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This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held in the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in our reading room, and not digitally available through the World Wide Web. See the Duplication Policy section for more information.
Size | 12.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 10,500 items) |
Abstract | The Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, established on 1 July 1988, supports scholarship and cultural understanding of the African diaspora through the interdisciplinary examination of art, culture, literature, and history. The Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History Records chiefly document student-led activism in support of a freestanding black cultural center and the campus committees studying the issue, and later strategic planning, fundraising, and event programming for the established Center. |
Creator | Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. University Archives. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Jodi Berkowitz, Amelia Holmes, Nancy Kaiser, January 2016
Encoded by: Nancy Kaiser, January 2016
Updated by: Dawne Howard Lucas, January 2022
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
The Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was established on 1 July 1988. Initially known as the Black Cultural Center, it was renamed in the fall of 1991 for activist and associate professor of Afro-American studies Sonja Haynes Stone, who died on 10 August 1991. Dr. Stone was the director of the Afro-American Studies curriculum from 1974 to 1979 and adviser to the Black Student Movement from 1974 to 1980.
The Center was originally housed in the Frank Porter Graham Student Union in what had been a snack bar. The student-led push for a freestanding center that began in 1992 became UNC-Chapel Hill's largest student protest movement since the Vietnam War. On 17 March 1992, students assembled in front of South Building where UNC-Chapel Hill's administrators, including Chancellor Paul Hardin III, had offices. The students had three demands: higher wages for the university's housekeepers, a freestanding black cultural center, and an endowed professorship in Dr. Stone's name. Chancellor Hardin rejected all three demands and cited segregation and separatism as reasons to refuse a freestanding center. He countered with a proposed addition to the Student Union.
On 3 September 1992, 400 demonstrators gathered outside the chancellor's house to demand a freestanding center and were removed by police. On 10 September 1992, between 600 and 1500 students peacefully marched into South Building and presented Chancellor Hardin with a letter demanding a freestanding center and calling for him to choose a site by 13 November 1992. The protest was organized by a coalition of black athletes called the Black Awareness Council, which was founded by football players John Bradley, Jimmy Hitchcock, Malcolm Marshall, and Tim Smith.
In 1993, the University's Board of Trustees approved a site for a freestanding center in the Coker Woods between the Bell Tower and Coker Hall. Fundraising for the Center took place over the following nine years. Funding came from contributions, pledges, a chancellor's discretionary fund, private donations, and other fund-raising programs. The Center's groundbreaking took place in April 2001 and it opened in August 2004.
In Fall 2002, the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center changed its name to the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History to align the name of the Center with its dual mission of supporting scholarship and cultural understanding of the African diaspora experience. Administratively located in the University's Academic Affairs Division, the Center is concerned with the interdisciplinary examination of arts, cultures, literatures, and histories of the African diaspora. The Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center's programs include the Diaspora Festival of Black and Independent Film, the Hekima reading and film discussion groups, the Pamela Nicole Cummings Visiting Artist Fellowship, the Sonja Haynes Stone Memorial Lecture, the African Diaspora Lecture Series, the Undergraduate International Studies Fellowship, and Communiversity Youth Programs.
Back to TopThe Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History Records chiefly document the student-led activism in support of a freestanding black cultural center, the committees and working groups studying the issue, and the programming and events that reflected the Center's initial mission of raising awareness of and appreciation for African American culture by the campus community. Analog and digital records, including reports, memoranda, correspondence, clippings, meeting minutes, printed publicity materials, and press releases, are the files of several different Center employees, including Margo Crawford, director of the Black Cultural Center from 1988 to 1994; Joseph Jordan, director from 2001 to the present; and public relations and program planning staff members, including Terry Spicer, Trevaughan Eubanks, Jennifer Ramirez, Antoinette Parker. Directors Gerald Horne and Harry Amana are represented in the collection but their files are presently not included in this record group.
Series 1 1980s-1994 documents the evolution of the Black Cultural Center from the initial proposal in 1984 to the approval in 1993 by the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees of a freestanding building named for Sonja Haynes Stone. Topics include strategic planning; the debate over whether the Center should be freestanding or not; the competing visions of the Black Cultural Center Planning Committee and the Black Cultural Center Working Group; the controversy surrounding building site selection; African American student-athlete activism on campus; Communiversity, an outreach program for African American youth in Chapel Hill; working conditions of housekeepers at UNC-Chapel Hill. Also of note are materials relating to a 1994 motivational speech given at the Black Student Leadership Summit by Barack Obama, then a lecturer on constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School.
Series 2 1994-2004 documents the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History during the ten-year period after the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees approved construction of a freestanding building on its current site. Topics include strategic planning; events planning and publicity; fundraising by alumni athletes; student fundraising and consensus building on campus; Communiversity; outreach to other African American cultural heritage organizations; the Carolina Circuit Writers; and collaborative programming with the Institute for African American Research.
Series 3 2004-2013 chiefly documents artistic programming and event planning at the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History after its grand opening in August 2004. Other topics represented include collaborative projects and performances, Communiversity, operational policies and procedures, the Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery, undergraduate study abroad, and website redesign.
Series 4 Publications includes records for Word, the first newsletter of the Black Cultural Center; its successor newsletter Milestones; and Sauti Mpya, a literary magazine also published by the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center.
Series 5 is the website of the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History. The site includes information about staff, the building, events and other programs, publications, making donations, and the library.
Back to TopRecords document the evolution of the Black Cultural Center from the initial proposal in 1984 to the approval in 1993 by the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees of a freestanding building named for Sonja Haynes Stone. The records, including reports, memoranda, correspondence, and clippings, are chiefly the files of Margo Crawford, director of the Black Cultural Center from 1988 to 1994. Topics include strategic planning; efforts to secure a black cultural center at UNC-Chapel Hill; the debate over whether the Center should be freestanding or not; the competing visions of the Black Cultural Center planning Committee and Black Cultural Center Working Group; the controversy surrounding building site selection; African American student-athlete activism on campus; Communiversity, an outreach program for African American youth in Chapel Hill; and working conditions of housekeepers at UNC-Chapel Hill. Also of note are materials relating to a 1994 motivational speech given at the Black Student Leadership Summit by Barack Obama, then a lecturer on constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School.
Box
1
Folder 1 |
Advancing African American Culture Award, 1990 |
Box
1
Folder 2 |
Advisory Board, 1990-1991The Advisory Board of the Black Cultural Center was established in 1988 by the UNC Board of Trustees and charged with planning a freestanding Black Cultural Center. Records include memoranda, reports, meeting agendas and minutes, by-laws, and related records. |
Box
1
Folder 3 |
Advisory Board, 1992 |
Box
1
Folder 4-5 Folder 4Folder 5 |
Advisory Board, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 6 |
Advisory Board: Board of Trustees, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 7 |
Advisory Board: Retreat, 1991-1992 |
Box
1
Folder 8 |
Advisory Board: Retreat, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 9 |
Advisory Board: Site reports, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 10 |
Advisory Board: Working group proposal, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 11 |
Annual report, 1991-1992Also includes program goals and proposed budgets for 1992-1993. |
Box
1
Folder 12 |
Black Awareness Council: Constitution, history, purpose, program, objectives, 1992The Black Awareness Council was founded in 1992 by four African American student-athletes: John Bradley, Jimmy Hitchcock, Malcolm Marshall, and Timothy Smith. Their goal was to increase participation of and awareness among African American students and athletes regarding campus and community issues. |
Box
1
Folder 13 |
Black Awareness Council: Letters and articles, 1992-1993 |
Box
1
Folder 14 |
Black Awareness Council: Meetings, 1992-1993 |
Box
1
Folder 15 |
Black Awareness Council: Related material, 1992-1993 |
Box
1
Folder 16 |
Black Cultural Center Foundation: By-laws, 1992 |
Box
1
Folder 17 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1984Memoranda, correspondence, meeting minutes, and reports regarding the evolving proposal for a black cultural center. The Planning Committee conducted a study to determine if a center at UNC-Chapel Hill would be feasible, and in 1988, the Black Cultural Center was officially established as a department within the Division of Student Affairs. |
Box
1
Folder 18 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1985 |
Box
1
Folder 19 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1986 |
Box
1
Folder 20 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1987 |
Box
1
Folder 21 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1988 |
Box
1
Folder 22 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1989 |
Box
1
Folder 23 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1990 |
Box
1
Folder 24 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1991 |
Box
1
Folder 25 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1992 |
Box
1
Folder 26 |
Black Cultural Center Planning Committee, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 27 |
Black Cultural Center strategic planning, 1991 |
Box
1
Folder 28 |
Black Cultural Center Working Group, 1993The Working Group was created in 1992 by Chancellor Paul Hardin. It was not initially recognized by the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center Advisory Board, but the Advisory Board reversed its position after the Chancellor endorsed a freestanding black cultural center named for Sonja Haynes Stone. |
Box
1
Folder 29 |
Black Cultural Center Working Group: Correspondence: Board of Trustees, 1992-1993 |
Box
1
Folder 30 |
Black Cultural Center Working Group: Correspondence: Chancellor Paul Hardin, 1992-1993 |
Box
1
Folder 31 |
Black Cultural Center Working Group: Statements of support, 1993 |
Box
1
Folder 32 |
Black Student Leadership Summit, 1994Barack Obama was a speaker at this event hosted by the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center. Obama was billed as a motivational speaker. The collection includes some notes about his presentation and articles about him for biographical and background purposes. |
Box
1
Folder 33 |
Black Student Movement, 1992 |
Box
1
Folder 34 |
Campus Y, 1992-1993Members of the Campus Y were frequent collaborators with and supportive of the movement to establish a freestanding black cultural center at UNC-Chapel Hill. Records include memoranda, clippings, and timelines of related events. |
Box
1
Folder 35 |
Clippings, 1975 |
Box
1
Folder 36 |
Clippings, 1988 |
Box
1
Folder 37 |
Clippings, 1989 |
Box
1
Folder 38 |
Clippings, 1990 |
Box
2
Folder 39 |
Clippings, 1991 |
Box
2
Folder 40-42 Folder 40Folder 41Folder 42 |
Clippings, 1992 |
Box
2
Folder 43-44 Folder 43Folder 44 |
Clippings, 1993 |
Box
2
Folder 45 |
Communiversity, 1992Communiversity was established by the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center as a Saturday school program for children ages 8 to 12. The school was directed and staffed by UNC-Chapel Hill student leaders with the purpose of complementing local public schools' "efforts to achieve greater success with students who were not achieving." The program sought to engage minority students from the community in traditional African and African American culture and history in a way that allowed them to express their own creativity, talent, and scholarship. Expanded program offerings are documented in Series 2 and 3. |
Box
2
Folder 46 |
Correspondence: Grant writing: Sent, 1991 |
Box
2
Folder 47 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Received, 1988Correspondence is scattered and relates primarily to programs and activities of the Black Cultural Center. |
Box
2
Folder 48 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Received, 1989 |
Box
2
Folder 49 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Received, 1990 |
Box
2
Folder 50 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Received, 1991-1993 |
Box
2
Folder 51 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Sent, 1988 |
Box
2
Folder 52 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Sent, 1989 |
Box
2
Folder 53 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Sent, 1990-1992 |
Box
2
Folder 54 |
Correspondence: Margo Crawford: Speakers, 1988-1990 |
Box
2
Folder 55 |
Events: Center naming, 1992Following the death of Sonja Haynes Stone, the Board of Trustees of UNC-Chapel Hill formally approved the renaming of the Black Cultural Center as the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center on 25 October 1991. |
Box
2
Folder 56 |
Events: General, 1989-1993 |
Box
2
Folder 57 |
Events: Multiculturalism workshop, 1992 |
Box
2
Folder 58 |
Events: Race Relations Week, 1993-1994 |
Box
2
Folder 59 |
Facilities Planning Committee and Working Group: Meeting materials, 1992 |
Box
2
Folder 60 |
Facilities Planning Committee and Working Group: Reports and memoranda, 1992-1993 |
Box
2
Folder 61 |
Feasibility Study, 1989-1991 |
Box
2
Folder 62 |
Fundraising, 1989-1993 |
Box
2
Folder 63-64 Folder 63Folder 64 |
Grant proposals, 1989-1990Proposals are primarily to the North Carolina Arts Council and the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation. |
Box
2
Folder 65 |
Grants: Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, 1992 |
Box
2
Folder 66 |
History and timelines, 1984-1993 |
Box
2
Folder 67 |
Housekeepers, 1992-1993Addressing the low wages and poor treatment of housekeepers was a concurrent issue at UNC-Chapel Hill in 1993. Student activism around this issue frequently overlapped with the struggle for a freestanding black cultural center on campus. |
Box
2
Folder 68 |
Kwanzaa, 1989, 1994 |
Image Box
1
Image Folder PF-40341/1 |
Photographs, 1989 and undatedTopics include an unidentified event, performer, speaker, and visitor to a children's activity. |
Box
3
Folder 69 |
Sonja Haynes Stone: Images, 1938-1991Copies of photographs of Sonja Haynes Stone from childhood to adulthood. |
Box
3
Folder 70 |
Sonja Haynes Stone: Memorials, 1991-1993Sonja Haynes Stone died 10 August 1991. See also Fred D. Muhammad in Series 2.2. |
Box
3
Folder 71 |
Sonja Haynes Stone: Writings, undated |
Box
3
Folder 72 |
Sonja Haynes Stone Task Force, 1991-1993The task force was a coalition of individuals and campus groups, including the Black Student Movement, the Campus Y, the Office of the Student Body President, the Black Awareness Council, the Student Environmental Action Coalition, the Black Greek Council, and others that formed following a celebration of the life and legacy of Sonja Haynes Stone. The group set three objectives to memorialize Dr. Stone: to rename the Black Cultural Center the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center, to establish an endowed chair in her honor, and to grant departmental status to the African and African American Curriculum. The task force was also concerned with the employment conditions of housekeepers at UNC-Chapel Hill, and was active from 1991 through 1993. It appears to have evolved into the Student Coalition for a Freestanding Black Center. |
Box
3
Folder 73 |
Staff meetings, 1989, 1991 |
Box
3
Folder 74-75 Folder 74Folder 75 |
Student Coalition for a Freestanding Black Cultural Center, 1992-1993The coalition was composed of student representatives from about ten campus groups, including the Black Awareness Council, the Black Student Movement, the Black Green Council, the Campus Y, the Black Cultural Center, and the Sonja Haynes Stone Task Force. It appears to have evolved from the Sonja Haynes Stone Task Force as additional student groups joined the effort. |
Box
3
Folder 76 |
Telephone log, 1992-1994 |
Series 2 has been divided into two subseries: 2.1 contains analog records, chiefly of public relations and program planning staff members, including Terry Spicer, Trevaughan Eubanks, Jennifer Ramirez, and Antoinette Parker; 2.2 contains digital files of Joseph Jordan, the director of the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History since 2001, and of public relations and program planning staff members. The subseries contain overlapping content and researchers are advised to review both series for related materials.
Records document the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History during the ten-year period after the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees approved construction of a freestanding building on its current site. Meeting materials, reports, clippings, printed email correspondence, printed publicity materials, press releases, and photographs, are chiefly the files of public relations and program planning staff members, including Terry Spicer, Trevaughan Eubanks, Jennifer Ramirez, and Antoinette Parker. Topics include strategic planning; events planning and publicity; fundraising by alumni athletes; student fundraising and consensus building on campus; Communiversity; outreach to other African American cultural heritage organizations; the Carolina Circuit Writers; and collaborative programming with the Institute for African American Research.
See also Series 2.2 for related content in digital format.
Digital files in this collection may contain file formats that users might find difficult to access. For guidance on accessing these files, please email wilsonlibrary@unc.edu.
Records, including correspondence, reports, and spreadsheets, document strategic planning, fundraising, and budgeting by Joseph Jordan, director of the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History since 2001. There are also event promotion materials created by the public relations and program planning staff members.
See also Series 2.1 for related content in analog format.
Records, including reports, meeting materials, and printed email correspondence, chiefly document artistic programming, event planning, and strategic planning at the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History after its grand opening in August 2004. Other topics represented include collaborative projects and performances, a minority health conference co-sponsored by the Center, Communiversity, operational policies and procedures, the Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery, undergraduate study abroad, and website redesign.
Box
8
Folder 322 |
Advisory Board, 2004-2005Meeting agendas and minutes, chiefly reflecting Center activities and strategic planning. |
Audiocassette C-40341/2 |
Advisory Board, 2004-2005Audio recording of retreat (part 4). |
Box
8
Folder 323 |
Advisory Board, 2005-2006 |
Box
8
Folder 324 |
Advisory Board: By-laws |
Box
8
Folder 325 |
Annual reports, 2005-2006Assistant director, Communiversity, programming. |
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8
Folder 326 |
Artist in Residence, 2004: de Leon, Aya |
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8
Folder 327 |
Artist in Residence, 2005: Hammad, Suheir |
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8
Folder 328-329 Folder 328Folder 329 |
Artist in Residence, 2006: Barrois, LyndonIncludes Diversity Incentive Fund application. |
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8
Folder 330 |
Artist in Residence, 2006: Perdomo, WillieSee also Grants: Performing Arts Fund. |
Box
8
Folder 331 |
Artist in Residence, 2006-2007Suggestions. |
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8
Folder 332 |
Black Alumni Reunion, 2005Schedule. |
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8
Folder 333 |
Building use requests, 2006 |
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8
Folder 334 |
Collaborations, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 335 |
Collaborations: Genome Project, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 336 |
Collaborations: Sundiata, Sekou, 2005Relating to the Genome Project. |
Box
8
Folder 337 |
Communiversity, 2005-2006Counselor manual, assessment forms, schedules, curriculum outlines. |
Box
8
Folder 338 |
Eli T. Ullum Undergraduate International Studies Fellowship, 2005Announcement. |
Box
8
Folder 339 |
Grants: National Endowment for the Humanities, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 340 |
Grants: Performing Arts Fund, 2005-2006Relating to Willie Perdomo as Artist in Residence. |
Box
8
Folder 341 |
High School Literacy Project, undatedPublication of poetry by high school students in Chapel Hill and Durham, N.C. |
Box
8
Folder 342 |
Letter of Support: Carolina Science Scholars for Diversity, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 343 |
Letterhead |
Box
8
Folder 344 |
Letters, 2005, 2007Letter of support and letter regarding programming possibilities. |
Box
8
Folder 345 |
Library, 2005Planning for film showings and discussions. |
Box
8
Folder 346 |
Memoranda, 2005-2006Topics include classroom space in the Center, the chancellor's Task Force on Diversity. |
Digital Folder DF-40341/33 |
Minority Health Conference: 11th Annual Summer Public Health Research Videoconference on Minority Health"Health Disparities: From Civil Rights to Human Rights." See also Sponsorship, 2005-2006: Minority Health Conference. |
Box
8
Folder 347 |
Performing arts, 2010-2011 |
Box
8
Folder 348 |
Program coordination checklist, undated |
Box
8
Folder 349 |
Programs, 2004-2005Chiefly concerning scheduling. |
Box
8
Folder 350 |
Programs, 2004-2005: "The Wise Ones" |
Digital Folder DF-40341/34 |
Programs, 2004-2005: "The Wise Ones"Photographs. |
Box
8
Folder 351 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Afro-Cuban drumming |
Box
8
Folder 352-355 Folder 352Folder 353Folder 354Folder 355 |
Programs, 2005-2006: "Black Popular Cultures/Black Popular Struggles Symposium"Topics include scene setting in black popular culture, hip hop, sports and the black athlete. Some files include Diversity Incentive Fund applications. |
Box
8
Folder 356 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Davis, Thulani |
Box
8
Folder 357 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Diaspora Film Series |
Box
8
Folder 358 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Hekima: The Piano Lesson |
Box
8
Folder 359 |
Programs, 2005-2006: "Identity Politics Reconsidered" |
Box
8
Folder 360 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Jones, Sarah |
Box
8
Folder 361 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Monica Carillo and Milagritos |
Box
8
Folder 362 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Open Mic Series |
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8
Folder 363 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Pathfinder Collegiums Project |
Box
8
Folder 364 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Proposals |
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8
Folder 365 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Reports |
Box
8
Folder 366 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Schedule |
Box
8
Folder 367 |
Programs, 2005-2006: Sonja Haynes Stone Memorial Lecture |
Box
8
Folder 368 |
Programs, 2006-2007: Diaspora Film Series |
Box
8
Folder 369 |
Programs, 2010-2011Planning outlines for films and speakers. |
Box
8
Folder 370 |
Public information, 2005-2006Public relations strategy and timeline. |
Box
8
Folder 371 |
Public information: Press releases, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 372 |
Publicity, 2008-2009 |
Oversize Paper Folder OPF-40341/3 |
Publicity: Posters, 2004-2005, 2011 |
Box
8
Folder 373-374 Folder 373Folder 374 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Art Advisory Committee, 2005Proposals for exhibitions. |
Box
8
Folder 375-376 Folder 375Folder 376 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Docents, 2005Information package on Michael D. Harris Letters from Home exhibit, the Hewitt Collection of African-American art; sign-in forms; recruitment flyers; general guide to the artists represented in the Center collection; training materials. |
Box
8
Folder 377 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Exhibits, 2006, 2008-2009 |
Box
8
Folder 378 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Guest book, 2004 |
Image Box
2
Color 35mm Slide 40341/1-4 40341/140341/240341/340341/4 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Hewitt Collection, 2004Slides of art work by Charles H. Alston, John T. Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Ernest Crichlow, James Denmark, Jonathan Green, J. Eugene Grigsby, Earl Hill, Alvis C. Hollingsworth, Ronald Joseph, Hughie Lee-Smith, Jacob Lawrence, Virginia Evans Smith, Ann Tankley, Ellis Wilson, Hale A. Woodruff. |
Audiocassette C-40341/1 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Interview with Michael D. Harris by P.P. Sunstrum |
Box
8
Folder 379 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: "Letters from Home," Michael D. Harris |
Box
8
Folder 380 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Miscellaneous, undatedNotes on African artists. |
Box
8
Folder 381 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Other exhibits, 2013 and undated |
Box
8
Folder 382 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Outreach, 2004 |
Box
8
Folder 383 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Possibilities, 2005Potential artists to exhibit. |
Box
8
Folder 384 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Press coverage, 2004-2005Michael D. Harris Letters from Home exhibit. |
Box
8
Folder 385 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Publicity, 2004-2005Michael D. Harris Letters from Home exhibit program and other printed flyers. |
Box
8
Folder 386 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: School visitsK-12 learning materials for Hewitt Collection of African-American Art. |
Box
8
Folder 387 |
Robert and Sallie Brown Museum and Gallery: Signage |
Box
8
Folder 388 |
Sponsorship, 2005-2006 |
Box
8
Folder 389 |
Sponsorship, 2005-2006: Minority Health ConferenceSee also Minority Health Conference: 11th Annual Summer Public Health Research Videoconference on Minority Health. |
Box
8
Folder 390 |
Sponsorship, 2005-2006: North Carolina Humanities Council |
Box
8
Folder 391 |
Staff: Meetings, 2005-2006Notes. |
Box
8
Folder 392 |
Staff: Monthly reports, 2005-2006 |
Box
8
Folder 393 |
Staff: Monthly reports, 2005-2006 |
Box
8
Folder 394 |
Staff: Retreat, 2005Immediate and five-year planning, inter-relationships of Center staff. |
Box
8
Folder 395 |
Strategic planning retreat, 2005 |
Box
8
Folder 396 |
Study abroad, undated |
Box
8
Folder 397 |
Undergraduate International Studies Fellowship, 2005-2006, 2008Administration of student travel awards. |
Box
8
Folder 398 |
VolunteersApplication form. |
Box
8
Folder 399 |
Website designers, 2006 |
Word was the first newsletter of the Black Cultural Center and was in publication from 1989 to 1990. Milestones was the successor newsletter. It began publication in 1996 and continues in publication to the present. Sauti Mpya was a literary magazine published by the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center from 1994 until 2000. Records include issues, meeting notes and agendas, and materials related to production.
Box
9
Folder 400 |
Milestones, 1996-2005, 2008Issues. |
Box
9
Folder 401 |
Milestones, Fall 1999Production materials. |
Box
9
Folder 402 |
Milestones, 2002-2003, 2006Production materials, draft of issue. |
Box
9
Folder 403 |
Sauti Mpya, 1992Call for submissions, production information, printing invoices, illustrations. |
Box
9
Folder 404 |
Sauti Mpya, 1993Editorial board meetings, invoices. |
Box
9
Folder 405 |
Sauti Mpya, 1996, 1998-1999Meeting agendas, production calendar, submissions. |
Box
9
Folder 406 |
Sauti Mpya, 2003-2005Call for submissions, planning materials, requests for information. |
Box
9
Folder 407 |
Sauti Mpya: Issues, 1991-1997 |
Box
9
Folder 408 |
Sauti Mpya: Issues, 1998-2000 |
Box
9
Folder 409 |
Sauti Mpya: Issues, 2001 |
Box
9
Folder 410 |
Sauti Mpya: Proofs, 2001 |
Box
9
Folder 411 |
Word, 1989-1991 |
The website of the Sonja Haynes Stone Black Cultural Center. The site includes information about staff, the building, events and other programs, publications, making donations, and the library.
Digital Item DI-20453/1 |
Website (stonecenter.unc.edu)Harvested using Archive-It, beginning in October 2014. |