-
A letter from Thelma T. Gorham to Kathy Krasenics. Gorham writes a letter of recommendation on behalf of Jamie Gerdine for an internship.
-
A fax cover sheet from Thelma T. Gorham to Milton A. Gerdine.
-
A letter from John Pauly to Thelma T. Gorham. Pauly writes about Gorham reviewing the manuscript "Brotherhood in Ink: The 'Atlanta World' Campaign for Justice for Haiti, 1932-1933."
-
A letter from Evans L. Cobb to Thelma T. Gorham. Cobb asks Gorham advice on higher education and how to pursue a professional career in writing.
-
A handwritten letter on business letterhead addressed to Thelma T. Gorham in which she is asked to editorially head "a Logan publication" identified as "Epoch." The letter also concerns financials and has several handwritten jottings that seem to have been added after the initial letter was written.
-
Correspondence between E. T. York and Dr. Leonard W. Johnson concerning the results of an investigation of alleged mismanagement of Florida A&M Foundation funds.
-
A letter from Mrs. Gorham explaining a doctoral program project she is undertaking at Florida State University. The project is "a communications study...of Black Women in Public Address." Gorham asks the future addressee (one of various distinguished black women public speakers) to reply with copies of some of their best speeches so that Mrs. Gorham can use these as reference points in her project.
-
A letter from Tammy Smith, a former student of Mrs. Gorham's, explaining her satisfaction with the workshop she attended under Mrs. Gorham's instruction and her intent to study journalism at FAMU, a historically black college in Tallahassee, Florida, with a renowned journalism program that Mrs. Gorham herself pioneered.
-
Blank subscription slips for various publications, including "Reader's Digest," "The Saturday Evening Post," and others.
-
A handwritten letter to Thelma T. Gorham from someone identified as "Charles." In it, Charles expresses sorrow and sympathy for a situation Mrs. Gorham is going through (the specifics are not explained, but it seems to involve a disagreement with a university). Charles goes on to explain that he is sending Mrs. Gorham a job application to work at his place of employment, which he refers to simply as "Martin," and that he hopes Mrs. Gorham can leave her current situation and move down South, where, he says, "a little racial prejudice here and there" is to be expected, but that "those few who have it keep it well hidden behind walls of smiles."