York (State) -- New York
  31. Riots -- New York (State) -- Peekskill
  32. Labor movement -- United States
  33. Discrimination in employment -- United States
  34. Academic freedom -- United States
  35. Intellectual freedom
  36. Freedom of speech -- United States
  37. Loyalty oaths -- United States
  38. Lynching -- United States
  39. Suffrage -- United States
  40. Labor -- United States
  41. United States -- Race relations
  42. United States -- Politics and government -- 1945-1953
  43. United States -- Social conditions -- 1945-
  44. United States -- Social conditions -- 1933-1945
Call number
  1. Sc MG 541
Source (note)
  1. George Marshall and Nancy Marshall Schultz
Biography (note)
  1. George Marshall was a leading advocate for the abolition of the Un-American Activities Committee of the United States House of Representatives (HUAC), a noted conservationist, and a pioneer in the U.S. civil rights movement. He chaired the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties (NFCL) between 1941 and 1946 and its successor organization, the Civil Rights Congress, between 1946 and 1950. He was also a trustee and the manager of the Robert Marshall Foundation. He was cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to turn over lists of NFCL contributors to HUAC and served three months in jail in 1950. He died in 2000.
  2. The National Federation for Constitutional Liberties was founded at a national conference on civil liberties held in Washington, D.C. in June 1940. Its mission was to coordinate the activities of its member organizations toward the realization of greater democratic freedoms. Under Marshall's stewardship, it supported vigorous prosecution of the war effort and made the fight against "native seditionists" and their supporters in Congress one of its chief concerns. It also led numerous anti-lynching, anti-poll tax and anti-discrimination in employment legislative campaigns. Its legal work through hired attorneys and public opinion campaigns encompassed the defense of Communist leaders Harry Bridges and Earl Browder, and victims of Jim Crow justice Samuel Buckhannon and Willie McGee. Its labor advocacy included protection of the Wagner Act against encroachments from anti-New Deal legislative proposals, and the defense of government employees labeled as subversive by the Kerr Committee.
  3. NFCL merged with the International Labor Defense in 1946 to form the Civil Rights Congress. The Congress continued the Federation's fight against discrimination, and organized the legal defense of victims of Jim Crow justice and advocates of radical causes. It also inherited the enmity of the Wood-Rankin Committee in Congress which labeled it a "Communist front." Marshall was elected CRC chairman at CRC's founding conference in 1946. He was active in the McGee case and in the campaign to save the Trenton Six. William Patterson, CRC National Secretary, called him "one of the outstanding leaders in the fight against Jim Crow." Marshall was also Secretary of the CRC Bail Fund, established in 1946 as a separate body with five trustees responsible for its operation. He resigned from the Bail Fund in September 1949 and from the Civil Rights Congress in June 1950.
Author
  1. Marshall, George, 1904-2000.
Title
  1. George Marshall papers, 1933-1955.
Biography
  1. George Marshall was a leading advocate for the abolition of the Un-American Activities Committee of the United States House of Representatives (HUAC), a noted conservationist, and a pioneer in the U.S. civil rights movement. He chaired the National Federation for Constitutional Liberties (NFCL) between 1941 and 1946 and its successor organization, the Civil Rights Congress, between 1946 and 1950. He was also a trustee and the manager of the Robert Marshall Foundation. He was cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to turn over lists of NFCL contributors to HUAC and served three months in jail in 1950. He died in 2000.
  2. The National Federation for Constitutional Liberties was founded at a national conference on civil liberties held in Washington, D.C. in June 1940. Its mission was to coordinate the activities of its member organizations toward the realization of greater democratic freedoms. Under Marshall's stewardship, it supported vigorous prosecution of the war effort and made the fight against "native seditionists" and their supporters in Congress one of its chief concerns. It also led numerous anti-lynching, anti-poll tax and anti-discrimination in employment legislative campaigns. Its legal work through hired attorneys and public opinion campaigns encompassed the defense of Communist leaders Harry Bridges and Earl Browder, and victims of Jim Crow justice Samuel Buckhannon and Willie McGee. Its labor advocacy included protection of the Wagner Act against encroachments from anti-New Deal legislative proposals, and the defense of government employees labeled as subversive by the Kerr Committee.
  3. NFCL merged with the International Labor Defense in 1946 to form the Civil Rights Congress. The Congress continued the Federation's fight against discrimination, and organized the legal defense of victims of Jim Crow justice and advocates of radical causes. It also inherited the enmity of the Wood-Rankin Committee in Congress which labeled it a "Communist front." Marshall was elected CRC chairman at CRC's founding conference in 1946. He was active in the McGee case and in the campaign to save the Trenton Six. William Patterson, CRC National Secretary, called him "one of the outstanding leaders in the fight against Jim Crow." Marshall was also Secretary of the CRC Bail Fund, established in 1946 as a separate body with five trustees responsible for its operation. He resigned from the Bail Fund in September 1949 and from the Civil Rights Congress in June 1950.
Connect to:
  1. Finding aid
Local subject
  1. Black author.
Added author
  1. Patterson, William L. (William Lorenzo), 1890-1980.
  2. Barsky, Edward K., 1895-1975.
  3. Dombrowski, James A. (James Anderson), 1897-1983.
  4. Eisler, Gerhart.
  5. Boas, Franz, 1858-1942.
  6. Knox, Owen A.
  7. Yergan, Max, 1892-1975.
  8. Hammett, Dashiell, 1894-1961.
  9. La Follette, Robert M., Jr. (Robert Marion), 1895-1953.
  10. Lamont, Corliss, 1902-1995.
  11. Burnham, Louis E.
  12. Robeson, Paul, 1898-1976.
  13. United States. Congress. House. Special Committee on Un-American Activities (1938-1944)
  14. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities.
  15. United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  16. United States. Committee on Fair Employment Practice.
  17. Civil Rights Congress (U.S.)
  18. American Civil Liberties Union.
  19. Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee.
  20. International Labor Defense.
  21. Council on African Affairs.
  22. Robert Marshall Foundation.
  23. National Federation for Constitutional Liberties.
  24. American League for Peace and Democracy.
  25. Contributors' Information Service (New York, N.Y.)
  26. National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners.
  27. Southern Negro Youth Congress.
  28. National Farmers' Union (U.S.)
  29. Southern School for Workers (Richmond, Va.)
  30. Citizens Emergency Conference for Interracial Unity (1943 : New York, N.Y.)
Research call number
  1. Sc MG 541
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