49
ED 033 635 AUTHCF TITLE TNSTITUTTON Spons Agency Pub Date Note Available from EDPS Price Descrirtors Abstract DOCDKENT RESUME FL 001 475 Hal-erhosch, John F.; And Cthers Annotated Bibliography: Afro American, Hispano and Amerind; with Amerinc; with Audio-Visual Materials List. Colorado State Dept. of Education, Denver. Eiv. cf Elementary and Secondary Education. Office of Education (DHM, Washington, E.C. Apr 69 48p. Colorado State Department of Education, Divisicn cf Elementary and Seccndary Education, 201 E. Colfax Street, Denver, Colorado, 80203 Colorado, 80203 (free upon request) EDF,S Price MF-T0.25 HC Not Available from EDPS. American Culture, American History, *American Indians, *Annotated Eibliographies, Audiovisual Aids, EicgraFhies, Cultural Education, Cultural Interrelationships, English (Second Language), Films, Filmstrips, *Instructional Materials, Instructional Program Divisions, *Negroes, Phonograph Records, Peading Materials, School Segregation, *Spanish Americans, Tape recordings, Voting Readings and audiovisual materials, selected especially for educators, related to the study of Afro- American, Hispano-American, and American Indian cultures are included in this 366-item annotated biblicgrarhy covering the period from 1861 to 1968. Historical, cultural, and biographical materials are included for each of the three cultures as well as information on the unique problems of each. Other sections deal with school segregation, politics, voting, discrimination, and civil rights in Colorado. Audiovisual materials include films, filmstrips, records, and tapes. A general section features works on language, culture, and race relations. Indication of reading level is noted; price and availability are frequently provided. (Not available in hard copy due to marginal legibility of original document].

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ED 033 635

AUTHCFTITLE

TNSTITUTTON

Spons Agency

Pub DateNoteAvailable from

EDPS Price

Descrirtors

Abstract

DOCDKENT RESUME

FL 001 475

Hal-erhosch, John F.; And CthersAnnotated Bibliography: Afro American,Hispano and Amerind; with Amerinc; withAudio-Visual Materials List.Colorado State Dept. of Education, Denver.Eiv. cf Elementary and Secondary Education.Office of Education (DHM, Washington,E.C.Apr 6948p.Colorado State Department of Education,Divisicn cf Elementary and SeccndaryEducation, 201 E. Colfax Street, Denver,Colorado, 80203 Colorado, 80203 (free uponrequest)

EDF,S Price MF-T0.25 HC Not Available fromEDPS.American Culture, American History,*American Indians, *AnnotatedEibliographies, Audiovisual Aids,EicgraFhies, Cultural Education, CulturalInterrelationships, English (SecondLanguage), Films, Filmstrips,*Instructional Materials, InstructionalProgram Divisions, *Negroes, PhonographRecords, Peading Materials, SchoolSegregation, *Spanish Americans, Taperecordings, Voting

Readings and audiovisual materials,selected especially for educators, related to the study ofAfro- American, Hispano-American, and American Indiancultures are included in this 366-item annotatedbiblicgrarhy covering the period from 1861 to 1968.Historical, cultural, and biographical materials areincluded for each of the three cultures as well asinformation on the unique problems of each. Other sectionsdeal with school segregation, politics, voting,discrimination, and civil rights in Colorado. Audiovisualmaterials include films, filmstrips, records, and tapes. Ageneral section features works on language, culture, andrace relations. Indication of reading level is noted; priceand availability are frequently provided. (Not available inhard copy due to marginal legibility of original document].

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(::)AFRO-AMERICAN, HISPANO AND AMERIND

Lid with

AUDIO- VISUAL MATERIALS LIST

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Prepared by A Human Relations Task Force Committee

Under the Direction of

The Division of Elementary and Secondary EducationJohn F. Haberbosch, Director

and

George A. Ek, Jr.,Social Studies Consultant

Office of Instructional ServicesLeo P. Black, Assistant Commissioner

COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Funded by Title I of theElementary and Secondary Education Act

DENVER, COLORADOApril, 1959

FOREWORD

The purpose of this publication is to assist educators with theselection of materials for the study of Afro-Americans Hispeno andAmerican Indian cultures. Many of the references have special signif-icance to Colorado and the use of such materials would be of assistanceto the study of Colorado history and the relationship of these culturalgroups to the history of the state.

The committee responsible for the preparation of the bibliographysearched out all available material and those items herein were selectedfor the three cultural groups.

Educators using this publication should also be alert to the wealthof material being published monthly on these same cultures and it ishoped that school or community librarians would prepare supplementallistings.

Byron W. HansfordCommissioner of Education

TABLE OF CONTENTS

FOREWORD i

INTRODUCTION 1

GENERAL MATERIALS 2

AFRO-AMERICAN HISTORY, General 4

AFRO-AMERICAN PIONEERS 7

AFRO-AMERICAN MILITARY EXPLOITS IN COLORADO AND THE WEST 9

AFRO-AMERICAN MINERS IN COLORADO 10

AFRO-AMERICAN PIONEER COLONIES 11

AFRO-AMERICAN PROBLEMS 12

HISPANO HISTORY 13

HISPANO CULTURE 16

HISPANO PROBLEMS 17

HISPANO BIOGRAPHY AND FICTION 19

AMERIND HISTORY 20

AMERIND CULTURAL VALUES 23

ANERIND BIOGRAPHY 26

AMERIND PROBLEMS 27

SCHOOL SEGREGATION IN COLORADO 30

PARTIES, POLITICS, AND THE VOTE 31

DISCRIMINATION AND CIVIL RIGHTS 33

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS LIST 35

INTRODUCTION

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

and

AUDIO VISUAL MATERIALS LIST

Compilat'on of an annotated bibliograPly, although an arduous task, canstill be rewarding. For this reason, the compilers of this bibliography are im-pelled to comment on the techniques of selection or the value judgments made aboutthe appropriate utilization by teachers and pupils of its content.

Every attempt was made to be thorobgh, both in researching and evaluat-ing the materials included. The basic procedure was to examine available materials.Tests of accuracy, fairness to topic, historiLity, and readability were applied.Only after this kind of deliberation were selections included. Every member ofthe bibliographic team acknowledged the urgency of providing a source of usefulmaterial.

In each of the four divisions, the organizational pattern is obviousfrom the content. Reading level is indicated at the bottom of each entry.(RL - J, HS, A)

RL = Reading LevelJ = Junior High SchoolHS = High SchoolE = Elementary SchoolA = Adult (Teachers)IP = Indicates In PrintOP = Indicates Out of Print

= Cost of PublicationHB = Indicates Hardback EditionPB = Indicates Paperback EditionText = Textbook

Other bibliographies are indicated for further study; also, many ofthese same authors have written many more vakable books and articles. Therefore,since there was some limitation as to space available, we would encourage widerreading from these same authors.

The committee urges all teachers to recognize the magnitude of preparingyoung people to live in today's world where the dream of the right to "life,liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" must become a ,ality of existence forevery human being on this planet.

Because the prices set by publishers change without notice, and becausebooks and other materials can go out of print at any time, users of this Annotated

Bibliography should consider it as a guide and not as a catalog.

It would be wise to contact the publisher, supplier, or jobber to checkon current prices and availability before ordering.

An Audiu-V: ;ual Materials List follows the Annotated Bibliography.

-2-

GENERAL MATERIALS

Allen, Oliver and Chester Williams. One Nation Indivisible. 1958. 38 pp. Report

of conference on race relations and the law. Freedom House, N. Y.

(RL-HS)

Ashley-Montagu, M. F. What uTe Know About Race. New York: Anti-Defamation League

of New York, 1967. 38 pp. A collection of fundamental facts on race and

man's evolution. Contains a selected annotated bibliography.

(RL-HS) IP $.50

Alpenfels, Ethel J. Sense and Nonsense About Race. Friendship Press. 475 River-

side Drive, New York, New York, 1957. 64 pp. Essential facts about race

relations.(RL-HS) IP $.75 PB

Bennis, Warren G., et al. Interpersonal Dynamics: Essays and Readings on Human

Interaction. Homewood, Illinois: The Dorsey Press, 1964. See Part V, "The

Process of Understanding People" by Robert Tannenbann, et al. p. 725.

(RL-A) IP $11.65 Lib $8.25 text

Bibby, Cyril. Race, Prejudice, and Education. New York: Frederick A. Praeger,

1960. 90 pp. Specifically designed to help teachers teach race; provides

basic scientific information; bibliography included.(RL-A) IP $4.00 MB

Coon, Carleton S. The Story of Man. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1962. Story of

man as a hunter, farmer, conquerer of his environment; deals in theories of

race and the origins of racial concepts.

(RL-HS) IP $7.95 HB

Hayakawa, Samuel I. Language in Thoript and Action. 2nd Ed. New York: Harcourt,

Brace and World, Inc., 1964. Discusses the impact of semantics on prejudice;

exercises are suggested fo: developing skill in recognizing semantic differences.

(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB $3.95 PB

Hillman, Sidney, The Dilemma in Race Relations. New York: Foundation Reprint Dept.,

Undated. 11 pp. A look at race relation problems in all areas of the United

States. (RL-HS)

McWilliams, Carey. Brothers Under the Skin. Boston: Little Brown and Co., 1951.

364 pp. A discussion of the status of minority groups in the nation and the

impact on international relations.(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB $1.95 PB

Mead, Margaret. "Culture Change and Character Structure." Identity and Anxiety:

Survival of the Person in Mass Society. Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press of

Glencoe, 1960.(RL-A) IP $8.50 HB $4.50 PB

Mencken, H. L. The American Language. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1923. 489 pp.

Traces the development of an "American language."

(RL-A) IP $25.00 HB 3 vol. $9.00 Text

Race aad Race Problems Pamphlets. Public Affairs Committee, Inc. Titles are:

The Races of Mankind, Benedict & Weltfish, 1956 (#85). 88 pp. Who's on First?,

Jack Mofley, 1956 (11233). 28 pp. Who's My Neighbor?, Algernon D. Black, 1958

(PT..-HS)

-3-

General Materials

Vander Zanden, James W. American Minority Relations. New York: Ronald Press Co.,1966. A general treatment of minority relations iu the United States.Contains an extensive bibliography.(RL-A) IP $7.75 HB

-4-

AFRO- AMERICAN HISTORY(General)

Adams, Russell L. Great Negroes: Past and Present. Chicago: Afro-American, 1965.

182 pp. Contains biographical sketches of Negroes throughout the world and

the extent of Negro contributions to mankind's history and progress.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 NB

American Oil Company. American Traveler's Guide to Negro History. Chicago: American

Oil Company, 1963. 58 pp. Designed as a supplementary guide to the

conventional tourist book, this publication acquaints the reader with some aspect:,

of Negro Americana.(RL-J)

Ames, William C. The Negro Struggle for Equality in the Twentieth Century.

Boston: D.C. Heath and Co., 1965. 185 pp. A collection of documents which

provide essential information necessary in attaining an awareness of the cur-

rent dilemma.(RL-HS) OP

Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. Journal of Negro History.

Washington, D. C. (Quarterly). A source of information for articles on

Negro History.

Atkins, James A. The Age of Jim Crow. New York: Vantage Press, 1965. An auto-

biography of a Denver resident whose life has paralleled the "separate, but

equal" status of his race.

(RL-HS) OP

Bcntemps, Arna. 100 Years of Negro

263 pp. Biographical sketches

scene by the Negro.(RL-HS) IP $4.25 HB

Freedom. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co., 1961.of significant conf:ributions to the American

$1.95 PB

Branch, Hettge Wallace. The story of "80 John." New York: Greenwich Book Publishing,

Inc., 1960. 59 pp. The story of a man born in a slave environment who rose

to the status of a successful Texas cattleman.

(RL-HS) OP

Carnish, Dudley Taylor. The Sable Arm: Negro Troops in the Union Army, 1861-1865.

Longmans, Green, and Co., 1956. 300 pp. A discussion of the contributions of

the Negro during the Civil War.

(RL-A) OP

Cuban, Larry. The Negro in America. Chicago: Scott, Foresman, and Co., 1965.

176 pp. One of the Scott Foresman series on "Problems in American History;"

a collection of source materials of the Negro as slave and free man.

(4L-HS) IP $1.80 PB

Durham, Philip and Everett L. Jones. The Negro Cowboys. New York: Dodd, Mead,

and Co., 1965. 230 pp. A documented history of the Black man on the frontier;

material on Negroes from Estavanclo in 1530 to such late 19th and early 20th

century characters as Nat Love and Bill Pickett.

(Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 26-31).(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB

Franklin, John Hope. From Slavery to Freedom. Third edition. New York: Alfred A.

Knopf, 1967. 686 pp. A comprehensive history of Negro Americans.

(RL-HS) IP $10.75 HB

-5-Afro-American History

(General)

Hughes, Langston and Milton Meltzer. A Pictorial History of the Negro in America.Rev. ed. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1956. 340 pp. More than 1000reproductions of pictures, "the largest number and the most important picturesever assembled in one volume," makes this a valuable asset to most studies ofNegro history.(RL-J) IP $5.95 HB

Katz, William Loren. Teacher's Guide to American Negro History. Chicago: 0-adrangle

Books, 1968. 192 pp. Provides teachers, schools, and libraries with a basichandbook for integzating American history curriculum. Contains up-to-datebibliographic and audio-visual information, a ease reference library, andspecific guidelines and objectives for classwork.(RL-A) IP $2.25 IT

Miller, Loren. The Petitioners: The Story of the Supreme Court of the United States

and the Negro. New York: Pantheon Books, 1966. 433 pp. A full chronicle ofwhat the Supreme Court has said and done in respect of the rights of Negroes,slave and free, between 1789 and 1965.(RL-HS) IP $8.95 HB

Morsbach, Mabel. The Negro in American Life. New York: Harcourt, Brace and

Woxld, Inc., 1967. 273 pp. Designed to set forth the historical significanceand achievements of Negroes, both individually and as a group, from the age of

exploration to modern times.(RL-HS) IP

Patrick, John F. The Progress of the Afro-American. Westchester, Illinois:

Benefic Press, 1968. 160 pp. An objective overview of Negro America's pro-gress with depth development of a people, their problems and potential.(RL-E) I?

Ploski, Harry A. and Roscoe C. Brown, Jr. (eds.). The Negro Almanac. New York:

Bellweather Publishing Company, 1967. 965 pp. This large collection of factsregarding black people here and abroad contains such diverse sections as"Significant Documents in American History," and "Negro Recipes: Soul Food."

(RL-HS) IP $22.00 HB

Salk, Erwin A. A Layman's Guide to Negro History. New York: McGraw-Hill Book

Company, 1967. 196 pp. ". . . comprehensive bibliography of books and

teaching aids;" a fairly complete source book for teachers and students; onevoid, which may be corrected in later editions, is the part played by the Negroin the development of the American West.(RL-HS) IP

Stampp, Kenneth M. The Peculiar Institution. Knopf, 1956. A re-examination ofslavery in the South, thoroughly documented.(RL-HS) IP $6.95 HB

Stratton, Madeline. Negroes Who Helped Build America. Boston: Ginn and Company,

1965. 163 pp. An introduction to Negro contributions to American art, science,

politics, civil rights and education.(RL-J) IP $3.00 HB

-6-

Afro-American History(General)

Tussman, Joseph (Ed.). The Supreme Court on Racial Discrimination. New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 1963. 393 pp. Contains selected major cases having to dowith racial discrimination from 1880 to 1960.(RL-HS) IP $1.95 PB

Wade, Richard C. (ed.). The Negro in American Life. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin Co.1965. 175 pp. This Life in America series paperback presents the student witha balanced picture of the Negro in American history; a volume of selectedreadings.(RL-HS) IP $1.40 PB

Watkins, Sylvester. Negro Heritage. Chicago: P.O. Box 8153. (Monthly). A leafletcontaining historical and current topics relating to Negroes.(RL-HS)

Woodward, C. Vann. The Strange Career of Jim Crow. New York: Oxford UniversityPress, 1955. 252 pp. A treatment regarding the "dark period" of the Negrostory in America.(RL-HS) IP $4.50 HB $1.50 PB

-7-

AFRO-AMERICAN PIONEERS

Barrett, Marjorie, "Negro in Colorado: Proud History," Rocky Mountain News,

April 21, 1968. Presents brief biographical sketch of Aunt Clara Brown.

Bishop, William C. (ed.). Sons of Colorado. Denver: William C. Bishop, July 1906,

Vol. F, No. 2, p. 24. Describes activities of "01 Lige" after his arrival in

Denver.(RL-HS) OP

Black, Augusta Hauck. "Old Lige," Colorado Magazine, (July, 1942), 154-156. Brief

biographical sketch of Elijah Wentworth, former slave, who became one of Denver's

respected pioneer citizens and served as town crier from 1860 to 1880.

(RL-HS)

Burroughs, John Rolfe. Where the Old West Stayed Young. New York: Wm. Morrow

and Co., 1962. Tells escapades of two Negro pioneers, Ned Huddleston, alias

Isom Dart, and Albert Welhouse in the Brown's Park area of Northwestern Colorado.

(RL-HS) IP $15.00 HB

Deily Rocky Mountain News, October 23, 1885. Tells of impending death of Aunt Clara

Brown.(RL-J)

Dellenbaugh, Frederick S. Fremont and '49. N. Y.: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1914.

547 pp. Describes the meeting between Fremont and Beckwourth near Long's

Peak and contains references to the Negro, Saunders Jackson, who accompanied

Fremont in 1848.

(RL-HS) OP

Denver Republican, March 4, 1882, p. 7. Tells of Aunt Clara Brown's reunion with

her daughter after a thirty-year separation.

(RL-J)

Denver Republican, February 18, 1882, p. 8. Gives sketch of Aunt Clara Brown from

birth to 1882 when as a free citizen of Colorado she departed to find her

daughter left in the South.

(RL-J)

Ferril, Will C. "Opulent Men of Color," Chicago Daily News, March 18, 1890. Provides

brief biographical sketches about pioneer Negroes of the Rocky Mountains and what

they have done; some of the individuals covered are: Edward J. Sanderlin, Jim

Beckwourth, Aunt Clara Brown, and Lewis Price.

(RL-HS)

Grinnell, George Bird. Adventures of Indian Fighters, Hunters and Fur Traders.

New York: Scribner's Sons, 1913. 363 pp. References are made regarding the

part played by the Creen brothers in the establishment of Bent's Fort and at

the Taos Massacre.(RL-HS) OP

Afro-American Pioneers

Grinnell, George Bird. "Bent's Old Fort and its Builders," Kansas HistoricalCollections, IV, 28-91. Tells of Negro brothers, Andrew and Dick Green, whowere servants at Bent's Fort in the 1830's and of a Negro woman, Charlotta,who was also employed at the Fort.(RL-HS)

Hafen, LeRoy R. "The Last Years of James P. Beckwourth," Colorado Magazine, V,134-139. Gives a brief biography of Beckwourth with some account of hisactivities in or near the Denver area and describes his death at the handsof his Crow Indian brothers.(RL-HS)

Harvey, James Rose. "Negroes in Colorado." Unpublished Master's Thesis, Universityof Denver, Denver, 1941. pp. 11-14. Contains biographical sketch of notedNegro fur trapper and explorer, James Beckwourth.(RL-HS)

Hill, Daniel Grafton, Jr. "The Sociological and Economic Implications of NegroChurch Leadership in Colorado." Unpublished Doctoral Dissertation, University ofDenver, Denver, Colorado. 1946. Chapter one, "The Negro in the Early History ofthe West" contains biographical sketches of ten 19th century Negro pioneers toColorado.(RL-HS)

Leonard, Daisy Anderson. From Slavery to Affluence. Steamboat Springs, Colorado:The Steamboat Pilot, 1967. 80 pp. Small pamphlet in two parts containingmemoirs of Robert Anderson and the autobiographical account of his widow'slife in Northwestern Colorado.(RL-HS) IP $2.50 paperback

McGue, D. B. "John Taylor - Slave-Born Colorado Pioneer," Colorado Magazine, XVIII,161-168. A treatment of early southeastern Colorado history.(RL -HS)

Owens, Sister M. Lilliana. "Julia Greeley, Colored Angel of Charity," ColoradoMagazine, XX, 176-178. An account of the honor granted to the former maid ofTerritorial Governor Gilpin.

Parkhill, Forbes. Mister Barney Ford. Denver: Sage Books, 1963. An account ofBarney L. Ford, Runaway slave, who was one of Colorado's leading businesspioneers.(RL -HS) OP

Savage, G. Thurman. "The Negro in the History of the West." Unpublished Master'SThesis, Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Missouri. More on the life ofJames Beckwourth.(RL-HS)

The Denver Post. "Aunt Clara's Glory Trail," Rocky Mountain Empire Magazine,supplement to newspaper, July 17, 1949, p. 7. Presents brief biographicalsketch of one of Colorado's first Negro pioneers who, after having purchasedher freedom, came to Colorado in l81;9 and settled in Central City.(RL-J)

Writer's Program. "Colorado Negroes." Colorado State Historical Society Library.Describes Thomas J. Riley as the first Negro to settle permanently in Denver.

-9-

AFRO-AMERICAN MILITARY EXPLOITS IN COLORADO AND THE WEST

Burkey, Elmer R. "The Thornburgh Batt3e With the ttes on Milk Creek," Colorado

Magazine, XIII, 90-110. An account of a Negro Cavalry tnit (Co. C 9th Cay.)

and the 1879 Ute Indian uprising.

(BL -ES)

Flipper, Henry O. Negro Frontiersman: The Western Memoirs of Henry O. Flipper.

Theodore D. Harris, (ed.) El Paso: Texas Western College Press, 1963. The

first Negro graduate of Vest Point. Flipper writes with first-hand knowledge

of the 10th Cavalry activities on the Southwest frontier between 1878 and 1916.

(EL -HS) OP

Haley, J. Evetts. Fort Concho and the Texas Frontier. San Angelo, Texas: San

Angelo Standard Times, 1952. Ahistory of the West Texas frontier, tells of

hardships suffered by a lost company of Negro cavalry and one chapter to

racial troubles on th2 Conchos River; written by a Texan.

(RL-HS) OP

Leckie, Wm. H. The Buffalo Soldiers. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1967.

260 pp. Narrative of the Negro 9th and 10th Cavalries and their service in

the West, contains information regarding the awarding of the Congressional Medal

of Honor to a Sgt. Henry Johnson for heroism in the Thornburgh Battle of 1879.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB

Parker, W. Thornton, M.D. Personal E., eriences Anon: Our North American Indians from

1867 to 2885. Northampton, Mass., 1913. Chapter 27 of this volume, entitled,

"The Evolution of the Colored Soldier" describes problems encountered by black

volunteers in the 125th infantry during service in the Southwest.

(RL-HS) OP

Rankin, M. Wilson. Reminiscences of Frontier Days. Denver: Smith-Brooks, 1935.

140 pp. The diary of a 19th century observer of Northwestern Colorado and

Southeastern Wyoming life in which mention is made of Negro troops at Milk

Creek in 2879.

(RL-HS) OP

Sprague, Marshall. Massacre: The Tragedy at White River. Boston: Little, Drown

and Co., 1957, 330 pp. Records the exploits of Capt. Francis S. Dodges, Negro

Company D, 9th Cavalry.

(RL -HW) IP $6.75 HB

Stephenson, Wendell Holmes. The Political Career of Gen. James H. Lane. Topeka:

Kansas State Printing Plant, 1930, Vol. 3, 165 pp. Chapter 12, "Recruiting of

Negroes in Kansas," contains a well-documented description of the raising of

Lane's Black Brigade. Also mentioned is the Lane Bill introduced into Congress

1864, proposing a plan for colonizing freedmen in West Texas.

(RL-HS) OP

Writer's Program. "Colorado Negroes." Colorado State Historical Society Library.

Negro troops of the 10th Cavalry came to the aid of Col. George H. Forsyth at

Beecher Island.(RL-HS)

-10-

AFRO-AMERICAN MINERS IN COLORADO

Parkhill, Forbes. Mister Barney Ford. Denver: Sage Books, 1963. pp. 100-104.

Description of Negro Miners and mining activity.

(RL-MS) OP

Randall Clippings, II, (July 1903) 220. An account of Jerry Lee (Negro pioneer)

who prospected famous lodes.

Rocky Mountain Nws, August 4, 1891, p. 2, c. 3. Describes past history and future

prospects of Peru mining district, Summit County.

(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, May 14, 1867, p. 1, c. 3. Discusses Negroes involved in

mining construction 11/4 miles above Georgetown.

(RL_J)

Rocky Mountain News, May 4, 1861, p. 2, c. 4. Gives suggested rates for price of

gold dust in Negro Gulch near present-day Breckenridge.

(RL-J)

Savage, W. Sherman. "The Negro on the MiningFrontier," Journal of Negro History,

XV (No. 1). Selected accounts of Negro miners in Colorado history.

Times, December 31, 1899, p. 26, c. 6. Washington Johnson, an old Negro prospector,

is doing development work in Gilpin County.

Times, January 15, 1900, p. 6, c. 2. Educated Negro woman, Ony Combs, has good

fortune in mining claim.

-11

AFRO-AMERICAN PIONEER COLONIES

Bittle, William E. and Gilbert Geis. The Longest Way Home. Detroit: Wayne State

University Press, 1964. The story of the all-I:uro community of Boley, Oklahoma

and of one Alfred Charles Sam who was the first of mis race to recruit people for

a beck-to-Africa movement is contained in this book.

(RL-HS) IP $8.50 HE

Denver Daily Tribune, May 10, 1879, p. 4. Editorial swporting plan to actively

seek settlement of Negroes in Colorado in order to aid in relieving the great

movement of southern Negroes then flooding into Kansas; editorial supports this

plan because "the emigration that will cone from these states will be made up

of the better and more intelligent classes of the colored people of the South."

(RL-J)

Denver Daily Tribune, May 10, 1879. Discusses plan to bring Fegroes into Colorado.

"Colorado can use hundreds of house servants and can also utilize Negro knowledge

of cattle and horse breeding."

(RL-J)

Denver Daily Tribune, May 11, 1879. Discusses the Afro-American; generated by large

influx of Negroes into Colorado at this _=me; opinions of a dozen representative

men are given concerning "The Exodus."

(RL-J)

"Place vanes in Colorado," Colorado Magazine, XVII (September, 1940), 190. Descrip-

tion of Deerfield, Colorado, only all-Negro agricultural colony in the state,

founded in 1911.

(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, February 14, 1866. Copies of letters received from Washington,

D. C. stating the right of Negroes to homestead and file pre-emption claims.

(RL-J)

Weld County News (special edition, November, 1921, p. 60. Comprehensive article

on Weld County's Negro Colony, Deerfield, one of 14 such agricultural colonies

in the United States in 1921.

(RL-J)

-12-

AFRO-AMERICAN PROBLEMS

Lincoln, C. Eric. Is Anybody Listening to Black America? New York: The Seabury

Press, 1968. 280 pp. Presents the various points of view held by both black

and white Americans concerning the civil rights struggle.

(RL-HS) IP $2.95 PB

Lomax, Louis E. The Negro Revolt. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1962. 271 pp.

An analysis of the reasons for current mood of militancy; all phases of the

revolt are handled from the NAACP to the Black Muslim movement.

(RL-HS) IP $4.50 HB

Myrdal, Gunnar. An American Dilemma New York: Harper and Row Publishers, Inc.,

1962. 1483 pp. An exhaustive analysis of the Negro's position in America as

of 1942; contains a "Postcript Twenty Years Later" which, in condensed form,

reviews the changes in the status of the American Negro since 1942.

(RL-HS) IP $16.50 HB $6.90 PB

Parsons, Talcott and Kenneth B. Clark, (eds.). The Negro American. Boston: Houghton

Mifflin Co., 1966. 781 pp. An extensive treatment of the major theme of the

civil rights movement.(RL-HS) IP $9.50 HB

School of Journalism. Minorities in Colorado. Uni7cmoity of Colorado. 1965. A

collection of 25 articles related to minority groups in Colorado.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB $1.95 PB

Urban League of Denver, Inc. Fact Letcer. March 1959. Vol. III, No. 1. Gives

comparative statistics and facts concerning progress of the Negro during the

past thirty years.

(RL-J)

Urban League of Denver. Urbanalysis. Publication of the Urban League of Denver now

published under the title of Fact Letter. Series of pamphlets reports on pro-

gress or setbacks in the various areas of education, housing, employment, and

community relations with relation to minority rights.

(RL-J)

-13-

HISPANO HISTORY

Bandelier, Fannie (trans.). The Journey of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca and HisCompanions from Florida to the Pacific, 1528 to 1536. New York: AllertonBook Co., 1905. 231 pp. Translation of Cabeza de Vaca's account of hiscrossing the continent of America.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB

Bean, Luther E. Land of the Blue Sky People. Monte Vista: Monte Vista Journal,1962. Comprehensive account of early history, exploration and settlement ofSan Luis Valley; mentions settlement of San Luis as Colorado's oldest townand gives description of early land grants.(RL-J)

Blacker, Irwin R. and Harry H. Rosen (eds.). The Golden Conquistadores. Indiana-polis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1960. 371 pp. Collection of accounts of explorationand conquest over North America in early hall of 16th century. Includes:Balboa, Cordoba, Cortes, Alvaredo, Cabeza de Vaca, Coronado, and DeSoto.(RL-HS) IP $5.95 BB

Bolton, Herbert Eugene. Coronado, Knight of the Pueblos and the Plains. New York,etc.: McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press,1949, 491 pp. Account of Don Vasquez de Coronado's expedition from Mexico in1540; the author, along with other university professors and a representativeof the U.S. Park Service, physically retraced the expedition of Coronado accord-to his maps.(RI.-HS) IP $8.95 HB $3.45 PB

Bolton, Herbert Eugene. Pageant in the Wilderness. Salt Lake City, Utah: UtahState Historical Society, 1950. 239 pp. Covers journey of Father Escalentethrough New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Arizona.(RL-HS)

Bourne, Edward Gaylord. Narratives of DeSoto. Two vols. New York: A. S. Barnes &Co., 1904. A translation of the Spanish historian Oviedo's General History orthe Indies; based on the diary of DeSoto's private secretary, Rodrigo Ranjel;traces DeSoto's expedition from Florida across what is now the United States.(RL-J) OP

Brinkerhoff, Sidney B. and Odie B. Faulk. Lancers for the King. Arizona HistoricalFoundation, 1965. 127 pp. Shows royal regulations for military operations inpresidios in Spanish and English. Illustrated with naps and pictures.(RL-J) IP $8.50 HB

Chavez, Fray Angelico. Origins of New Mexico Families. Santa Fe: HistoricalSociety of New Mexico, 1954. 338 pp. Comprehensive genealogical record oforiginal 17th & 18th century families of New Mexico divided into two sections.(RL-J) OP

Forbes, Jack D. Apache, NavaLo, and Spaniard. Norman, Oklahoma: University ofOklahoma Press, 1960. Describes Spanish thrust forward north from Mexico intoNew Mexico, Arizona, and Texas from 1540 to 1700.(RL-J) IP $5.95 HB

-14-Hispeno History

Gibson, Charles. Ippin in America. New York: Harper and Row Publishers, Trc., 1956

239 pp. A surmary of Spanish America from earliest explorers to modern ,'Ees;discusses power and influence of church and relationship between Spaniards andIndians.(RL-A) IP $6,95 HS $1.95 PB

Hallenbeck, Cleve. Land of the Conquistadores. Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers,

Limited, 1950. 375 pp. Comprehensive history of the New Mexican area which in-

cludes Colorado. "...most of the archives covering the period from 1693 to 1846were burned or otherwise disposed of by the early Anglo-American officials whocould not read Spanish..."(RL-J) OP

Hammond, George P. Don Juan de Onate and the Founding of New Mexico. Santa Fe:

El Palacio Press, 1927. Reviews early expeditions before Onate; containsdetailed account of Onate's expedition; includes actual lists of names anddescriptions of soldiers and people who went to New Mexico in 1600.(RL-HS) OP

Jones, Oakah L., Jr. Pueblo Warriors and Spanish Conquest. Norman, Oklahoma:

University of Oklahoma Press, 1966. 225 pp. Military history of New Mexicocovering period from 1519-1822; covers military use of Indian auxiliaries;covers Spanish-Indian relations.(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB

Keeton, Elsie. "The Story of Dead Man's Canon and of the Espinosas." ColoradoMagazine, VIII (January 1931) 34-38. Gives some ideas as to what motivatedthe Espinosas.(RL-HS)

Lopez, Olibama. "Pioneer Life in the San Luis Valley," Colorado Magazine, XIX(September 1942) 161-167. Descriptive account of early pioneer life of Spanishsettlers in San Luis Valley in Southern Colorado.(RL-J)

Lowery, Woodbury. The Spanish Settlements, 1513-1561. New York: Russell & Russell,

1959. Vol. 1, 515 pp. Detailed account of early Spanish settlements; includesdescriptions of physical aspect of the country and early exploration and settle-ment.

Lowery, Woodbury. The Spanish Settlements - Florida 1562-1574. New York: Russell &

Russell, 1959. Vol. II, 500 pp.

(RL-A) IP $15.00

Lummis, Charles F. The Spanish Pioneers. Chicago: Rio Grande Press, 1963. 292 pp.Detailed history of early Spanish exploration.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB

Meredith, Robert and Brooks E. Smith. Riding with Coronado. Boston: Little, Brown

and Co., 1964. 107 pp. An adaptation of Pedro de Casteneda's eye-witnessaccount of the exploration of the Southwest from the translation of the Relacionde la Jornada de Cibola.(RL-J) IP $3.95 HB

Hispano History

Perrigo, Lynn I. Our Spanish Southwest. Dallas: Banks, Upshaw & Co., 1960.

498 pp. A comprehensive history of the Southwest from pre-colonial days

until the present; contains extensive bibliography.

(RL-HS) OP

Schroeder, Albert H. and Dan S. Matson. A Colony on the Move; Gaspar Castano de

Sosa's Journal, 1590-1591. Sait Lake City: School of American Research; printed

by Alphabet Printing Co., 1965. Complete English translation of Gaspar Castano

de Sosa's journal of his expedition from northern Mexico into New Mexico in 1590

to 1591; contains a commentary with appropriate illustrations and photographs of

the area along with maps of the pueblas covered.

(RL-HS) OP

Spencer, Frank C. The Story of the San Luis Valley. Alamosa: Alamosa Journal,

1925. Treats early Spanish colonization in San Luis Valley.

(RL-J)

Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (trans. and ed.). After Coronado, Spanish Exploration Northeast

of New Mexico from 1696 to 1727. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.

Contains translations of diaries, proceedings of councils of war, judicial inves-

tigations, correspondence, church records and Governors' reports of the Trans-

Mississippi region from 1696 to 1727.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB

Thomas, Alfred B. "Spanish Expeditions into Colorado." The Colorado Magazine, I

(November 1924), 289-300. Gives an account of which early expeditions actually

entered Colorado and which did not.

(RL-HS)

Thomas, Alfred Barnaby (trans. and ed.). Teodoro de Croix and the Northern Frontier

of New Spain, 1776-1783. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press.

Translation of the general report of 1781 with a detailed analysis of each of

the provinces under the command of Commander-General of the interior provinces

in New Spain.(RL-HS) IP $4.50 HB

Tobin, Thomas T. "The Capture of the Espinosas." Colorado Magazine, IX (March 1932)

59-66. A statement dictated by Tom Tobin on the details of the capture of the

Expinosas.(RL-HS)

"Trinidad and Its Environs," Colorado Magazine, VI-VIII, 159. Mentions the founding

of Trinidad and several prominent Mexican families.

(RL-J)

Wagner, Henry R. The Spanish Southwest, 1542 to 1794. Albuquerque, New Mexico:

University of New Mexico Press, 1937. A publication of the Quivira Society in

two volumes containing a definitive collection of bibliography in English,

Spanish, Italian, and German; describes material available in Rome, the archives

in Seville, Mexico City, Santa Fe, New Mexico and elsewhere.

(R1.-A) OP

Winship, George Parker. The Journey of Coronado, 1540 to 1542. New York: A. S.

Barnes Co., 1964. A highly detailed account of the Coronado expedition and

exploration.

(RL-HS) IP $15.00 HB

-16-

HISPANO CULTURE

Caleva. Mexican Cookbook for Quantity Service. New York: Ahrens Publishing Co.,

Inc., 1958 153 pp. A collection of recipes from Mexico.

(RL- ) OP

Deakin, Edwin and Ruth I. Mahood (eds.) A Gallery of California Mission Paintings.

Los Angeles: Ward Ritchie Press, 1966. 58 pp. Collection of E. Deakin's

paintings of 21 California missions with descriptions of each mission.

(RL-J) IP $7.50 HB

Duggan, Ann Schley, Jeanette Schlottmann, and Abbie Rutledge. Folk Dances of the

United States and Mexico. New York: Ronald Press Co., 1948. Contains terns,

counting, music diagrams, analysis of basic steps, and descriptions of costumes.

Pages 99-159 contain Mexican folk dances.

(RL-J) IP $5.00 HB

Espinosa, Jose E. Saints in the Valley. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico

Press, 1960. 122 pp. Traces the history of sacred images in Spanish-Colonial

New Mexico; begins with Coronado's expedition in 1540 through destruction of

religious objects during the Pueblo Revolt of 1680.

(RL-J) IP $7.50 HB

Fergusson, Erna. Mexican Cookbook. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press,

1945. 118 pp. A collection of recipes with detailed directions for preparation

of foods customary to New Mexico.

(RL-J) IP $2.45 HB 95c PB

Hague, Eleanor. Spanish-American Folk Songs. New York: American Folklore Society,

1917. A collection of Spanish-American folk songs.

(RL -J) IP $4.00 HB

Lummis, Charles F. The Land of Poco Tiempo. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico

Press, 1952. 236 pp. Descriptive book about the Southwest; treats customs,

religion, songs, ceremonies, traditions, and history of the people of the

Southwest.(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB $2.50 PB

Robinson, Cecil. With the Ears of Strangers. Tucson: University of Arizona Press,

1963. Interesting work covering treatment of Spanish and Mexicans in American

literature.(RL-A) IP $7.50 HB

Sedillo, Mela. Mexican and New Mexiczn Folkdances. Albuquerque: University of

New Mexico Press, 1937. 47 pp. Includes various folk dances of Mexico and

New Mexico with a description of costumes and dance steps.

(RL-J) OP

Wilder, Mitchell A. Santos, the Religious Folk Art

Marchbanks Press, 1943. Valuable contribution

culture of Spanish Americans; well-illustratedwell as descriptions on how they were made and

(RL-J) OP

of New Mexico. New York:

to materials published onwith pictures of Santos, as

why.

-17-

HISPANO PROBLEMS

Burma, John H. Spanish-Speaking Groups in the United States. Durham, N. C.:

Seeman Printery, 1954. Presents in a single volume significant aspects

of life and conditions of Spanish-speaking groups in U.S.; includes

Spanish-Colonials, Mexican-Americans, Filipino-Americans and Puerto Ricans

in New York.(RL-HS) IP $4.00 HB

Colorado Commission on Spanish-Surnamed Citizens. The Status of Spanish-Surnamed

Citizens in Colorado. January 1967. Report to the Colorado General Assembly

on the problems, conditions and needs of Spanish-surnamed citizens of the state,

including recommendations for legislative action.

Estes, Dwain and David W. Darling (ed.). Texas Conference for the Mexican-American,

Improving Educational Opportunities. San Antonio, 1967. Contains proceedings

of conference, information on status, needs, and recent trends in education

of Mexican-Americans.(RL-HS)

Gamio, Manuel. The Mexican immigrant - His Life Story. Analysis of adjustments

of Mexican immigrants to the United States in decade 1920-1930. Includes

personal life stories.

(RL-HS) OP

Heller, Celia S. Mexican-American Youth, Forgotten Youth at the Crossroads.

New York: Random House, 1966. Describes attitudes, backgrounds and

problems of Mexican-Americans.(RL-A) IP $3.75 HB $1.95 PB

Landes, Ruth. Latin Americans of the Southwest. (Americans All Series).

St. Louis: McGraw-Hill, Inc. 1965. 104 pp. A summary of the history,

status, relationships and needs of the Hispanos; discusses contemporary

organizations and the hopes and aspirations for the Hispanos' future.

(RL-HS) IP $1.48 PB

Madsen, William. Mexican-Americans of South Texas. New York: Holt, Rinehart &

Winston, 1964. 112 pp. Case studies containing details on aspects of

behavior and beliefs of Mexican-Americans and how these beliefs often

interfere with the process of acculturation.

(RL-HS) IP $1.95 PB

Manuel, Herschel Fermin. Spanish-Speaking Children of the Southwest, Their

Education and the Public Welfare. Austin: University of Texas, 1965.

222 pp. Summarizes history of various organizations working for the

improvement of the Hispano.

(RL-A) IP $5.00 HB

Harden, Charles F. and Gladys Meyer. Minorities in American Societa,2nd Ed.

New York: American Book Co., 1962. 497 pp. Chapter on race gives a

summary that is both anthropological and sociological. Chapter 6 deals

with the Hispanos.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB

-18-

McWilliams, Carey. North from Mexico. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co., 1949.

Story of Spanish-speaking people in the U.S. up to 1948; covers history ofrelations between Mexican-Americans and Anglos.(RL-HS) OP

Mexican American Study Project. Advance Report No. 3. Revised bibliography.

May 1967.

(RL-HS) IP $1.00

Rubel, Arthur J. Across the Tracks: Mexican Americans in a Texas City. Austin,

Texas: University of Texas Press, 1966. 266 pp. An examination of thespectrum of interpersonal relations in a cultural perspective as related toMexican-Americans.(RL-HS) IP $6.50 HB

Samora, Julian (ed.). La Reza: Forgotten Americans. University of Notre Dame

Press, 1966. A collection of papers dealing with the status of theSpanish-American in the Southwestern United States.(RL-A) IP $6.00 HB

Sanchez, George I. Forgotten People. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico

Press, 1940. An account of the way of life and problems of Mexican-Americansin New Mexico.(RL-HS) OP

Saunders, Lyle. Cultural Differences and Medical Care: The Case of the Spanish-Speaking People of the Southwest. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1954.Discusses the differences in social relationships and cultural expectationsinvolved in the medical systems of Anglo and Latin groups.(RL-A) OP

-19-

HISPANO BIOGRAPHY AND FICTION

. Adventures in Success, Spanish-speaking Americansof the Southwest. NDEA Institute for Disadvantaged Youth, university ofDenver, 1967. A collection of biographical sketches of outstandingcontemporary Hispanos of the Southwest.(RL-HS)

Baker, Nina Brown. Juan Ponce de Leon. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957.145 pp. A biography about the Spanish explorer.(RL-J) LP $3.07 HE

Coleman, Eleanor S. The Cross and the Sword of Cortes. New York: Simon andSchuster, 1968. 191 pp. A novel of the adventure and conquests of Cortes.(RL-J) IP $3.95 HB

Colorado Department of Education.. Materiales Tocante Los Latinos. Compiled byJoan Harrigan (School Library Consultant). Denver, Colorado, October, 1967.A bibliography of materials on the Spanish-American. (No charge to ColoradoSchool Districts).(RL-J) 50c

Ellithorpe, Harold. Colorado Latin-American Personalities. Denver: A. NL PrintingCo., 1959. 76 pp. Contains biographies of leading Latin-American personalitiesin Colorado compiled by Lino Lopez with biographies written by Ellithorpe.(RL-J)

Knoop, Faith Yingling. Francisco Coronado. Champaign, Illinois: CarvardPublishing Comp* y, 1967. A biography of Coronado.(RL-J) IP $2.32 HB

McGann, Thomas F. "The Ordeal of Cabeza de Vaca," American Heritage, II (December1960), 32-37. Description of the wandering of Cabeza de Vaca and othersurv-vors of the Narvaez expedition.(RL-HS)

Means, Florence Crannell. Teresita of the Valley. Cambridge, Mass.: RiversidePress, 1943. 166 pp. A story of a family and its trials and tribulationsin the San Luis Valley.(RL-J) OP

AMERIND HISTORY

Beal, Merrill D. I Will Fight No Mom Forever. Seattle: University of Washington

Press, 1963. 366 pp. A comprehensive view of the relations between Chief

Joseph of the Nez Perce Indians and the U. S. Government prior to their war;

documented by the use of unpublished diaries, letters, and eye-witness accounts.

(RL-HS) IP $2.95 PB

Catlin, George. North American Indians. Philadelphia: Willis P. Hazard, 1967.

402 pp. It offers a descriptive view of early Indian customs, rituals,

and way of life.(RL-HS) IP $17.50 HB $4.00 PB

Collier, John. The Indians of the Americas. New York: W. W. Norton and Company,

Inc., 1947. 1?(.1 pp. Offers a view of the Indian of the Western Hemisphere

covering battles, conquests, and legislative treatment during a period from

the Paleolithic Era to the late 1940's.

(EL-HS) IP $6.95 HB 75c PB

Forbes, Jack D. apache, Navajo, and Spaniard. Norman: University of Oklahoma

Press, 1960. 304 pp. Describes Spanish movement northward from Mexico during

the period from 1540 to 1700; effects of Spanish invasion on intertribe

relationships are discussed.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB

Forbes, Jack D. Warriors of the Colorado. Norman: University of Oklahoma

Press, 1965. 378 pp. Story of the Quechan (Yuma) Nation and the effect

they had on preventing settlement in California by Spain and Mexico.

(RL-HS) IP S5.95 HB

Foreman, Grant. The Last Trek of the Indians. Chicago: University of Chicago

Press, 1946. 382 pp. Traces the moving of Indians from the Colonial Eastern

states to the midwest and finally to Oklahoma; discusses the corruption and

mismanagement by Indian agents; views the relations between the government

and these Indian tribes.

(RL-HS) OP

Fritz, .)r. Henry E. The Movement for Indian Assimilation, 1860-1890. Philadelphia:

University of Philadelphia Press, 1963. 244 pp. Provides an understanding of

Federal Indian policy during the period of crisis following the Civil War;

contains bibliography of supportive sources for further reading.

(RL-A) IP $6.95 HZ

Guttmann, Allen and Van R. Halsey. State's Rights and Indian Removal: The Cherokee

Nation v. The State of Georgia. Boston: D. C. Heath, 1965. 94 pp. Examines

political maneuvers in attempting to move the Cherokee Indians from their land

in Georgia, using documents involved from the 1780's to the early 1830's;

established policy regarding Indian land in future controversies.

(RL-HS) OPi.

Hodge, Frederick Webb (ed.). Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. Two vols.

New York: Pageant Books, Inc., 1959. A detailed set of books of the

dictionary type containing information on minute topics about Indians.

-21-

Hoig, Stan. The Sand Creek Massacre. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1961.

217 pp. Discusses the battle at $and Creek and investigates the eventsleading to the battle and the debate that followed.

(RL-HS) IP $4.00 MB

Hyde, George E. Indians of the High Plains - From the Prehistoric Period to

Coming of Europeans. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 1959.

231 pp. Detailed information is provided on the early Indian as a member of a

family and a tribe, and how various tribes rose or fell in power.

(RL-A) /P $4.00 HB

Knight, Oliver. Following the Indian Wars. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press,

1960. 348 pp. Provides information on 25 years of Indian wars as reported

by newspaper correspondents that followed armies and participated in battles;

describes more than 1000 fights in twelve major campaigns from Colorado toCalifornia and the Southern Plains to Montana.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 Hit

Martin, Paul S., George I. Quimby, and Donald Collier. Indians Before Columbus.

Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1947. 528 pp. Offers a look at early

America from the view of the archaeologist; separates America into geographic

sections and periods of migration.(RL-A) IP $8.50 HB

McNickle, D'Arcy. The Indian Yribes of the United States, Ethnic and Cultural

Survival. London: Oxford University Press, 1962. 79 pp. Explains why the

American Indian has not adjusted to the life of the United States; speculates

as to what can be expected for the future now that the Indian has become

vocal.(RL-HS) IP $1.20 PB

Peithmann, Irvin M. Broken Peace Pines. Springfield: Charles C. Thomas, 1964.

298 pp. A story of the American Indian beginning with the age of Europeandiscovery and settlement to the Indian of today; expounds the theory that the

Indians were used as pawns in the control of America by all nations that came

into contact with then.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB

Priest, Loring Benson. Uncle Sam's Stepchildren. New Jersey: Rutgers University

Press, 1942. 310 pp. Discusses the programs of the U.S. in caring for the

Indian during the years from 1865 up to the Dawes Act of 1837.

(RL-A) IP $8.50 HB

Rockwell, Wilson. The Utes, a Forgotten People. Denver: Sage Books, 1956.

307 pp. A historical and cultural view of a group of Indians living in the

Rocky Mountains and Western Slope of Colorado.

(RL-HS) OP

Schmitt, Martin F. and Dee Brown. Fighting Indians of the West. New York: Charles

Scribner's Sons, 1948. 362 pp. A story of the struggles of Indians with the

White man.(RL-J) OP

Sprague, Marshall. Massacre, the Tragedy at White River. Boston: Little Brown

and Co., 1.37. 364 pp. nr.te4ls 1879 "Moeker Massacre" in Western

Colorado.(RL-HS) IP $6.75 HB

-22-

Underhill, Ruth. Red Man's America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1955.

400 pp. Describes Indians of a period from the Stone Age to Americancitizenship; covers legislation and philosophy of the government toward the

Indian today.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB

Underhill, Ruth M. The Navajos. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press,

1956. 299 pp. Covers the Navajo, i.e., appearance in the Southwest, their

present-day position as America's largest tribe, and their adjustment to a

new way of life.

(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB

Wedel, Waldo R. Prehistoric Man on the Great Plains. Norman, Oklahoma: University

of Oklahoma Press, 1961. 355 pp. Offers a nontechnical survey of the

prehistoric Great Plains Region; discusses archaeology and environment of the

plains as a home for man; traces history of the Indian tribes that held the

region up to 1800.

(RL-H5) IP $5.95 HB

Werstein, Irving. Massacre at Sand Creek. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,

1963. 186 pp. The story of what happened to a group of Indians encampedaccording to a peace agreement on the Big Sandy in Eastern Colorado and the

years of Indian reprisals that followed this incident.

(RD-HS) IP $3.15 HB

White, Leslie A. (ed.). Lewis Henry Morgan - The Indian Journals, 1859-62.

Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1959. 229 pp. Contains first-

hand observations by L. H. Morgan of life in Kansas and Nebraska Territories

as he traveled among the Indians during the period 1859 to 1862.

(RL-HS) IP $17.50 HB

Wormington, H. IL Ancient Man in North America. Denver: Peerless Printing Co.,

1957. 322 pp. Discusses the various sites of discovery of artifacts throughout

North America.(RL-HS) OP

-23-

AMERIND CULTURAL VALUES

Appell, Claude. Indians. Chicago: Follett Publishing Co., 1965. 69 pp.An illustrated book tells the story of the North American Indian from hisbeginning on this continent; subject divided into cultural groups; discussestheir differences, personalities, endways of life.(RL-J) OP

Coatsworth, Elizabeth. Indian Encounters. New York: Macmillan, 2960. 264 pp.Offers a view of the American Indian life through a collection of poetryand prose chosen by the author.(RL-HS) IP $3.95 Ha

Lmbree, Edwin R. Indians of the Americas. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1939.260 pp. Concentrates on the primitive Indians in America.(RL-J) IP $5.50 HB

Gladwin, Harold Sterling. Men Out of Asia. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company,Inc., 1947. 390 pp. A history of man's migration from Asia and the originof early American civilizations.(RL-J) OP

Yesterday and Today. New York: E. P. Dutton andpp. A quick reference to alphabetically-listed topics;tree; lists various tribes making up specific Indian

Grant, Bruce. American IndianCompany, Inc., 1960. 352includes en Indian familyfamilies.(RL-J) IP $5.95 HB

Hagan, William T. American Indians. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1964.190 pp. Clash of the Indian culture with the White man's culture; tracesthe changing of attitude of the new Americans; contains original photos.(RL-J) IP $5.00 Ha $1.95 PB

Hamilton, Charles (ed). Cry of the Thunderbird. New York: Macmillan Co., 1950.283 pp. Collection of Indian tales; portrays the Indian of the Eastern UnitedStates. It has value in that these tales are told by Indians.(RL-J) OP

Hannum, Alberta. Spin a Silver Dollar. New York: Viking Press, 1945. 173 pp.Story of a young couple who, after graduating from college, move to Arizonato open a trading post where they become acquainted with Navajo customs andsuperstitions.(RL-J) IP $5.00 HB

LaFarge, Oliver. A Pictorial History of the American Indian. New York: CrownPublishers, Inc., 1959. 272 pp. A view into the customs and superstitionsof the Indians of the western hemisphere.(RL-J) OP

Lowie, Robert H. Indians of the Plains. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.1954. 222 pp. Provides an account of the Indians of the American Plains byviewing their way of life from the time of their discovery by the White man tothe assimilation of White man's ways.(RL-HS) IP $1.95 PB

-24-

Merry, Edward S. "Magazine of the Intertribal Indian Ceremonial", Gallup,New Mexico, published annually. 50 p?. Current information is provided onvarious Indian topics; through its color and black and white photos a senseof realism is provided in viewing the Indian in past and present.(RL-J)

Northey, Sue. The American Indian. San Antonio: The Naylor Company, 1962. 228 pp.Describes the ways of life of the American Indian and discusses various tribesaccording to geographic region.(RL-J) IP $4.95 HB

Oswalt, Wendell H. This Land Was Theirs. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1966.560 pp. Offers an anthropological study of Indians of the United States bydescribing the changing life of Indian tribes and tracing their way of lifefrom historic contact to modern times.(RL-A) IP $9.95 HB

Rachlis, Eugene, and John C. Ewers. Indians of the Plains. New York: AmericanHeritage Publishing Company, Inc., 1960. 153 pp. Contains illustrations,maps and historical data about American Indians.(RL-J) IP $4.95 MB

Spicer, Eduard H. Cycles of Conquest - The Impact of Spain, Mexico, and the UnitedStates or. the Indians of the Southwest, 1533-1960. Tucson: University ofArizona Press, 1962. 609 pp. Indepth study of the many "invasions" of Indianclaimed lands; provides an interesting history of each of the tribes and a lookat the effect on Indian culture.(RL-HS) $12.50 HB $5.95 PB

Stirling, M., et al.Society, 1955.American.(RL-J) IP

Indians of the Americas. Washington: The National Geographic432 pp. An illustrated 25,000-year history of the aboriginal.

$7.50 HB

U. S. Department of Interior. "Indians of Arizona". Washington: U. S. GovernmentPrinting office, 1965-66. Approx. 24 pp. each:

"Indians of Montana and Wyoming" 1966"Indians of Oklahoma" 1965"Indians of the Great Lakes Area" 1966"Indians of the Central Plains'"Indians of the Gulf Coast States""Indians of the Dakotas""Indians of California""Indians of the Lower Plateau""Indians of the Northwest"

Offers a brief view of the Indians of a particular section of the U.S. andconcentrates on the Indian today with respect to his economic development,social progress, reservation life, population, and individual problems tobe net in the future.(RL-J) IP 15 each

Washburn, Wilcomb E. (ed.). The Indian and the White Man. New York: New YorkUniversity Press, 1964. 480 pp. A collection of historic documents relatedto the American Indian and his relations with the White man; contains personalrecollections as told by Indians.(RL-HS) IP $7.50 HB $1.95 PB

-25-

Wissler, Clark and L. W. Kluckhohn (eds.). Indians of the United States. New York:

Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc., 1940. 319 pp. A view of the struggle of

the Indians to resist the advancing frontier, and the node of life and modifi-

cations that resulted in residing among white people; valuable as it provides

information on Indian personalities, on Indian life in the late '30's, on the

contribution of the Indian to American culture.

(RL-A) I? $5.95 HB $1.95 PB

Wright, Muriel H. Aij.ai_trAlessf12klahomaAGuidetotheli Norman: University

of Oklahoma Press, 1951. 300 pp. Defines and describes the 75 Indian tribes

that found Oklahoma to be their home; also discusses each tribe's way of life,

customs, and governmental relations.

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB

-16-

AHEaIND BIOGRAPHY

. Biographical and Historical Index of American

Indians and PersAls Involved in Indian Affairs. 8 Vols. Boston: G. K. Hall and

Company, 1966. Annotated index for documents printed through the Departmentof Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs; offers a good source for reports and

data on the American Indian.(RL-HS) IP $6.40 BB

Cooke, David C. Fighting Indians of the West. Ncw York: Dodd, Mead and Co., 1954

208 pp. A srory of 10 of the more important Indian Chiefs that attempted

to prevent r white man from coming onto their lands; gives

reasons for a Indians' hate of the white man.

(RL-.;) IP $6.00 BB

. "Famous Indians - A Collection of Short Biographies"

Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1966. 47 pp. A collection

of thumbnail sketches of famous Indians including Osceola, Red Cloud, Sitting

Bull and Geronimo; supplementary bibliography included.(RL-1)

Kroeber, Theodora. Ishi in Two Worlds. University of California Press, 1961.

255 pp. The story of Ishi, last of the California Indians who, robbed of his

home and people, turns to his enemy, the white man for help and lives out his

final years in the city.(RL-3) IF $5.95 HB $1.95 PB

Marriott, Alice. Maria, the Potter of San Ildefonso. Norman: University of

Oklahoma Press, 1960. 294 pp. True story of Maria Martinez, an Indian who

revived the ancient pueblo craft of pottery-making and brought prosperity to

her community in the Southwestern pueblos.

(RL -J) IP $4.95 HB

Porter, C. Fayne. Our Indian Heritage - Profiles of 12 Great Leaders. Philadelphia:

Chilton Books, 1964. 228 pp. Biographical collection of Indian personalities

that were important in contributing to the Indian heritage; offers a look

at the Indian from the early part of the 15th Century.

(RL-J) IP $4.95 HB

-17-

AMERIND PROBLEMS

Allen, T. D. Navajos Have Five Fingers. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press,1963. 249 pp. Describes contemporary life of the Navajo and the relationsbetween the author and the Navajo Indians.(RL-J) IP $4.95 HB

Bennett, Robert L. Statistics Concerning Indian Education. Department of Interior,Bureau of Indian Affairs, Fiscal Year 1966. Order from Publications Service,Haskell Institute, Lawrence, Kansas. Provides detailed information on IndianEducation and discusses Indian enrollment in public schools, the percentageof Indian graduates, and amount of Indian blood and name of tribe of thoseusing public education.(RL-A)

Brophy, William A. and Sophie D. Aberle. The Indian, America's Unfinished Business."Report of the Commission on the Rights, Liberties, and Responsibilities of theAmerican Indian" Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1967. 236 pp. Con-cerned with the relationship between the Federal Government and the Indian, andoffers a view into Indian values, background, assimilation, population, andthe meaning of the reservation. A factual and concise report on the education,economic development, and tribal government of the American Indian today.(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB

Cohoe, William. A Cheyenne Sketchbook. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1964.96 pp. Lonesome Nan (Cohoe) describes how life changed for the Cheyenne Indiansfollowing their wars with the white man in the late 1870's. The story isformed around sketches and describes life in a prison in Fort Marion, Florida.'RL-J) IP $5.95 HB

Cory, David M. Within Two Worlds. New York: Friendship Press, 1955. 176 pp.Concerned with the struggle made by the Indian in retaining his home and wayof life, and centers on the greater number that have made no advance.(RL-HS) OP

Dale, Edward Everett. The Indians of the Southwest. Norman: University of OklahomaPress, 1949. 283 pp. Reviews one hundred years of federal relations with theIndians in the territory acquired from Mexico in 1848. Illustrated andcontains a bibliography.(BL-HS) OP

Debe, Angie. And Still the Waters Run. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1940.417 pp. Analyzes the manner in which, since the Dawes Act, the five civilizedtribes lost their tribal identity by the passage of laws which made themcitizens of the United States, forbade them self-government and encouraged thebanning of customs; contains a supportive bibliography.(RL-A) IP $9.00 HB

Embry, Carlos B. America's Concentration Camp. New York: David McKay Company, Inc.1956. 242 pp. Discusses today's American Indian life and myths about thereservation with a view into conditions c the reservation.(RL-HS) OP

-98.-

Fey, Harold E. and D'Arcy McKickle. Indians and Other Americans. New York:

Harper and Brothers, 3959. 220 pp. Offers a factual and historical survey

of the forces that have brought the Indian to the late 5J's and the problems

of the Indians of today.(RL-HS) OP

Gessner, Robert. Massacre - A Survey of Today's American Indian. New York:

Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931. 418 pp. Describes life of the

Indian on the reservation with a view into the living conditions, health

and medical attention, moral and physical decay, harsh treatment and life at

a level of low subsistence.

(RL-HS) OP

Hannum, Alberta. Paint the Wind. New York: Viking Presc, 1958. 206 pp. Story

of a young Navajo artist's returning to the reservation after serving in the

U.S. Marines and his attempt to return to reservation life.

(RL-J) IP $5.00 HB

P

Hayakawa, Samuel I. Language in Thought and Action. 2nd Ed. New York: Harcourt,

Brace and World, Inc., 1964. Discusses the impact of semantics on prejudice.

(RL-HS) IP $5.00 HB $3.95 PB

Hillman, Sidney. The Dilemma in Race Relations. New York: Foundation Reprint

Dept., Undated. 11 pp. A look at race relations problems in all areas of

the United States.

(RL-HS)

Jackson, Helen Hunt. A Century of Dishonor. Boston: Ross and Haines, 1885.

514 pp. A critical view of the treatment of the American Indian, beginning

with the Colonial Period of American History and extending up to the 1880's.

It is supported through documents.(RL-HS) IP $8.75 HB $2.25 PB

Josephy, Alvin M. The American Heritage Book of Indians. New York: American

Heritage Publishing Company, Inc., 1961. 424 pp. An illustrated book

offering a century by century view of the Indians as affected by others

around them and the final effect of the conquering white man.

(RL-J) IP $15.00 HB

LaFarge, Oliver. As Long as the Grass Shall Grow. New York: Longmans, Green and

Company, 1940. 140 pp. A brief history of relations between the Indian and

White man formed around a collection of photos; examines the economic, cu?tural

and political aspects of Indian life.

(RL-J) OP

La Farge, Oliver (ed.). The Changing Indian. University of Oklahoma Press, 1943.

184 pp. Provides a view of the Indian during the 40's and considers their

contributions, education, economic status, the policy of the government, and

the future.(RL-J) OP

Macgregor, Frances Cooke. Twentieth Century Indians. New York. G. P. Putnam's

Sons, 1941. 127 pp. A view of the American Indian illustrated with

photographs taken by author.

(RL-J) OP

-29-

Mannypenny, George W. Our Indian Wards. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke and Company,

1880. 436 pp. Describes the struggle that resulted in the removal of the

Indian from his land and the new life and loss of identity of the tribes

acquired in submission.(RL-HS) OP

McWilliam-4, Carey. Brothers Under the Skin. Boston: Little Brown and Co., 1951.

364 pp. A discussion of the status of minorities with emphasis on the

fact that to is is a critical national problem which also affects our

international relations. Contains chapters entitled: "The Forgotten

Mexican," "The Non-vanishing Indian," and "The Negro Problem."

(RL-HS) IP $5.95 HB $1.95 PB

Mead, Margaret.Survival ofof Glencoe,(RL-A)

"Culture Change and Character Structure." Identify and Anxiety:

the Person in Mass Society. Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press

1960

IP $8.50 HB $4.50 PB

Mencken, H. L. The American Language. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1923. 489 pp.

Mencken, in three volumes, traces the development of an "American language."

It might be of particular interest to those attempting to determine the

source of American slang.(RL-A) IP $25.00 HB $9.00 Text

Race and Race Problems Pamphlets. Public Affairs Committee, Inc. Titles are:

The Races of Mankind, Benedict & Weltfish, 1956 (#85). 28 pp. Who's on

First?, Jack Mofley, 1956 (233). 28 pp. Who's My Neighbor?, Algernon D.

Black, 1958 (0273). 28 pp.

(RL-HS)

Richter, Conrad. Light in the Forest. Knopf and Co., 1953. 179 pp. A novel

of a White boy raised by Indians.

(RL-J) IP $3.95 HB

Steiner, Stan. The New Indians. New York: Harper Row Publishers, Inc., 1968.

348 pp. Treats the conflict between Indian and white man during the

time of unrest to present.

(RL-A) IP $7.95 HB

Underhill, Ruth. Here Come the Navaho. Lawrence, Kansas: Haskell Press.

United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs, 1953.

285 pp. Illustrated history of the Navaho people offers a historical view

into their problems and way of life as a parallel to the history of the

United States and contains a good bibliography.

(RL-J)

Vander Zanden, James W. American Minority Relations. New York: Ronald Press

Co., 1966. A general treatment of minority relations in the United States.

Contains an extensive bibliography.

(RL-A) IP $7.75 HB

Verrill, A. Hyatt. The Real American. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1954.

309 pp. Provides an understanding of the American Indian and his reaction

to the white man.(RL-HS) OP

SCHOOL SEGREGATION IN COLORADO

Council Journal, Colorado Territory, 5th Session, 1866. pp. 89-91. Address ofGovernor A. Cummings to Council with regard to taxation of Negroes for supportof public schools.(RL-J)

Council Journal, Legislative Assembly, Territory of Colorado, 6th Session, December1866. Address of Governor Cummings in which he mentions that the practice oftaxing Negroes for support of public school, while preventing their childrenfrom attending, had been rectified by the legislature.(RL-HS)

Denver Republican, September 13, 1883, p. 2, c. 2. Segregated schools discussed inarticle on "Early Journalism" by William N. Byers, founder of the RockyMountain News. An account of history of journalism in Denver since 1858.(RL-J)

General Laws of Territory of Colorado, First Sessions, 1861. v. 160, Secs. 41 and44. Discriminatory act passed by first Colorado Legislative Assembly taxingNegro property for the support of public schools, yet preventing Negrochildren from attending.(RL-HS)

Hensel, Donald Wayne. "A History of the Colorado Constitution in the NineteenthCentury." Unpublished Master's Thesis, the University of Colorado, Boulder,Colorado, 1957. 216 pp. Mentions that the Colorado Constitutional Convention,1876, prohibited racial segregation in public schools.

Rocky Mountain News, March 25, 1924, p. 14. Denver School Board adopts a policy ofholding separate social hours and school-sponsored activities for Negroes andUhices.(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, February 8, 1927, p. 7. Denver's Park Hill area wantsNegro schools.(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, April 19, 1959. Centennial Edition, p. 44E. Discussessegregation in the Denver Public Schools.

Session Laws of Colorado, Eighth Session, 1870. p. 145, Sec. 34. Schoolsegregation law passed by territorial legislature for school districtsnumbering more than 25 or more Negro children.(RL-A)

The Constitution of the State of Colorado. Article IX, Sec. 2. Nc mention made ofcolor distinction in providing for the gratuitous education of state residents

between the ages of six and twenty-one.(RL-HS)

The Constitution of the State of Colorado. Article IX, Sec. 8. Racediscrimination in public schools forbidden.(RL-HS)

-31-

PARTIES POLITICS AND THE VOTE

The Costitution of the State of Colorado. Article V41, Sec. 1. Suffragegiven to all =ale citizens 21 years of age.(BL-HS)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, January 11, 1867, p. 1. Editorial position ofnewspaper is one of opposition to Negro suffrage; takes issue with ColoradoDemocratic Party over its purported support of Negro suffrage.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, January 26, 1867, p. 1. Editorial is sharply criticalof Colorado Governor Cummings for his use of Negro suffrage and equalityas a tool in the fig hr for statehood.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, February 3, 1867, p. 1. Editorial once more blastsGovernor Cummings and his Copperhead friends for using Negro equality andsuffrage as a political tool in the fight for statehood.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, July 17, 1872, p. 4. Letter to the editors byH. O. Wagoner, iiesio citizen, regarding protest meeting held by Denver:iegroes on July 15, 1872. Interesting in light of nature of Wagoner'sremarks concerning the treatment and neglect of Negroes by the RepublicanParty.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, September 9, 1873, p. 4. Article relates proceedingsof Negro political meeting during which Mr. Barney Ford, a Negro candidatefor the territorial legislature, spoke. Mr. Ford was an ardent supporter of theRepublican Party.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, October 10, 1880, p. 11. Letter written to the editorsregarding the importation of hundreds of Negro Republicans from Kansas intoColorado to insure a Republican victory at the polls.(RL-J)

Daily Rocky Mountain News, October 23, 1885, p. 8. Information given regardingthe establishment of an independent Republican Party headquarters by a groupof Negro leaders in the Denver community.(RL-J)

Denver Republican, October 6, 1892, p. 2, c. 2. Discusses "Colored RepublicanClub" in Colorado Springs.(RL-J)

Golden City Colorado Transcript, December 19, 1866. Excerpts from "Second AnnualMessage of Governor Cummings to Legislative Assembly" regarding equality ofpolitical rights for the Negro. Governor Cummings in this address asksthe legislature to lift the ban on the right of Negroes to vote and givethem the franchise.

-

(RL-J)

?arties, Politics and the Vote

-32-

Gunnison Daily Review Press, September 12, 1882, p. 1, c. 3. A few Negro votersof the county endeavor to create an entirely Negro county ticket in thefield.

(RL-J)

Hall, Frank. History of Colorado. Chicago: The Blakely Printing Co., 1889,Vol. 1, p. 402.

Nothershead, Harmon. "Negro Rights in Colorado Territory," Colorado Magazine,XL (July /963) 212-223. Discusses Negro rights in the territory ofColorado, 1859-1867, with special emphasis placed on the controversy overNegro suffrage which ensued during the struggle for statehood in 1864 and1865.

(RL-HS)

Rocky Mountain News, (Weekly), February 20, 1867. Account of celebration byNegroes for suffrage.

Rocky Mountain News, (Weekly), April 10, 1867. Negro citizens meeting duringwhich tine resolutions were passed concerning thanks for protection atpolls at recent election; pledged allegiance to Territory of Colorado;acknowledged themselves in favor of early statehood.(RL-J)

Tines, Nay 22, 1901, p. 3, c. 8; and Nay 29, 1901, p. 2, c. 1. Discussions ofactivities of the "Colored Central State Democratic Club."(RL-J)

-33--

DISCRIMINATION AND CIVIL RIGHTS

Brown, George. "Jim Crow Series." The Denver Post, beginning September, 1951.Examines "Jim Crowism" in Denver during the early 1950's.

() L-J)

Central City Daily R.....3ister Call, May 9, 1888, p. r, c. 4. Negro man will suebecause he was refused service in a local bar.(RL-J)

Colorado Catholic, January 4, 1894, p. 4. Mentions a Negro council of the AmericanProtective Association in Denver; APA was a strongly anti-Catholic movementover the nation in the 1890's.(RL-J)

Denver Tribune-Republican, February 6, 1885. Damage claim for $10,000 filedagainst Tabor Grand Opera House by Negro man named Hawkins. Claim isbased upon segregated seating in the theatre.(RL-J)

Harvey, James Rose. "Negroes in Colorado." Unpublished Master's Thesis. TheUniversity of Denver, Denver, 1941, pp. 64-65. Negroes stage demonstrationin Denver's Washington Park on August 17, 1939, in protest of segregatedswimming.(11.-MS)

Porter, Kenneth. Western Folklore, XXIV (July 1965), 191-198. Mr. Porterdiscusses racism as used in children's rhymes and sayings in central Kansasduring his boyhood years, 1910-1918; author concludes that the use ofderogatory terns in schoolboy fashion did not contribute to overt racism unless"reinforced" by racist influences of a more conscious nature."(RL-HS)

Rocky Mountain News, November 5, 1931, p. 4, Negro recreational center isproposed.(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, March 25, 1945, p. 25. Colorado legislators find no evidenceof race discrimination.(RL-J)

Rocky Mountain News, April 4, 1965, p. 13. Fair Housing Bill passes and issent to Governor Love for signature.(RL-J)

The Denver Post, September 23, 1912. Kalamath Strect residents protest Negroneighbors.(RL-J)

The Denver Post, October 31, 1922, p. 9. Steps are taken to prevent Negroencroachment in residential neighborhoods.(RL-J)

The Denver Post, June 24, 1925, p. 5. Ku Klux Klan advocates repeal of ColoradoCivil Rights Laws.

(RL-J)

-34-

The Denver Post, June 6, 19L7. p. 3. States that racial bias is on the

decrease.(RL-J)

The Denver Post, December 26, 1947. p. 6. Editorial stating that prejudice isbuilding and that the committee on race relations nas done a great dis-

service to the people.

(R1.-.1)

The D2nver P'st, October 7, 1957. Colorado Supreme Court voids anti-race

land pacts.(RL-J)

The Denver Post, March 19, 1959, p. 3. State Senator George Brown leads fight

on anti-discrimination housing bill.(RL-J)

Tines, October 17, 1898, p. 8, c. 3. Police chief prohibits Negro from working

in a certain district of the city.(RL-J)

Tines, May 1, 1899, p. 2, c. 1. Mentions race war as having been waged at recent

meting of the Ministerial Alliance. States that the question of the

relation of the white and black races confronts America.

Tines, April 26, 1922, p. 3. YMCA for Negroes is proposed.

(RL-J)

Code

ADL

CCRC

CEA

CSC

CU

DPL

DPS

ESEA

NCCJ

NEA

vzC

-3; -

AUDIO-VISUAL MATEAIALS LIST

of

SOURCE INFORMATION

Source and Contact Person

Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith

Miss Emmy Zamora 623-7157

Colorado Civil Rights CommigAionMiss Josie Gurule 222-9911

Colorado Education Association771-4240

Colorado State College

Greeley, Colorado

University of ColoradoAudio- Visual Department 443-2211

Denver Public LibraryAudio-Visual Department 266-0851

Denver Public Schools, Special Services266-2255, Ext. 426

Denver Public Schoola, ESEA CenterMrs. Lela Francis, 266-2255, Ext. 396

National Conference of Christians and

Jews, Mr. Ted Yoder

National Education Association

Visual Aids Center, 744-3329

ABBREVIATION CODE

B&W - Black and White

C - Color

Loaning Information

Filmstrips freeSee ADL rental listfor fees on films

Pick up and returnbasis if available

Postage only orfree if picked up

Fees listed inMountain PlainsEducational MediaCouncil Film Catalog

Fees listed inMountain PlainsEducational MediaCouncil Film Catalog

One day loan$.25 per reel

See audio-visualchairman

No cost if availablefor pick up

$1.00 per film plustransportation, orcan be picked up

See PublicationsCatalog

Rent plus postage

P - grades 1-3I - Grades 4-6J - Grades 7-9S - Grades 10-12A - Adult and College

-36-

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS

FILMS

PIJSA1011 min (C)

ADL

IJ

12 in (C)

DPS

ONE PEOPLE

This color cartoon depicts the contributions ofdifferent nationality groups to our American cultures.

INDIAN POW-VOW

Tne film is a traditional treatment of someIndian customs.

CAST THE FIRST STONE

42 r-In (n41)

ADL Iutarieus with Americans whose lives have beenaffected by prejudice and discrimiuntionare documented in this film.

60 min.ADL

18 min (B&W)Encyclopedia Britannica

NBC WHITE PAPER ON SIT-INS

Students demand hunan and civil rights through thesit-in movement in southern U.S. Negro colleges.

BOOKER T. WASHINGTON

The Negro's struggle to free his fellow Negroes frompoverty, fear, and ignorance is portrayed in thisfilm.

IJSA BOUNDARY LINES

111/2 min. (C)

ADL Color, art, and music are used in this cartoon toexplore imaginary boundary lines that divide people.

IJSA BROTHERHOOD OF MAN

ll min. (C)ADL An animated cartoon reveals the scientific facts of

the essential alikeness of people.

IJSA GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER12 min. (C)DPS The study of a great Negro; explores his philosophy,

his work, and his c6nzributions to the field ofscience.

IJSA I WONDER WHY

5 min. (B&W)ADL This film describes a Negro child's feeling

about prejudice.

-37-

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS- (Films)

JSA THE CHALLENGE

284 min. (B&W)ADL A writer and photographer team, representing the

President's Committee on Civil Rights, tours theUnited States collecting data on Civil Rights.

JSA RACIAL DIFFERENCES

10 min. (B&W)AFL-CIO Scientifid di scoveries and theories concerning

skin color difference are presented.

JSA42 Mill. (B&W)

ADL

WALK IN MY SHOES

This film by ABC television describes the strugglefor racial equality in our country.

BEGINNINGS OF CONSCIENCE

16 min. (B&W)DPS The conscience of an adult is traced to the process of

socialization as a child. It studies experiences withthe forces of exclusion, force and ridicule.

SA ALL THE WAY HOME

2911 min. (B&W)

ADL-CCRC A study of people's fears and anxieties when faced withthe prospect of a Negro family buying a home in an all-whiteneighborhood.

SA BROKEN MASK

Broadcasting Film Corp. A Negro deals with barriers of skin color prejudice.

SA THE BURDEN OF TRUTH

67 min. (B&W)ADL & CCRC A Negro family moves into a white suburban community:

a mob protests. Through flashbacks, we cr.scover theproblems and the prejudices that the young Negrofather faced in growing up.

SA THE CHALLENGE TO AMERICA

25 min. (B&W)ADL & CEA This film explores the role of education in intergroup

relations.

SA DATE WITH LIBERTY

20 min. (B&W)ADL Key concepts of liberty are illustrated.

SA EPITAPH FOR JIM CROW

30 min. ea. (B&W)ADL & CCRC Five films which can be used as a series or as independent

entities to illustrate the dynamics of intergroup relations

in the U.S. If focuses on the historical and currentsituation of the Negro American.

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS (Films)

SA10 min.DPS

SA32 min. (B&W)DPS & CCRC

SA60 min. total (20 min. ea.)DPS & CCRC - FreeMcGraw Hill

SA30 min. ea.National Ed. Tel.Indiana UniversityC.U.

SA35 min. (11.1.1)

ADL

SA50 min. (B&W)ADL

SA25 min.AFL-CIO

A60 min.Audio Visual CenterIndiana University

A

Jewish CommunityRelations Council

A50 min. (B&W)ESEA

-38-

HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT

Visual examples are shown of heredity andenvironment at work.

HIGH WALL

This case study describes a young bigot, indicatinghow he became "infected" and how his home lifefostered the development of prejudice.

THE HISTORY OF THE NEGRO IN AMERICA

Part IPart IIPart III

1619-1860 Out of Slavery- 1661 -1877 Civil War and Reconstruction

- 1877 to date of Freedom Movement

HISTORY OF THE NEGRO PEOPLE SERIES

Heritage of the NegroThe Negro and the SouthSlaveryThe Vanishing NegroFree at LastNew MoodOur Country TooThe Child ReLurns Home

THE INHERITANCE

The film traces the long, bitter struggle of workersagainst economic exploitation. It demonstratesthrough footage and still photographs,.the strugglefor social, economic and cultural change.

NO HIDING PLACE

The film exposes the evils of "block busting."

SEGREGATION IN THE SCHOOLS

Discussion of Supreme Court Rulings on Segregation.

AMERICAN CRISIS: MARKED FOR FAILURE

Leading educators are interviewed to focus attentionon a preschool pilot program in Harlem, New York.

COMMON FALLACIES ABOUT GROUP DIFFERENCES

Known scientific evidence is used to analyze sevencommon notions about races, heredity and groupdifferences. The presentation reveals the fallaciesof these notions.

INCIDENT ON WILSON STREET

Documentary of a group of preschoolers in an enrichedprogram for underprivileged children.

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS (Films)

A28 min. (B&W)DPS

-:3.9

MORNING FOR JIMMY

A young Negro boy encounters racial discriminationwhile seeking employment.

A PORTRAIT OF A DISADVANTAGED CHILD16-19 min. ea. PORTRAIT OF THE INNER CITYDPS & ESEA PORTRAIT OF THE INNER CITY SCHOOL: A PLACE TO LEARN

3 CRISIS IN LEVITTOWN311/2 min. (B&W)

ADL A series of interviews are conducted with residentsof Levittown, Pennsylvania. The residents speakboth for and against the integration of the firstNegro family that seeks to move into thecommunity.

FACE OF THE SOUTH30 min. (C)ADL This film is a historical analysis of the economic

and social factors which have made the south whatit is today.

FELICIA1231 min. (B&W)ADL A study of the corrosive effects of prejudice.

caused by conditions in Watts.

87 min. (B&W)ADL

INTRUDER IN THE DUST

William Faulkner's novel is the basis of this film.True to character and locale it reveals a glimpseof race relations in the south.

83 min. (B&W) THE LAWLESSFeature FilmADL Racial discrimination is indicated as the cause of the

problems of a boy from a group of Mexican field workersin a California Town.

20 min. (C)

Dibie-Dash Productions,Hollywood.

NEW HORIZONS IN VOCATIONS FOR MINORITY GROUPS

Education is credited with the achievement ofMexican-Americans and other minority groups.

THE NON-VIOLENT50 min. (B&W)ADL The constitutionality of public demonstrations is

put to the test.

50 min. (B&W)DPL

PROFILES IN COURAGE

The film studies problems of the American Negro in19th century America. Many of the issues are stillapplicable today.

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS (Mrs)

SA6 C 2 (B&W)

16 mm. film seriesFilm Associates11559 Santa Monica Blvd.Los Angeles, California

"OF BLACK AMERICA"

This series of films presents the history ofblack Americans and their contributions to ourway of life. It deals with the feelings andattitudes of black people toward themselvesand toward whites.

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS

FILMSTRIPS

I30 FramesDPS

IDPS

IJ23 Frames

IJ44 Frames (C)

IJ47 Frames (B&W)DPS

IJ

27 Frames (C)DPS

IJS

23 Frames (C)DPS

IJS

Dr. Ethel J. AlpenfelsWarren Schloat Prod.Pleasantville, N.Y.

10570

IJS

14 Frames (C)

PIONEERS AND SETTLERS OF LOUISIANA AND TEXAS

SPAIN IN THE NEW WORLD (Building a New Nation)

AFTER THE WHITE MAN CAME (Story of American Indian)

Depicts the downward progress of the American Indianafter the encroachment of the whites on his land.

CORTEZ CONQUERS MEXICO (Discovery and Exploration of America)

INDIAN OF THE SOUTHWEST

Studies of S. W. Indians including history of settlementby Spanish, culture of tribes, dwellings, mode of life,industries and handicrafts.

Part I Customs of Tribes in Region

Part II Customs of Tribes in Region

CORTEZ (Spanish Explorer)

Describes the exploration and discoveries of this famousSpanish explorer.

CORONADO (Spanish Explorer)

Describes the exploration and discoveries of this famousSpanish explorer.

EXPLODING THE MYTHS OF PREJUDICE

SPANISH EXPLORATION (Age of Discovery and Exploration)

Presents sequence of maps showing great movements of this agein relation to their geographic backgrounds. Each map presentsa single concept.

THE AMERICAN NEGRO

This is a fine documentary about Negroes and their achievements.

-42-

AUDIO- VISUAL MATERIALS (Filmstrips)

J47 FramesNCCJ

J50 FramesADL NCCJ

JSPepsi-Cola RadioReproductions

Detroit, Michigan

JS27 Frames (C)

DPS

JS54 Frames (C)Jewish Labor

Committee

6 Filmstrips3-12 in. 33 rpm

recordsCoronet

6 FilmstripsFilm Associates11559 Santa Monica

Blvd.

Los Angeles, Calif.

38 Frames ea.

MCGraw -Hill

EARLY AMERICANS

History and development of problems for groups such as Indian,

Mexican, and Spanish Americans. The effort to solve them is

also included.

FREE TO BE DIFFERENT

Challenges to Americans to appreciate cultural and religious

differences.

ADVENTURES IN NEGRO HISTORY, Vol. 1 & 11

SOCIAL CHANGE

Explains reforms which took place in business and education's

attitude toward the Negro and in the general culture between

1865 and 1900.

WE ARE ALL BROTH KS

Cartoon form "Races of Mankind" presents scientific facts

regarding race.

AMERICAN INDIAN LEGENDS

How Summer Came to the NorthlandHow the Indian Learned from the AnimalsThe Sons of CloudsGreat Rabbit and the Moon ManHow the Raven Brought the SunThe Legend cf Starboy

THE AMERICAN NEGRO PATHFINDERS

Dr. Ralph BuncheJustice Thurgood MarshallGeneral Benjamin DavisA. Philip RandolphDr. Mary McLeod BethuneDr. Martin Luther King

THE HISTORYOF THE AMERICAN NEGRO - Series 8

From Africa to AmericaSlavery in the Young American RepublicSlavery in a House DividedThe Negro in the Gilded AgeThe Negro Faces the 20th CentruyThe Negro Fights for the Four FreedomsThe Threshold of Equality

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS (Filmstrips)

o Filmstrips w/read script (C)

Social Studies SchoolSer.

4455 Lennox Blvd.Inglewood, Calif.

90304

Dr. Ethel J.Alpenfels

Warren Schloat Prod.Pleasantville, N.Y.

10570

56 Framesw/script

INDIAN CULTURES OF THE AMERICAS

MINORITIES HAVE MADE AMERICA GREAT

OUTSTANDING AMERICANS OF NEGRO ORIGIN

Full color portraits and thumbnail sketches of

36 outstanding Negro-Americans.

AUDIO- VISUAL MATERIALS

PHONOGRAPH RECORDS

AMERICAN INDIAN DANCES Folkways PD 6510

GLORY OF NEGRO HISTORY Folkways FC 7752

GREAT NEGRO AMERICANS Vol 1.

Ten shorts on outstanding Anerican Negroes in all fields.

GREAT NEGRO AMERICANS 18R M-41706

MUSIC OF AMERICAN INDIANS

MUSIC OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN OF THE SOUTHWEST FE 4420

THE NEGRO FAMILY

NEGRO FOLK SONGS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Folkways 7133

NEGRO WOMEN, THE Folkways GH 5523

JOHN BROWN'S BODY

JOHN F. KENNEDY AND THE NEGRO

OUR COMMON HERITAGE DL 9072

SING ALONG IN SPANISH

SING, SAY AND SPEAK SPANISH YL 219

THE NEGRO PEOPLE IN AMERICA

WAYS OF MANKIND Title III ESEA DPS

-45-

AUDIO-VISUAL MATERIALS

TAPES

State Dept of Ed. COUNT DOWN FOR TOMORROW

J. Fuybay, Ph.D.Lecture on Change

State Dept of Ed. WHAT iS POVERTY

Dramatization on Poverty

TITLE 1, VT No.1 50 min. HISTORY AND CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE NEGRO AND WHI

Mrs. Hattie CrossleyWE SHOULD RECOGNIZE THESE CONTRIBUTIONS

TITLE I, VT No. 2 60 min. HISTORY AND CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE SPANISH AND WHY

Dr. Horace Ulibarri

TITLE I, VT No. 3 60 min.Or. Thomas Pettigrew

WE SHOULD RECOGNIZE THESE CONTRIBUTIONS

HUMAN RELATIONS IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

TITLE I, VT No. 5 45 min. INACCURACIES OF TESTS RESULTS WITH DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS

irs. Jessie Maxwell

COE WORKSHOP VT No. 2. CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION REPORT

Mr. Henry Talioferro