This is the retired account of the National Archives at Philadelphia - a unit of the U.S. National Archives that serves as a repository for federal documents considered permanently valuable. We hold the records of federal agencies and U.S. Courts in the states of Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. Visit us at www.archives.gov/philadelphia
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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Retiring Account
We are no longer actively updating this account. For updates from the National Archives at Philadelphia, please visit https://www.archives.gov/philadelphia.
Follow other @USNatArchives social media accounts: https://www.archives.gov/social-media
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Black Americans fought for equality long before the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. In 1884, while Jim Crow was in its infancy, a group of black Baltimoreans purchased first-class tickets to board the Steamer Sue, which plied the waters between Maryland and Virginia. About an hour into the voyage, the ship’s chambermaid informed the group that the captain would not permit them to occupy the first class cabin because the ship’s regulations prohibited African Americans from that part of the vessel. The travelers protested their treatment by staying up all night in the ship’s saloon. When the women returned to Baltimore they filed a lawsuit against the Baltimore, Chesapeake, and Richmond Steamboat Company.
You can learn more about this case, and how researcher Dr. Dennis Patrick Halpin unraveled the story, by checking out his guest post on NARA's Rediscovering Black History blog: https://rediscovering-black-history.blogs.archives.gov/2018/12/18/early-civil-rights-protest-and-the-steamer-sue-case/
Pictured: Scan of the Rules and Regulations of the Baltimore, Chesapeake & Richmond Steamboat Company, which was submitted with the Stenographer’s Record in the case file.
#black history#black history month#bhm#nara#archives#history#maryland#baltimore#protests#civilrights
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Archives Technician Andrew Salyer may have bitten off more than he could chew with this one...
While searching through our U.S. District Court records for a researcher, Andrew opened the wrong box and found several exhibits of dental products (including fake teeth). After going through the case with a fine tooth comb, he discovered the case was about a product that was alleged to decrease recovery times after dental surgeries (U.S District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk Division, Civil Case No. 77-732 Harry Snead, Wayland J. Eley, and Louis M. Johnson v. Julian F. Hirst). Andrew has plans to sink his teeth into the case in the coming weeks to write a blog post about it, but we couldn't pass up the opportunity to share his findings.
Interested in learning more about our holdings? Email us at [email protected] or check out our website at www.archives.gov/philadelphia
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Check out this blog post, written by Andrew Salyer titled "Morose Marginalia on Naturalization Records."
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Check out recent blog post by Archives Specialist Matthew DiBiase: "Face Off: Derek Sanderson vs. the NHL"
A new exhibit showcasing the impact sports have had on America has opened at the National Archives Museum. All American: The Power of Sports (https://museum.archives.gov/all-american) spans centuries of United States history and features more than 75 original items from National Archives’ holdings. The exhibit is free and open to the public and will be on view through January 7, 2024.
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A new exhibit showcasing the impact sports have had on America has opened at the National Archives Museum. "All American: The Power of Sports" (https://museum.archives.gov/all-american) spans centuries of United States history and features more than 75 original items from National Archives’ holdings, including items documenting sports at Bureau of Indian Affairs boarding schools. The exhibit is free and open to the public and will be on view through January 7, 2024.
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Check out recent blog post by Archives Specialist Matthew DiBiase: "Sports in Courts: Savagery on Sunday"
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Thousands of Indigenous women experienced involuntary sterilization and removal of their children in the 1960s and 1970s. A case file from our holdings of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, Norma Jean Serena et al. v. Natalie J. Leezer et al., tells the story of Norma Jean Serena's fight for justice after her forced sterilization and wrongful removal of her children in 1970.
Read more here.
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Check out "Sports in Courts: Malcolm Poindexter Jr. v. Granville Hamner," written by our very own Archives Specialist, Matthew DiBiase. This blog post describes a 1949 incident between Malcolm Poindexter, Jr. of the Philadelphia Tribune and Philadelphia Phillies infielder Granville “Granny” Hamner.
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The photograph featured here is a panorama of the vast Olympic National Forest in Washington State.
This photograph was included with information about a fire detection system, which the David W. Taylor Model Basin was looking into procuring in the 1960s.
Check out the National Archives Catalog entry here: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/68123516
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Seen here is a photograph of a man and woman on a trail to Heart's Content in Allegheny Forest near Warren, PA. This pictures comes from a collection of photographs from the Northeastern Forest Timber Management Research Station.
Check out the National Archives Catalog entry here: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/81214790
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Seen here is a photograph of United States Forest Service employee posing with the root system of a pitch pine that was pulled out with a tractor near New Lisbon, New Jersey. This is one of many pictures from this series of photographs that depicts the various aspects of the work of the U.S. Forest Service Northeastern Forest Experiment Station.
Check out the National Archives Catalog entry here: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/81214798
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Check out "The Grisly Tale of the “Colorado Cannibal” Alfred Packer, as Seen in the Records of the Office of Indian Affairs" on the Text Message blog.
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The National Archives launched the 1950 Census website on April 1, 2022. We hope you’ve had a chance to search the 1950 Census and learn more about your family history and life in the United States in 1950. The website has already had more than 1.4 million visitors, including 44 million page views and over 1.2 million names transcribed!
You can continue to help transcribe and refine our name index. Transcribing or submitting name updates helps improve the accuracy of the name index and make the records more searchable.
Because the initial name index is built on optical character recognition (OCR) technology, we know it is not 100% accurate. This is where we need your help! We encourage you to try out the 1950 Census website’s built-in transcription tool to help refine the name index. Need ideas where to start? Interested in helping with more complicated forms? While you can transcribe any name or any page within the 1950 Census, we’ve identified several specific areas where we’d like your help transcribing.
Visit our 1950 Census transcription project web page to learn more about specific enumeration districts or areas where we could use help transcribing.
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Check out this blog post, written by Andrew Salyer, related to Maryland Civil Case No. 81-803, Atari, Inc. v. Amusement World, Inc. titled "Asteroids and Meteors and Lawyers: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Copyright Law."
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Happy Census Day! Join us for the virtual celebration at 10 am ET at http://archives.gov/1950census
See answers to the most frequently asked questions about the 1950 census here: https://www.archives.gov/research/census/1950/faqs
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Today's post highlights the work of one of our former interns, Maria Adamson, who interned with us virtually this past fall as a part of the Cultural Fieldwork Initiative (CFI), a partnership with the Temple University College of Education Social Studies faculty and more than 30 regional cultural institutions. We have two new teaching activities that focus on identification papers of several Chinese people who were “on exhibit” in an ethnographic display in Philadelphia in 1899. You can use The Chinese Village Exhibit at the 1899 Export Exposition for high school, or Contextualizing a Photograph: On Exhibit at the “Chinese Village” for middle school, while teaching about immigration and the Chinese Exclusion Act, imperialism, or while teaching the history of anthropology, “otherness,” and living ethnological displays. Check out Maria's blog post, along with links to her activities, here.
#Chinese Exclusion Act#ChineseExclusion#ChineseExclusionAct#Chinese Exclusion#History#Archives#Primary Sources#PrimarySources#Research#Teachers#HistoryTeachers#History Teachers#Lesson Plan#LessonPlans
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