Authors: Patricia Bell-Scott
Tags: #Political, #Lgbt, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #United States, #20th Century
“sensation-mongering”
: Warren H. Brown’s “A Negro Warns the Negro Press” appeared first in the
Saturday Review of Literature
, December 19, 1942, 5–6. It gained wider circulation and attention when it was reprinted in
Reader’s Digest
, January 1943. PM may have included a clipping of the advertisement “
The Afro-American Newspapers Answer Reader’s Digest
‘A Negro Warns the Negro Press,’ ”
WP
, January 17, 1943, a point-by-point response to Brown’s attack, with the materials she sent to ER.
“temperate”
: ER to Walter White, January 4, 1943, ERP. This controversy is also discussed in Lash,
Eleanor and Franklin
, 673–74.
“that there are times”
: ER, “What Is Morale?,”
Saturday Review of Literature
25 (July 4, 1942): 12.
“Some of us thought”
: PM to ER, May 13, 1943, ERP.
“
UNDERSTAND COMPLETION
”
: PM to ER, telegram, May 29, 1943, PMP.
ER’s long-standing affiliation
: Brigid O’Farrell, “A Stitch in Time: The New Deal, the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and Mrs. Roosevelt,”
Transatlantica
1 (2006), accessed August 3, 2013,
http://transatlantica.revues.org/190
; see also Brigid O’Farrell,
She Was One of Us: Eleanor Roosevelt and the American Worker
(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2010).
When Franklin Roosevelt reconstituted
: “Fair Employment Body Named,”
WP
, July 2, 1943. The other appointees were the Right Reverend Monsignor Francis J. Haas, chairman; John Brophy, Congress of Industrial Organizations; Milton P. Webster, Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Boris Shishkin, American Federation of Labor Economics; P. B. Young Sr.,
Norfolk Journal and Guide;
and Samuel Zemurray, United Fruit Co.
Memorial Day
: Coggs, interview by author; PM,
Song
, 195–97.
She called the White House
: PM,
Song
, 196.
“wrinkled”
: Ibid.
“big magnolia tree”
: ER, “My Day,” June 2, 1943.
“mini-reception”
: PM,
Song
, 197.
“spontaneous laughter”
: Ibid.
“tea for a few guests”
: ER, “My Day,” June 2, 1943.
“She asked me”
: PM to Mother [Pauline Fitzgerald Dame], June 4, 1943.
17. “FORGIVE MY BRUTAL FRANKNESS”
“morally responsible”
: “Blood on Your Hands,”
Jackson Daily News
, June 22, 1943.
Murray’s unrelenting schedule
: PM to Mother [Pauline Fitzgerald Dame], June 2, 1943, PMP.
“periods of crying”
: Dr. Brown, University Infirmary, Howard University, bedside notes, May 13, 1943, PMP.
“mental observation”
: PM to Mother [Pauline Fitzgerald Dame], June 2, 1943.
“emotional attachments”
: Ibid.
“terrific breakdowns”
: PM, “Questions prepared for Dr. Titley, Long Island ‘Rest’ Home—Amityville, New York,” December 17, 1937, PMP.
“mad Murrays”
: PM to Mother [Pauline Fitzgerald Dame], June 2, 1943.
“pattern of life”
: Ibid.
“This little ‘boy-girl’ ”
: Ibid.
“done nothing”
: Ibid.
“legal genius”
: Ibid.
One topic was
: “Shot While Playing with Roosevelt Lad: Chum of President’s Grandson Is Victim of Rifle Bullet,”
NYT
, June 7, 1943.
“wearing a rose”
: PM to ER, July 11, 1944, ERP.
“We cannot expect”
: PM to ER, June 7, 1943, ERP.
“four sons in the Army”
: Ibid.
Eleanor Roosevelt shared
: Julieanne Phillips, “Carrie Chapman Catt,” in
The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia
, ed. Maurine H. Beasley, Holly C. Shuman, and Henry R. Beasley (Westport, CT: Greenwood), 79–80, and Jason Berger, “Jane Addams,” in
The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia
, ed. Beasley, Shuman, and Beasley, 1–3.
But the first lady did not share
: John M. Craig, “Peace Movement,” in
The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia
, ed. Beasley, Shuman, and Beasley, 396–98.
“It was very sad”
: ER to PM, June 12, 1943, ERP.
She had thirteen
: PM to Mr. [Marvin H.] McIntyre, June 18, 1943, FDRP.
Some of her female friends
: Powell, interview by author; Katie McCabe and Dovey Johnson Roundtree,
Justice Older Than the Law: The Life of Dovey Johnson Roundtree
(Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2009), 55–72.
In Mobile, Alabama
: “Mobile Race Riot Laid to Company: OWI Taxes Alabama Shipbuilding Officers with Suppressing FEPC Ruling on Workers,”
NYT
, June 13, 1943.
Clashes between
: “Troops Curb Detroit Riots: 23 Are Dead; Governor Calls on Army for Help as Civil Authority Fails,”
WP
, June 22, 1943.
In Los Angeles
: “Los Angeles’ Zoot War Called ‘Near Anarchy’: ‘Black Widow’ Girls Beat, Slash Woman,”
WP
, June 11, 1943.
“the ugliest brand”
: “California: Zoot-Suit War,”
Time
, June 21, 1943.
“question”
: International News Service, “Zoot Suit Riots Concern Mexico,”
El Paso Herald-Post
, June 17, 1943.
Tempers also flared
: PM to Mr. [Marvin H.] McIntyre, June 18, 1943.
Authorities in Beaumont
: “Rape Sparks Race Rioting in Beaumont,”
WP
, June 17, 1943.
Few public officials
: Louis Martin, “Prelude to Disaster: Detroit,”
Common Ground
4 (Autumn 1943): 21–26; “Makes Race Riot Charges: Group to Aid Colored People Puts Onus on Detroit Officials,”
NYT
, July 29, 1943; and “Los Angeles’ Zoot War Called ‘Near Anarchy,’ ”
WP
.
“personally proclaiming”
: “Blood on Your Hands,”
Jackson Daily News
.
“white cabinet”
: PM to Mr. [Marvin H.] McIntyre, June 18, 1943.
“a determination”
: Ibid.
These alleged clubs
: Caryn Neumann, “Eleanor Clubs,” in
The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia
, ed. Beasley, Shuman, and Beasley, 157–58.
“a white woman”
: Howard W. Odum,
Race and Rumors of Race: Challenge to American Crisis
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1943), 86.
The FBI found
: “First Lady Says FBI Search for ‘Eleanor Clubs’ Futile,”
WP
, September 23, 1942.
On August 2, 1943
: “Harlem’s Tragedy,”
NYT
, August 3, 1943; William Pickens, “Harlem Riot: A Communication,”
WP
, August 8, 1943; and “1943 Harlem Riot Killed 5, Hurt 500: It Began When a Policeman Shot a Negro Soldier,”
NYT
, July 19, 1964. For in-depth discussion of the 1943 Harlem riot, see Harold Orlansky,
The Harlem Riot: A Study in Mass Frustration
(New York: Social Analysis, 1943); Dominic J. Capeci Jr.,
The Harlem Riot of 1943
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1977); and Nat Brandt,
Harlem at War: The Black Experience in WWII
(Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1996), 183–215.
“tramped”
: PM, “And the Riots Came…,”
Call
, August 13, 1942.
“ostensibly for”
: Ibid.
“a woman carry”
: Ibid.
Her frustration
: PM, “Harlem Riot,” in PM,
Dark Testament
, 35, and PM, “And the Riots Came…,”
Call
.
“mealy-mouthed”
: PM,
Song
, 212.
“Mr. Roosevelt Regrets”
: PM, “Mr. Roosevelt Regrets,” in
Dark Testament
, 34.
“heart sank”
: ER, “My Day,” August 4, 1943, PMP.
“be stampeded”
: Ibid.
“unwelcome change”
: Quoted in Black,
Casting Her Own Shadow
, 92.
“I have your poem”
: ER to PM, July 26, 1943, PMP.
18. “I COUNT YOU A REAL FRIEND”
“What Can the Negro”
: “Freshmen Hear First Lady,”
Hilltop
, January 29, 1944.
By the midsummer of 1943
: Black,
Casting Her Own Shadow
, 92.
ER’s days started
: ER,
This I Remember
(New York: Harpers & Brothers, 1949), 295–310.
“mouth hanging open”
: Stella K. Hershan,
A Woman of Quality
(New York: Crown, 1970), 163.
“Mrs. Roosevelt made me”
: Ibid.
On January 14, 1944
: “Freshmen Hear First Lady,”
Hilltop
.
“I know that this will”
: Ibid.
“Don’t get mad”
: This motto appears as the title of
chapter 20
in PM,
Song
, 232.
Her answer
: Ibid., 217–19.
Even as Murray
: PM, “A Blueprint for First Class Citizenship,”
Crisis
, and Brown, “NAACP Sponsored Sit-ins.”
“moderately priced”
: PM,
Song
, 222.
“rigorous”
: Ibid.
“to indulge”
: PM and Ruth Powell, “Pledge,” May 1, 1944, in PM, “Record of Howard University Student Civil Rights Campaign.”
“such as making signs”
: PM,
Song
, 223.
“twos and threes”
: Ibid.
The demonstration produced
: Ibid., 224.
“smartly dressed”
: Ibid.
“as a personal favor”
: Ibid.