Bethlehem Center picnic
1963-07-29
1964-04-10
1 folder
Charlotte Mayor's Committee on Race Relations records, 1960-1965
Series 1, Mayor's Community Relations Committee minutes and related materials
Charlotte mayor (from 1957-1961) James Saxon Smith formed the Mayor's Friendly Relationship Committee (MFRC) in response to student organized sit-ins at lunch counters in some of uptown Charlotte's major white-owned establishments on February 12, 1960. By July 1960, the MFRC had helped the lunch counter owners and student protesters come to an agreement which resulted in the integration of many of Charlotte's lunch counters. The work of the committee continued and expanded to explore broader community issues, and was renamed the Mayor's Community Relations Committee (MCRC) in 1961. This collection comprises papers related to the establishment and work of both committees, and includes correspondence, committee minutes, memorandums, pamphlets, and research materials on the subject of race relationships.
This series mainly comprises the minutes and member lists of the Friendly Relations Committee and the Community Relations Committee.
Cunningham, John R. (John Rood), 1891-1980
J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
manuscripts (documents)
eng
Cunningham, John R. (John Rood), 1891-1980 Brookshire, Stanford R., 1905-1990 Smith, James Saxon
Charlotte (N.C.). Mayor's Friendly Relationship Committee Charlotte (N.C.). Mayor's Community Relations Committee Johnson C. Smith University
African Americans--Segregation Civil rights Discrimination in public accommodations Race discrimination Civil rights movements Municipal government Race relations Politics and government
North Carolina--Charlotte North Carolina--Mecklenburg County
Living Charlotte : the postwar development of a New South city
Mayor's Committee on Race Relationships papers
Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library
Box 1, Folder 1
https://www.cmstory.org/sites/default/files/special_collections/Mayor%27...
This collection is part of Living Charlotte (http://livingcharlotte.uncc.edu/), a digital project that documents economic growth and social change in Charlotte, North Carolina, in the decades following World War II.
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Digitization made possible by funding from the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources.
cml-mcrc-010101
2015-08-21