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 File — Box: L.27

Lynching Legislation - 76th Congress (1939-1941) - Clippings, 1939

Dates

  • Creation: 1939

Document Types

Clippings

Legacy Description

Headline: "House Gets Three More Antilynch Bills" (clipping from January 28, 1939). Anti-lynching bill, H.R. 2716, was introduced by Representative Emanuel Celler, Democrat, of New York, on January 18, 1939. Anti-lynching bill, H.R. 2724, was introduced by Representative James P. McGranery, Democrat, of Pennsylvania, on January 18 1939. Anti-lynching bill, H.R. 2887, was introduced by Representative Charles R. Clason, Republican, of Massachusetts, on January 19, 1939. Headline: "Senate Receives New Bipartisan Antilynch Bill: Wagner, Van Nuys Joined by Capper; Favored by NAACP" (clipping from January 28, 1939). Anti-lynching bill, S.R. 845, was introduced by Senators Robert F. Wagner of New York, Frederick Van Nuys of Indiana, and Arthur Capper of Kansas on January 19, 1939. From clipping, "Congressman Joseph A. Gavagan (Dem., N.Y.), whose anti-lynching bill was passed last year in the House, has introduced the companion bill to the Wagner-Van Nuys-Capper Bill in the lower chamber" (from the article, "Senate Receives New Bipartisan Antilynch Bill," January 28, 1939). Headline: "New Antilynch Bill in Senate" (clipping from February 25, 1939). Anti-lynch bill, S1500, was introduced by Senator Barbour (Rep., NJ) on February 20, 1939.

Arrangement

Most of the morgue material on lynching is arranged in two main categories, Lynching Cases, and Lynching Legislation. Files documenting Lynching Cases are arranged by state. Specific lynching cases with a large volume of documents are arranged in their own folders. The lynching legislation files for federal legislation are arranged chronologically by congressional term, and state legislation by state, following the original order of the series. Additional material documenting lynchings is found elsewhere in the morgue collection, filed under the names of victims and others involved in incidents, subsequent trials, or political activity.

Processing Information

Lynching files have been processed using detailed processing procedures. All the information in the finding aid has been verified against folder content, dates and document types have been added, and more detailed arrangement and description work has been performed.

In files on lynching cases, names of victims are listed in the scope and content note for that folder, along with the locality and year of the incident. Unnamed victims are listed with location and date, and victims of attempted lynchings are also listed when named. When many documents are found for a specific victim, they are arranged in a separate folder with the victim's name in the folder title. Content warnings have been added to folder records where photographs of lynching victims are filed, or clippings with particularly graphic headlines, and such items are encapsulated within the main folders to allow researchers to choose whether or not to engage with this content.

The lynching legislation files appear to have been originally compiled around 1941, when correspondence is found between an AFRO librarian and a Congressional Research Service librarian. A 1939 report created by the Congressional Research Service is found, which may serve as an index to the content of these files.

Repository Details

Part of the AFRO American Newspapers Archives Repository

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