African Americans--History, Printed ephemera, African American football players
A Tribute to Eddie G. Robinson "One Man's Influence and Achievements". Eddie Robinson (February 13, 1919 - April 3, 2007). Born in East Feliciana Parish, graduate of McKinley Senior High School and Leland College, he received his Master's Degree...
African Americans, Bicentennial Commission, Port Hudson (La.) History Siege, 1863
The Black Man in the Civil War. Taken from Charles H. Wesley and Patricia W. Romero, International Library of Negro Life and History; Negro Americans in the Civil War. Published in Baton Rouge as part of the American Bicentennial celebration. Ca....
Interview with legendary blues man Scott Dunbar (July 1, 1909 - October 1,1994) at his home in Woodville, Ms. Scott worked as a fishing guide on Lake Mary and as a young man played at lodges around the lake. Scott gained wider attention after he...
Nelson Rockefeller, Woody Dumas and an unidentified man at the first National Association of Counties Clean Water Congress in Atlanta, GA. Date: November 7, 1965
Baton Rouge (La.), Mayors, Rockefeller, Nelson A. (Nelson Aldrich), 1908-1979, National Association of Counties
Mayor Woody Dumas, center with New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, left and an unknown man at the National Association of Counties (NACo) Clean Water Congress in Atlanta, GA. November 7, 1965
Frank McConnell, Council man; Tillie Scheneker, librarian; and Margaret Gueymard, Librarian; at the newly opened Mid-City Library on Goodwood Boulevard, Baton Rouge, La. Date: 1967
Picture of young man sitting in front of automobile with "Baton Rouge Seventh Port" on the grill. Taken from the scrapbook of Velma Poche. Date: 1930. Date: ca. 1930
John Francis Irvine[Halse] Emma Raum Irvine, John Francis Irvine Jr., unidentified man, and Theresa Irvine [Hunter] presumably in St. Francisville, La. After the 1912 flood in Bayou Sara.
Jessamine Irvine Bentley, youngest sister of John F. Irvine Jr. Inscription on photo "My father's youngest sister Jessamine (named for the county of that name in Kentucky). She was the wife of Mr. Bentley, Episcopal clergy man, but died with them...