Posted on 01/29/2007 10:05:26 AM PST by Protect the Bill of Rights
T V Mangum was the first president of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP.
A Google search on TV Mangum will bring up alot of articles.:
In September, 1946, the NAACP announced that it intended to take legal action against bus ... "Rustin to C. J. Gates, June 5, 1947; T. V. Mangum to Rustin, ... links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8906(196933)30%3A3%3C213%3ATFFR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-H - |
P55/146, C. O. Pearson (center), T. V. Mangum (right), and Kelly Alexander (left) (n.d.). P55/147, N.C. NAACP meeting with Jackie Robinson sitting next to ... dlib.uncc.edu/special_collections/manuscripts/html/55.php - 188k - |
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML This series of Papers of the NAACP documents the activities of branch ... Principal Correspondents: Lucille Black; T. V. Mangum; J. M. Stockton; ... www.lexisnexis.com/academic/guides/Aaas/naacp2701.pdf - |
"Our problem," Houser wrote to the North Carolina NAACP in an urgent ... George Houser to T. V. Mangum, North Carolina NAACP, June 7, 1947, CORE, reel 44. ... muse.jhu.edu/journals/radical_history_review/v088/88.1mollin.html - |
The North Carolina Conference of NAACP Branches formed in Charlotte in 1943, largely as a result of efforts by Ella Baker, Kelly Alexander, and T. V. Mangum ... ncmuseumofhistory.org/workshops/civilrights1/Session2_1.html - 87k - |
John Mangum was born in 1870. He married twice and raised 2 families.
His first wife was Maria Lewis. Among their children was Travis Mangum who was born about 1899. Travis married EuVa Lee Green. Eventually, they settled in Statesville and had 2 children
Gwendolyn Katrina and Charles Luther Mangum
Travis Mangum, from Granville County is Travis Van Mangum. He is none other than T V Mangum, charter member and first president of the NC Chapter of the NAACP.
http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:wLUWkpxlhQMJ:www.genealogybuff.com/va/va-lynchburg-obits2.htm+%22charles+m+l+mangum%22+lynchburg&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=3&client=firefox-a
Gwendolyn Mangum Johnson
Gwendolyn Mangum Johnson, 63, of Philadelphia, Pa., entered eternal rest on Oct. 29, 1999. She was the daughter of the late T.V. Mangum and Euver L. Mangum of Statesville, N.C. A graduate of North Carolina Central College (now University), where she was soloist with the college choir from her freshman year. She received a teaching certificate from Livingston College in Salisbury, N.C. and taught at Morningside High School for several years before moving to New York City where she ventured into social work, and worked also in Philadelphia before retiring. Cherishing her memories are her husband, George C. Johnson; her son, Audwin L. Thomas and his wife, Sandra R. Thomas; three granddaughters, Farrol S. Thomas, Gwendolyn F. Thomas and Audwina L. Thomas; her brother, Charles M.L. Mangum, publisher of the Piedmont Area Journal newspaper, Lynchburg. Services are scheduled for Friday evening at 6 p.m. at Mt. Olive Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ, 2039 W. Toronto, Philadelphia, Pa. Professional services are entrusted to the Wescott Funeral Home, 101-03 W. Hunting Park Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Courtesy of Franklin Funeral Home, 845-7101.
--------------------------- VIRGINIA NAACP NAMES PRESIDENT
Richmond Times-Dispatch
October 20, 1986
Author: News Leader staff writer
Estimated printed pages: 2
Charles M.L. Mangum, a Lynchburg lawyer, is the new president of the Virginia State Conference NAACP.
Mangum, 52, was elected at the 51st annual convention of the state National Association for the Advancement of Colored People this weekend. He succeeds James E. Ghee, a Farmville lawyer.
Mangum said he plans to "take the ball and run with it by improving on the concepts in which the NAACP was founded."
Enhancing black businesses, the preservation of black colleges and helping the poor and infirm will continue to be priorities of the state NAACP, Mangum said.
He also envisions a closer working relationship among the NAACP, black churches and black fraternal groups.
Mangum said he has been a member of the NAACP all his life. A native of Statesville, N.C., his father, Travis Van Mangum, formed the Statesville branch of the organization in 1927, 17 years after the national organization was founded.
(excerpt)
----------------------
We need to ship Nifong over to the Sunni area of Iraq and see how long he will last.
Have you guys made any connections yet with Crystal Gail Mangum and Elmira Mangum?
No connection yet ...
SCHOLARS
Herald-Sun, The (Durham, NC)
September 8, 1998
EXCERPT
* * *
Elmira Mangum-Daniel of Durham has received the 1998 Delbert Mullens Award for ``Thinking Outside the Box.''
The Hillside High School graduate recently earned her doctorate in educational leadership and policy from State University of New York at Buffalo. She also holds an undergraduate degree in geography and education from N.C. Central University where she graduated magna cum laud.
She is married to Dr. Gregory Daniel, and they have three children. She is the daughter of Alice Blanche Vanhook Mangum and the late Ernest Mangum.
http://www.zmag.org/zmag/articles/daniels1.htm
The Rise and Demise
of Ben Chavis at the NAACP
Ron Daniels
The news that Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis had been selected as the new Executive Director of the NAACP, the oldest and largest civil rights organization, was greeted with great expectancy by many within the National African American community and the progressive movement. There were great expectations for Ben Chavis as head of the NAACP because he came to the position with a long history as a progressive activist. This mood of expectancy was re-enforced when Chavis selected as his top aides Don Rojas, former Director of Communications for the People's Revolutionary Government of Grenada under Maurice Bishop and Lewis Myers Jr., a progressive activist and attorney and former legal adviser to Rev. Jesse L. Jackson and Minister Louis Farrakhan. ...........................
(Snip)
More on Chavis/Willimas ...
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0040,noel,18692,1.html
=:-o
mark
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbninquiry.asp?ean=9781400083114&z=y
Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story
by Timothy B. Tyson
EXCERPT
Like many small Southern towns, Oxford had barely been touched by the civil rights movement. But in the wake of the killing, young African Americans took to the streets, led by 22-year-old Ben Chavis, a future president of the NAACP. As mass protests crowded the town square, a cluster of returning Vietnam veterans organized what one termed "a military operation." While lawyers battled in the courthouse that summer in a drama that one termed "a Perry Mason kind of thing," the Ku Klux Klan raged in the shadows and black veterans torched the town's tobacco warehouses.
//
Author joins Duke faculty
Tyson's book 'Blood Done Sign My Name' is UNC reading assignment
Herald-Sun, The (Durham, NC)
July 3, 2005
Author: PAUL BONNER
EXCERPT
(no link)
The author of UNC's freshman reading assignment, "Blood Done Sign My Name," joins Duke University's faculty this month.
Timothy Tyson, who remains a professor of Afro-American studies at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, will be a visiting professor of American Christianity and Southern culture at the Duke Divinity School. He also will be a senior scholar of documentary studies at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke.
Tyson will be teaching two courses and taking part in the Divinity School's new Center for Reconciliation, which will focus on issues of race in North Carolina, Mississippi and South Africa, he said.
"Blood Done Sign My Name," Tyson's account of the 1970 racially charged killing of a black man in Oxford, will keep him busy, as well, with several discussions and speeches on the Chapel Hill campus scheduled for late August, Tyson said Monday. As a 10-year-old living in Oxford at the time, Tyson was a witness to the aftermath of the slaying.
(snip)
Nice.
This just in ...
http://wral.com/news/local/story/1183786/
Defense Attorneys Meet With New Prosecutors in Duke Lacrosse Case
Duke Lacrosse
Posted: 22 minutes ago
Updated: 12 minutes ago
Durham A scheduled hearing for the Duke lacrosse case has been postponed as defense attorneys met with the new prosecutors assigned to the case on Tuesday.
(snip)
http://www.newsobserver.com/1185/story/537768.html
The hearing set for Feb. 5 in the Duke lacrosse case has been postponed while new prosecutors get up to speed on the case.
This morning, lawyers for three former lacrosse players met with the two prosecutors assigned to the case by the attorney general's office for about two hours.
When the meeting was over, the defense lawyers came out and said the hearing, which was to be an important test of the prosecutions case, will be postponed.
Joseph B. Cheshire V, who represents one of the players, said the prosecutors had a tremendous amount of information to review and said he was pleased with the meeting.
"We are excited to have professional prosecutors who are willing to sit down and engage us in conversation," Cheshire said. "We are excited that we are now engaged in a professional process."
(snip)
This thing has reached a point of absurdity that can't even be put into words.
Duke LAX Hearing Delayed -- May 7th -- ?
WTVD Eyewitness News
(01/30/07 -- DURHAM) - Eyewitness News has just learned a major court hearing in the Duke Lacrosse case has been delayed.
Special prosecutors who have taken the case from Durham DA Mike Nifong say they need more time to go over the boxes of evidence.
The hearing will now be held on May 7th.
At that time we should learn whether the case will move forward or be dropped.
http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=triangle&id=4985186
Well that gives them more time to consider before dropping the charges. So will they go a month? Will they drop these charges this week or next?
Good.
I just can't imagine what it is costing the families.
More than money, that's for sure. They ought to be reimbursed for what their financial loss has been. But the emotional cost can never be replaced.
Okay. :>
I think it should be pointed out Tim Tyson is white. His father was the minister at Oxford United Methodist Church, the white Methodist church, at the time the events in the book took place. Tim Tyson was 10 at that time.
Thank you. See the interview below. I wondered if he was black or white.
http://altweeklies.com/gyrobase/AltWeeklies/Story?oid=oid%3A138897
A 1970 Race Murder in North Carolina is Recalled
By Ellen Meany (Freelancer)
Let the truth that Ive told speak for me
(snip)
.....The book is Blood Done Sign My Name, a memoir of a 1970 race murder and the subsequent violence that rocked the small tobacco town of Oxford, N.C., where Tyson and his family lived. Tyson was just 10 at the time, and a hearsay witness to the crime, when his playmate, Gerald Teel, told him what Teels father and brothers had done the night before. Its the books haunting first line: Daddy and Roger and em shot em a nigger.............
(snip)
...............Robert Teel and his 18-year-old son, Larry, were acquitted of the crime by an all-white jury, despite testimony by two black eyewitnesses. Roger Oakley, Teels 21-year-old stepson, actually confessed to shooting the gun but was never indicted.
Henry Dickie Marrow, a 23-year-old U.S. Army veteran whose wife was pregnant with their third daughter, had been beaten down and shot to death in the street by these three men, for allegedly making a remark to Larry Teels wife. In an Army photograph of young Marrow in fatigues, he looks small, like a child.
He weighed 140 pounds when they killed him, Tyson sputters with disgust. Hell, my leg weighs 140.
Tyson watched as this murder in Oxford brought the Black Power movement to town. There were marches, boycotts and riots. Two huge tobacco warehouses were burned to the ground, setting the night skies aglow for miles around, and causing millions of dollars in damage.
Just a kid, Tyson struggled to comprehend what was happening. Eventually, he acquired the tools to investigate and understand. Twelve years after the crime, with an ice pick in his pocket for protection, Tyson walked into Robert Teels barbershop to ask him why he and his sons had killed Henry Marrow..............
(snip)
....But Blood Done Sign My Name isnt just about the murder; its about Tysons upbringing amid racial turmoil. Central to the story is Tysons father, Vernon, a liberal Methodist minister, whose attempts to reach across the color divide in Oxford before and after the murder eventually got him run out of town.
Toward the end of 1970, the Tysons packed up and headed for a new home in Wilmington, N.C., where statues of Confederate generals loomed on the street corners along the banks of Cape Fear. There, Vernon Tyson learned about an 1898 race massacre, yet another chasm in American race history, one so deep that his son says, its omission from North Carolina history may have been the biggest of the lies that marked my boyhood.
Historical omission is the heart of the matter. Race massacres and murders still stain the fabric of America. Blood is a bright light on our dark past. Like the verse in the old gospel song, it declares, Let the truth that Ive told speak for me....
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