Letter, Nancy and Joe Ellin to Kalamazoo Council on Human Relations; September 23, 1964



IsPartOf M323 Ellin (Joseph and Nancy) Freedom Summer Collection.
The University of Southern Mississippi Libraries
McCain Library and Archives

Funding for the Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive
provided by a National Leadership Grant for Libraries from the
Institute for Museum and Library Services


File Description

Alt ID: ellin106
Title: Letter, Nancy and Joe Ellin to Kalamazoo Council on Human Relations; September 23, 1964
Author: Ellin, Joseph
Author: Ellin, Nancy B. (Nancy Bowles)
Subject and Keywords: African Americans
Subject and Keywords: Bombings
Subject and Keywords: Justice and politics
Subject and Keywords: McComb (Miss.)
Subject and Keywords: Mississippi
Subject and Keywords: Political participation
Subject and Keywords: United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Description: Typewritten letter from Nancy and Joe Ellin to the Kalamazoo Council on Human Relations, dated September 23, 1964. Requests that supporters of the Civil Rights Movement write letters to President Lyndon B. Johnson, Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach, and their congressmen asking for a continued federal presence in Mississippi. Mentions the unsolved bombings in McComb, Mississippi, as well as the two most recent acts of violence there.
Publisher: University of Southern Mississippi Libraries. (electronic version)
Other Contributors: Electronic version made available through a National Leadership Grant for Libraries from the Institute for Museum and Library Services.
Date: (YYYY-MM-DD) 1964-09-23 (original)
Date: (YYYY-MM-DD) 2003-02-20 (digital reproduction)
Resource Type: Text
Format: (Extent) Digital reproduction of 1-page document.
Source: Box 2, Folder 8
Relation: IsPartOf M323 Ellin (Joseph and Nancy) Freedom Summer Collection.
Relation: IsPartOf the Civil Rights in Mississippi Digital Archive.
Coverage: (Time Period) 1964
Rights: Copyright protected. Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required.