Box Special Collections Miscellaneous Manuscript Collection Box 2
Contains 18 Results:
The Ku Klux Klan and Mer Rouge, 1920s
The Ku Klux Klan and Mer Rouge is a printed propaganda piece from the 1920s that defends the organization's ideology, and promotes an anti-immigrant, anti-Catholic political position. It is written by an anonymous author.
Thomas B. Macaulay letter, 1857 (typescript copy), undated
The collection consists of a typescript copy of an 1857 letter written to Congressman H.S. Randall of New York in which Macaulay discusses his ideas on Jeffersonian democracy.
Robert Lathan letters, 1911, 1913, 1920
"The Black Whale Captured in Charleston Harbor, January 1880", 1885
College of Charleston Library vertical file on the Citizens' Councils of America, 1973-1986
The collection consists of materials gathered by the staff of the Robert Scott Small Library at the College of Charleston in Charleston, South Carolina. It includes numerous documents published by the Citizens' Councils of America between 1973 and 1986.
College of Charleston Library vertical file on the Citizens' Councils of America, 1973-1986
The collection consists of materials gathered by the staff of the Robert Scott Small Library at the College of Charleston in Charleston, South Carolina. It includes numerous documents published by the Citizens' Councils of America between 1973 and 1986.
Slave passes for Mack and Ellack, 1843, undated
The folder contains two slave passes written by Sarah H. Savage and dated 1843. One pass gives an enslaved person named Mack permission to sleep in Bedon's Alley. The other pass, which has been penned through, gives an enslaved person named Ellack permission to sleep in Stoll's alley for three months.