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Eunice Liberty National Council of Negro Women records

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Adminstrative Information

Detailed Description

Advertisements and Flyers

Certificates

Correspondence

Debtor's Anonymous Program

Harambe Brunch

Minutes and Policy Documents

Newsletters

Orbituaries

Photographs

Programs and Invitations

Reports and Directories

Selectees for Man and Woman of the Year

Songs

Youth Program

Subject Files

Newspaper Clippings

Newspapers


Eunice Liberty National Council of Negro Women records, 1961-1991 | The Black Archives History & Research Foundation of South FL, Inc.

By Emily Gibson, assisted by Robert Wilkerson and Ashley Davis

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Collection Overview

Title: Eunice Liberty National Council of Negro Women records, 1961-1991Add to your cart.

ID: 01/BAF MS_00170

Primary Creator: Liberty, Eunice W.

Extent: 9.0 Linear Feet. More info below.

Subjects: Beauty contests, Busing, Civil rights, Education, Educators, Elections--Florida--City of Miami, Minorities -- Housing, Nonprofit organizations, Women educators

Forms of Material: Clippings (Books, newspapers, etc.), Correspondence, Flyers, Advertising, Programs

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This collecton consists of the records of the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) Greater Miami Section, collected by Eunice Liberty from 1961 to 1991 while working for the organization. It consists of flyers, certificates, correspondence, pamphlets, meeting minutes, newsletters, photographs, programs, reports, directories, and newspaper and magazine clippings. The collection contains an extensive news clippings file, predominantly from Ebony magazine and black owned newspaper, The Miami Times, documenting events impacting civil rights in South Florida and throughout the United States in the 1970s. The collection also documents the activities of the NCNW's Youth Program, such as the Mary McLeod Bethune essay contest, which attracted students from throughout the Miami Dade Public School system, and the Woman of the Year contest. Of note, the collection contains photographs of Sidney Poitier and many studio quality, formal portraits of the selectees for the Woman of the Year contest. It also contains correspondence to Ms. Liberty from Dorothy Height, an American Administrator, Educator, Social Activist, president of the NCNW for forty years, and honored at her funeral by an eulogy from United States President Barack Obama.

Collection Historical Note

Administrative History

In 1935 President Roosevelt appointed Mary McLeod Bethune as his minority affairs advisor in the National Youth administration. There she formed a coalition of 27 national organizations and concerned individuals with an outreach to four million women throughout the U.S., known as the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW). The NCNW, headed by Mrs. Bethune and joined by such organizations as The National Council of Jewish Women, the National Council of Catholic Women, Church Women United, the Nationa YMCA, and Women in Community Services (WICS), set a goal to maintain continuing relationships to advance the concerns of women in developing countries and minority populations in underdeveloped  areas in the U.S.. Mrs. Bethune served as president from 1935 to 1949 when she was succeeded by other influentual women, such as Irene Straughter, Dorothy Height, Cornilia Glenn, Eunice Liberty and Lillian D. King.

(Information taken from Series 6: Minutes and Policy Documents)

Biographical Note

Mrs. Eunice W. "Liberty Bell" Liberty (1904-2001) was born in Kissimmee, Florida to Carrie Gilbert and Pope Watson. When she was 12, she left home to attend high school in Daytona Beach, Florida. In 8th grade, she attended the Mary McLeod Bethune Normal Industrial Institute for Negro Girls (which later became Bethune-Cookman College). She graduated from Edward Waters High School in Jacksonville. She received a teaching certificate from Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU, Florida A&M) in 1927. She earned a Masters degree from Columbia University in New York in 1950.

Around 1930, she moved to Miami to take a teaching position. She worked for Miami Dade Public Schools for nearly 40 years and retired in 1969. She taught at Douglas Elementary School in Overtown for 23 years. In 1970, she argued successfully for formally adding African-American History to Miami Dade Public Schools curriculum.

In 1935, Ms. Liberty married King Liberty. They were married for 31 years. They had no children. Begninning in 1950, they lived in the Liberty City area of Miami.

Ms. Liberty joined the National Council of Negro Women in the late 1950s and was President of the Greater Miami Chapter of the National Council of Negro Women from 1970 to 1980. In 1967 she was appointed to the Governors Committee on Education. Starting in 1968, she became active in the Model City Administering Board, at one time serving as Second Vice Chair Person. In 1981, she was involved with the Save the Children Project and Community Outreach Service Summer Program. She was also Project Director for the James E. Scott Liberty Square Project and the Debtors Anonymous Program (organized in 1977), and was active in the Bicentennial Commission of Florida. She was a member of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc..

In 1990, Ms. Liberty was recognized as a pioneer of the Miami community by In the Company of Women and is profiled in their publication, "In the Company of Women: The First Six Years." In 1996, the Miami Commission on the Status of Women inducted Ms. Liberty into the Miami Centennial 1996 Women's Hall of Fame. In 1997, The Community Coalition for Women's History honored her accomplishments as part of their Women's Hisotry Month celebration. Shortly before passing, she received the Drum Major for Justice Award from Miami-Dade Community College.

Subject/Index Terms

Beauty contests
Busing
Civil rights
Education
Educators
Elections--Florida--City of Miami
Minorities -- Housing
Nonprofit organizations
Women educators

Administrative Information

Repository: The Black Archives History & Research Foundation of South FL, Inc.

Alternate Extent Statement: 9 boxes

Access Restrictions: There are no access restrictions on this material.

Use Restrictions: Finding Aid (c) 2011 The Black Archives, History and Research Foundation, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Permission to publish materials must be obtained in writing from the Director of The Black Archives, History and Research Foundation, Inc. An image license agreement must be signed prior to recording or copying images.

Processing Information: Original Order was maintained where possible. Series 4: Debtor's Anonymous Program, Series 5: Harambe Brunch, Series 13: Selectees for Man and Woman of the Year, and Series 15: Subject Files are in the original order that Eunice Liberty arranged them in.


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series 1: Advertisements and Flyers, 1979-1991],
[Series 2: Certificates, 1947, 1969, 1978, 1984],
[Series 3: Correspondence, 1976-1981],
[Series 4: Debtor's Anonymous Program, circa 1978-1979],
[Series 5: Harambe Brunch, circa 1973-1981],
[Series 6: Minutes and Policy Documents, 1964-1985],
[Series 7: Newsletters, 1964-1985],
[Series 8: Orbituaries, 1962-1981],
[Series 9: Photographs, circa 1960s-1970s],
[Series 10: Programs and Invitations, circa 1974-1981],
[Series 11: Reports and Directories, 1966-1981],
[Series 12: Selectees for Man and Woman of the Year, 1977-1978, 1987],
[Series 13: Songs, undated],
[Series 14: Youth Program, 1969-1991],
[Series 15: Subject Files, 1961-1989],
[Series 16: Newspaper Clippings, 1969-1988],
[Series 17: Newspapers, 1944-1981],
[All]