Guide to the Philip Levy civil rights collection, 1948-1953 Philip Levy civil rights C0121

Guide to the Philip Levy civil rights collection, 1948-1953

A Collection in
Special Collections Research Center
Accession Number COLLECTION NUMBER


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George Mason University Libraries

2006 By George Mason University Libraries. All rights reserved.

Processed by: Special Collections Research Center Staff

Repository
George Mason University. Special Collections Research Center.
Collection number
C0121
Title
Philip Levy civil rights collection 1948-1953
URL:
http://scrc.gmu.edu/levy.html
Physical Characteristics
1 linear foot
Creator
Philip Levy
Language
English
Abstract
This collection contains meeting minutes and grant proposals from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) as well as correspondence on civil rights and race relations between senators and NAACP members. Many of the materials deal with the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC), issued by Franklin Roosevelt in 1941 as executive order 8802.

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

There are no access restrictions.

Use Restrictions

There are no restrictions on personal use. Permission to publish material from the Philip Levy civil rights collection must be obtained from Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.

Preferred Citation

Philip Levy civil rights collection, C0121, Special Collections Research Center, George Mason University Libraries.

Acquisition Information

Collection donor unknown.

Processing Information

Processed by Special Collections Research Center staff. EAD markup completed by Eron Ackerman and Jordan Patty in August 2009. Box list created and EAD updated by Amanda Brent in 2017.

Biographical Information

Philip Levy was a government official in several capacities, serving on the legal staff of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and as counsel to Senator Robert F. Wagner. Levy practiced private law in Washington, D.C. during a career that spanned 1934-1970. He was directly involved with the development of national labor policy in the United States in the 1930s and 1940s, and maintained a continued interest in labor policy throughout his long career.

Scope and Content

This collection contains meeting minutes and grant proposals from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) as well as correspondence on civil rights and race relations between senators and NAACP members. Many of the materials deal with the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC), issued by Franklin Roosevelt in 1941 as executive order 8802 partly in response to protests organized by A. Philip Randolph. The bill was blocked from federal legislation by the conservative coalition in Congress, but five states passed their own FEPC bills: New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Washington. Several documents represented in this collection come from Connecticut.

The materials in this collection include a 1948 letter on civil rights from President Harry Truman to the Congress; a 1949 statement of Irving M. Engel on behalf of the American Jewish Committee to the House Committee on Labor and the Education Subcommittee on Discrimination in Employment; correspondence of Senator William Benton to Philip Levy, Walter White, and an op-ed to the New York Times; a 70 page "Program for Progress in Race Relations" submitted in 1951 by William H. Hastie, Arthur B. Spingarn, and Walter White on behalf of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.; pamphlets from 1949 criticizing the Fair Employment Practices Commission on the bases of reverse discrimination and biological inequality between and among races; statements of Senator Herbert H. Lehman regarding civil rights, including an address to a Dinner of the American Civil Liberties Union; 1951 meeting minutes of the NAACP; and letters from the NAACP's Legal Defense and Education Fund to the Ford Foundation's Program Planning Division requesting support for research on unequal opportunities and world opinion on racial discrimination in the United States. The collection also includes various newsclippings and articles about race relations and civil rights during this time. Particular focus is paid to race relations in Washington, D.C.

Arrangement

Arranged by subject by Special Collections Research Center staff.

Related Material

Special Collections Research Center also holds the James H. Laue papers.

Index Terms

    Persons:

  • Benton, William, 1900-1973.
  • Lehman, Herbert H.
  • Levy, Philip.
  • Weaver, Robert C.
  • White, Walter.
  • Corporate Names:

  • American Jewish Committee.
  • National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
  • United States. Committee on Fair Employment Practice.
  • Subjects:

  • African Americans--Civil rights--History--20th century.

Significant Persons Associated With the Collection

  • Benton, William, 1900-1973.
  • Lehman, Herbert H.
  • Levy, Philip.
  • Philip Levy
  • Weaver, Robert C.
  • White, Walter.

Contents List

Box: 1 Folder: 1
Senator William Benton Correspondence and Federal Fair Employment Practice Act (FEPA) Speech Documents,
1950-1952

Box: 1 Folder: 2
Republican Party's Campaign Platform on Civil Rights,
July-August 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 3
Newspaper Clippings and Congressional Report on Closure/Cloture in Senate,
August 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 4
Civil Rights Legislation and FEPC Act in Connecticut Documents,
1949-1950

Box: 1 Folder: 5
"Connecticut State Inter-racial Commission-Highlights of the Annual Report",
1948-1949

Box: 1 Folder: 6
Congressional Record,
June 1948

Box: 1 Folder: 7
"Statement of Irving M. Engel on Behalf of the American Jewish Committee To the House Committee on Labor and Education Subcommittee on Discrimination in Employment",
May 25, 1949

Box: 1 Folder: 8
Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) Notes, Correspondence, Report, and News Clippings,
1951-1952

Box: 1 Folder: 9
NAACP Committee Presentation to the Ford Foundation Documents,
August 1950-December 1951

Box: 1 Folder: 10
Foreign Relations Documents,
1952

Box: 1 Folder: 11
Senator Herbert H. Lehman Addresses, Remarks, and Statements,
1950-1952

Box: 1 Folder: 12
NAACP Correspondence,
1951-1952

Box: 1 Folder: 13
Newsclippings on Segregation and Race,
1950-1961

Box: 1 Folder: 14
Handwritten Notes,
circa 1950s

Box: 1 Folder: 15
"The Poll-Tax Question",
February 15, 1947

Box: 1 Folder: 16
"Preamble to the Proceedings of the Third Annual Conference on Civil Liberties",
February 23-24, 1950

Box: 1 Folder: 17
Department of Defense Press Release-"Integration in Far East [Korea] to be Completed by Army",
July 26, 1951

Box: 1 Folder: 18
"News from NAACP" Newsletters on "Major Candidates on Civil Rights" and "Records of Senators Sparkman, Nixon",
July 31, September 11, 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 19
"A Program for Progress in Race Relations" by William H. Hastie, Arthur B. Spingarn, and Walter White Manuscript and Responses,
May-June, 1951

Box: 1 Folder: 20
Factual Supplement to "A Program for Progress in Race Relations",
1951

Box: 1 Folder: 21
"Proposals" by Dr. Robert C. Weaver - Proposal for Support of a Research Program on Hispanic Americans,
circa 1950

Box: 1 Folder: 22
Proposed Civil Rights Projects and Handwritten Notes,
circa 1950

Box: 1 Folder: 23
"Quizzing Nixon" - Interview with Then-Senator Nixon - U.S. News and World Report,
August 29, 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 24
"Report on Korea: The Shameful Story of the Courts Martial on Negro Gis" Pamphlet by Thurgood Marshall,
April 1951

Box: 1 Folder: 25
"Segregation in Washington" Booklet,
November 1948

Box: 1 Folder: 26
"Should Negros Back Sparkman?: A Debate" Article in "The New Leader",
September 1, 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 27
"Survey Graphic" Magazine-"Color-Unfinished Business of Democracy",
November 1942

Box: 1 Folder: 28
Speech on Civil Rights, Possibly by Senator Benton,
August-September 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 29
President Truman's Message to Congress on Civil Rights,
February 2, 1948

Box: 1 Folder: 30
"Tentative Draft of Statement by Subcommittee Appointed at Breakfast Hill",
circa 1950

Box: 1 Folder: 31
"Twenty Years of Civil Rights Progrress" by the Democratic National Committee,
August 22, 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 32
Senator Robert F. Wagner Speeches,
1938

Box: 1 Folder: 33
Senator Walter White Correspondence and Articles on Civil Rights,
1950-1951

Box: 1 Folder: 34
"What the American Negro Wants" - Interview with Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. - U.S News and World Report,
September 5, 1952

Box: 1 Folder: 35
Race Relations in Washington, D.C. Documents and Newsclippings,
1950

Box: 2 Folder: 1
"The Washington Afro-American" Newspaper,
January 18, 1955

Box: 2 Folder: 2
Reprint from American Journal of International Law - United States Congressional Peace Resolution,
July 1920

Box: 2 Folder: 3
"American Diplomacy" by George F. Kennan,
circa 1950

Box: 2 Folder: 4
Martin Bursten and William Benton Correspondence,
April 1952

Box: 2 Folder: 5
U.S. News and World Report Articles,
1952

Box: 2 Folder: 6
FEPA - "Speech of Senator William Benton of Connecticut in the Senate of the Unite States",
May 9, 1950

Box: 2 Folder: 7
Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
January 1949