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A letter from Thelma T. Gorham to L. C. Austin, General Manager of Pettees Hardware Company, in which Gorham follows up on a conversation about advertisement rates for a radio show
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A letter from Richard R. Gorham Jr. to the Publicity Department of Ebony Magazine, in which Gorham Jr. discusses his radio program
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A letter from Richard R. Gorham Jr. to Don D. Robey, of Peacock Records Inc., in which Gorham Jr. discusses a mailing list for a radio program
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A letter from Richard R. Gorham Jr. to NME.W. Victor in which Gorham Jr. discusses pricing for features on a radio program
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A letter from Thelma T. Gorham to Wilbur Oates, of Bakers Shoe Stores, in which Gorham discusses an offer from the Oklahoma Eagle to Oates concerning advertising
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A letter to Hiram from an unidentified sender, though the likelihood is high it was written by Thelma T. Gorham. In it, the writer discusses matters relating to their job and the Step-Up program
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A letter from Thelma T. Gorham to Lee Turpin, Business Manager at the Oklahoma Eagle, in which Gorham discusses business matters relating to the Oklahoma Eagle
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A letter from E. Frederick Morrow, Advisor on Business Affairs for the Department of Commerce, to Thelma T. Gorham, in which Morrow informs Gorham about the dissolution of the Office of Adviser on Negro Affairs and informs her where she can find the information she requested
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A letter from a sender identified only as Jesse to Thelma T. Gorham, discussing the authors thoughts about black-owned businesses
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Note: Original video file has been edited for clarity. This is an interview with Lettie Jackson, one of the pioneer educators of African American rural schools in Leon County, Florida. She talks about her time as a teacher, the schools she worked in, and her memories living on the Sunny Hill Plantation during the Jim Crow era.