George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Special Collections & Archives2006 By George Mason University Libraries. All rights reserved.
Finding aid prepared by FINDING AID AUTHOR
There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Esther Brinch Cuban Revolution documents must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.
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Esther Brinch Cuban Revolution documents, C0113, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.
Accquired by Special Collections and Archives before 2008.
Processed by Special Collections and Archives staff. EAD markup completed by Eron Ackerman and Jordan Patty in August 2009. Further processed by Emily Curley in June 2017. Finding aid updated by Emily Curley in June 2017.
Esther Brinch served as a translator for the Danish government during the 1960s in Cuba. She was a member of multiple organizations, including the World Peace Council and the Women's International Democratic Federation. Brinch's work covered the Cuban Revolution, a violent upending of authoritarian President Fulgencio Batista who was replaced by socialist (and later Communist-backed) Fidel Castro. Her work also covered the Cuban Missile Crisis, a two-week period between October 16 and October 28, 1962 in which tensions escalated between the United States and the Soviet Union over Soviet nuclear missiles stored in Cuba, about 90 miles from the coast of the United States.
This collection contains 12 documents on revolutionary Cuba from the library of Danish Communist Party activist Esther Brinch. Materials include pamphlets, manuscripts, telegrams, and photographs.
Organized by subject.
Special Collections Research Center also holds the Francis J. McNamara papers and the French Communist Party poster collection.