| The Manuscript
Collections consist primarily of unpublished documents such as literary
manuscripts, letters, diaries, cartoons, photographs, architectural drawings,
and organizational, church and governmental records. Also included are
some printed material, microforms, tape recordings, films and other items
received as part of the manuscript collections.
The major emphasis of the Manuscript Collections is on North and South
Carolina, with particular attention to the Charlotte/Mecklenburg area.
The largest and most important collection is the Harry Golden Papers,
consisting of about 300,000 items that document the life and work of
one of the most colorful and important practitioners of personal journalism
in the 20th century.
The collection reflects the involvement of Golden, editor of the Charlotte
base Carolina Israelite and author of several best sellers, in politics,
civil rights and Jewish affairs.
The Golden papers also include an extensive group of original documents
and secondary material relating to Carl Sandburg, Golden's friend and
the subject of his 1961 biography.
Through an agreement with the city of Charlotte and the State Archives,
the library is the repository for the official papers of Charlotte's
mayors. These collections are complemented by the papers of other elected
officials, including Fred Alexander, the first black city councilman
in Charlotte in this century and later a state senator. The library
also has the minute books of the city and county school boards, 1885-1960,
various city and county records, 1870s to 1920s, the files of the Charlotte
Mecklenburg Charter Commission, 1969-71, papers of members of the Planning
Commission, 1978-92, and records of the Mecklenburg County Health Department,
1915-84.
The papers of Julius Chambers and of Ben Horack and William Waggoner,
rival attorneys in the Swann v. Charlotte/Mecklenburg Board of Education
case that established busing as a constitutional means of integrating
schools, are the most heavily used of several collections relating to
race relations and civil rights. Other important collections include
the records of the Charlotte/Mecklenburg Community Relations Committee,
and the papers of national NAACP chairman Kelly Alexander Sr., gubernatorial
candidate Dr. Reginald Hawkins and Charlotte 3 member T. J. Reddy.
The Torrance Banks Family Papers, 1768-1932, are almost certainly the
largest and most comprehensive collection of Mecklenburg County family
papers in existence. Among other families whose papers are available
are Alexander, Arthur, Caldwell, Davidson, Harrell, Hood, Irwin, Latta,
Leary, Liddell, Love, Moor, Patterson, Pharr, Spratt, Spring, Sullivan,
Van Landingham, Walker and Wilkes. Collections of individuals include
the papers of artist and AME Zion minister William A. Cooper, journalist
Pete McKnight, labor organizer Boyd Payton and novelist Marian Sims.
The George M. Ivey and William H. Sumner collections include 30-40,000
photographic prints, negatives and slides.
Collections of architectural drawings include the papers of Louis Asbury
and Martin Boyer, who designed many homes in Myers Park and Eastover,
and of Biberstein, Bowles, Meachem and Reed, who designed textile mills
all over the South. Among the organizations that have donated their
records are three DAR chapters, the Charlotte branch of the American
Association of University Women, the Charlotte Woman's Club, the 38th
Evacuation Hospital Unit formed by Charlotte doctors during World War
II, the Mecklenburg Historical Association and the Unitarian Church
of Charlotte. The records of the Piedmont and Northern Railway Co. and
J.A. Jones Construction Co. are the largest of several collections relating
to area businesses.
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