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American Civil Liberties Union Records, The Roger Baldwin Years, 1917-1950: Finding Aid
MC001.01

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Published in 2002
©2007 Princeton University Library
Summary Information
- Creator:
- American Civil Liberties Union.
- Title and dates:
- American Civil Liberties Union Records, The Roger Baldwin Years, 1917-1950
- Abstract:
- The American Civil Liberties Union Records document the activities of the Union in protecting individual rights from 1920 through 1995. The files contain materials on freedom of speech, expression, and association; due process of law; equality before the law; legal case files; and organizational records. Within these categories files reflect subject areas such as academic freedom, censorship, racial discrimination, aliens' rights, privacy concerns, labor concerns, amnesty, and government loyalty and security. The files reflect work on litigation, advocacy and public policy, and subject files on various areas of interest connected with civil liberties. Materials include correspondence, court documents, memoranda, printed matter, minutes, reports, briefs, and legal files. Also included are materials from ACLU affiliate organizations, and the Lawyers Constitutional Defense Committee.
- Size:
- 315 linear feet (1886 bound volumes, 12 archival boxes on 288 reels of microfilm), Bound scrapbook volumes for the years 1912, 1917-1946, with an extensive subject card file index
- Call number:
- MC001.01
- Location:
- Princeton University Library. Department of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library.
Public Policy Papers.
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 USA - Language(s) of material:
- English.
- Storage note:
- This collection is stored onsite at the Mudd Manuscript Library.
History of the ACLU
The ACLU During the Baldwin Years, 1917-1950
The American Civil Liberties Union has for the last seventy-five years been the principal defender of the rights that citizens can assert against government. Its primary aims have been the defense of the freedoms of speech and press, the separation of church and state, the free exercise of religion, due process of law, equal protection of the law and privacy rights of all citizens. The organization has been responsible for what historian Samuel Walker has called “a revolution of law and public attitudes toward individual liberty.” Walker estimates that modern constitutional law has been shaped in no small measure by the ACLU, with the organization involved in some 80% of the landmark cases in the twentieth century. The ACLU has fostered the growth of tolerance, fought to end racial discrimination, promoted a legal definition of privacy rights, and defended the rights of the unpopular, the powerless and the despised.
Origins of the ACLU
The ACLU began as a part of the American Union Against Militarism (AUAM) which had been formed in New York in 1914 to oppose American entry into World War I. Following the declaration of war in 1917, Crystal Eastman, AUAM's Executive Secretary, and Roger Baldwin, a social worker involved in juvenile justice, established a Bureau of Conscientious Objectors to oppose the new draft law and to advise conscientious objectors. On July 1, 1917, the AUAM created a Civil Liberties Bureau that became an independent organization known as the National Civil Liberties Bureau (NCLB) on October 1, 1917. Once Eastman and Baldwin took their efforts to this new organization, the AUAM quickly folded.
The NCLB had two main tasks: to defend the rights of conscientious objectors imprisoned in camps around the country and to fight the increasing suppression of free speech by both government officials and conservative patriotic societies. Its leadership came from a mix of social workers like Baldwin and Eastman, Protestant clergy (Norman Thomas, Harry F. Ward and John Haynes Holmes) and lawyers (Walter Nelles, Albert DeSilver, L. Hollingsworth Wood and Clarence Darrow).
The NCLB sponsored three tests of free speech rights during wartime, all of which ended in failure for the organization. Socialist Party leader Charles T. Schenck was denied the right to mail antiwar and anti-draft literature in a case which established Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' “clear and present danger” test. Also upheld were convictions of Eugene Debs for condemning war and capitalism in a speech and Jacob Abrams for distributing leaflets opposing the American intervention in Russia.
By late 1918 Roger Baldwin had come to lead the organization due to Eastman's ill health. Baldwin was gifted with the ability to build an organization due to his effectiveness as a publicist, fundraiser and administrator. While Baldwin favored public education and reasoning with public officials, he soon became a target. The NCLB's defense of the Industrial Workers of the World led to investigations by army intelligence and the Bureau of Investigation and to phone taps. On August 31, 1918, federal agents seized the NCLB's files which were eventually to be used by New York State's Lusk Committee prior to their return to the NCLB.
When Congress extended the draft to age 35 late in the war, Baldwin notified his draft board he would refuse induction. Imprisoned in November 1918, Baldwin used the time until his release the following July to read, write, create a prisoners' self-help group, issue a mimeographed newsletter on life in prison and organize the NCLB's records.
The postwar Red Scare, the Palmer raids, new laws on criminal syndicalism and use of red flags, and the need to repeal the Espionage Act and to secure amnesty for wartime dissidents led to calls for a permanent organization after the war. On January 19, 1920, the American Civil Liberties Union received its charter in New York.
ACLU During the 1920s
The ACLU started its career with a bang, issuing a Report upon the Illegal Practices of the United States Department of Justice written by twelve prominent lawyers, including Zechariah Chaffee and Felix Frankfurter. In these early years, Baldwin generally favored working for the cause of labor as a more effective means for obtaining desired changes in society. The failure of litigation efforts during the war probably influenced this early course. Thus during the 1920s the ACLU was substantially involved in efforts to strengthen the labor movement. The ACLU also continued to work for amnesty, to repeal criminal syndicalism laws, to oppose compulsory military training on campuses, and to ward off attacks by right wing groups. It fought book bans by the Customs Service and Post Office. It promoted racial justice while also defending the Ku Klux Klan's right to march and opposing NAACP attempt to ban Birth of a Nation. It defended the rights of Communists to free speech and applied the same standard to Henry Ford's anti-Semitic works.
The ACLU remained a relatively small organization throughout this period with 2500 members in 1930 and a budget of only $25,000 annually. While there was a National Committee--a letterhead group of sixty persons which met annually--decisions were made by a small Executive Committee that met weekly and by a governing Board. The heart of the leadership consisted of Baldwin and his fellow pacifists--Norman Thomas, John Haynes Holmes, L. Hollingsworth Wood and John Nevin Sayre. Baldwin tended to be an autocrat who did not easily share power. Only three of the twenty executive committee members were lawyers and the position of General Counsel was not created until 1929. The organization did not seek a broad constituency and found recruiting labor leaders and conservatives to its board a difficult task. Baldwin recruited most local correspondents during his annual tours around the country. During the 1920s most financial support came from Albert DeSilver (and his widow following his death) and from the American Fund for Public Service (generally known as the Garland Fund), a private foundation to support social reform which the ACLU basically administered until it failed during the stock market crash.
Throughout the 1920s labor and political speech issues predominated. The organization remained silent on such issues as the Volstead Act, the Olmstead wiretapping case, and other due process or privacy law questions. ACLU's greatest claim to fame during this decade was its offer to defend anyone willing to challenge the Tennessee law forbidding teaching the theory of evolution. Clarence Darrow and Arthur Hays, backed by the ACLU, defended John T. Scopes in the famous Dayton, Tennessee “Monkey Trial.” Live radio coverage and an enormous press cadre (led by five Baltimore Sun reporters, including H. L. Mencken) made the public aware of the ACLU and helped the organization raise funds.
Other major activities prior to the New Deal included a defense of picketing by laborers in Paterson, New Jersey, establishment of the principle of the incorporation of free speech and press freedoms under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment in Gitlow v. U.S., the unsuccessful appeal of Charlotte Whitney's conviction for organizing on behalf of the Communist Labor Party in California, a reversal of Harold Fiske's conviction as an Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) organizer in Kansas, and foundation of the right to counsel in capital cases in the “Scottsboro Boys” appeals.
In the area of censorship, the ACLU led a march to protest a Boston ban of Mencken's American Mercury, defended Margaret Sanger's right to deliver a speech on birth control, stopped a Post Office ban on Mary Ware Dennett's pamphlet The Sex Side of Life, supported a case that ended a Customs Service prohibition on the importation of James Joyce's Ulysses, aided Yetta Sternberg in a California case banning display of a red flag and established limits on prior restraint of the press in the Near v. Minnesota case.
In 1929 Baldwin proposed a broad expansion plan for the organization to include increased interest in civil rights, Native Americans, police brutality, and alien rights; opposition to compulsory military training and censorship; and extension of civil liberties efforts to the international arena. The result was an increase in subject committees (for instance Labor Injunctions and Indian Civil Rights) and a larger network of regional affiliate organizations.
Baldwin continued to try to work from within the government. The Wickersham Commission hired Walter Pollak, Zechariah Chaffee and Carl Stern on Baldwin's recommendation, and its report Lawlessness in Law Enforcement was a major bombshell. The Indian Civil Rights Committee held a day-long conference in 1933 which helped to shape the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. In 1931 the ACLU published Black Justice and Morris Ernst as chair of the Garland Fund's Committee on Negro Work issued the Margold Report suggesting the need for a legal attack on segregation.
Throughout these years and later, the ACLU was by no means monolithic and vigorous debates raged over many of the policy decisions within the organization. For example, the religious element in the organization was not unalterably opposed to Bible reading and release time in schools. While some favored turning to the courts to effect changes, others believed public education, strikes and working for legislative and administrative change would prove more effective. Some preferred broad legal challenges while others wanted narrower tests designed to achieve the desired result in particular cases. The debates in the records of committee and board meetings provide lively and rich documentation of the activities and struggles of the organization.
The New Deal
Given its history of opposition to government power, the ACLU viewed Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal with misgivings. The economic situation had led to increased repression of labor, lynchings and deportations, but the notion of granting more power to the same government that had been the cause of repression during World War I did not sit well with many in the organization.
Throughout the 1930s the ACLU continued to defend free expression, asserting the rights of the German-American Bund in Shall We Defend Free Speech for Nazis in America (1934) and commissioning two studies of Nazis in America ( Shirts!) and of the effects of anti-Fascist laws in Europe. The ACLU opposed Catholic efforts to censor printed works, movies and information on contraception, leading to the resignation of Rev. John Ryan from the National Committee in 1934. Baldwin also appeared regularly on a CBS radio program, “Let Freedom Ring,” during the 1930s. Other important activities included opposition to Boss Frank Hague's limits on union activities in Jersey City, cases to extend free speech rights to Communists, a series of Jehovah's Witnesses cases involving flag salutes and permits for literature distribution, and the National Labor Relations Board's attacks on Henry Ford's free speech rights.
The most difficult aspect of the New Deal years for the ACLU was its relationship to the Communist Party. The ACLU's bail fund had been seriously affected when five Communist Party members jumped bail and fled to the Soviet Union in 1930. Yet the two organizations had worked together on Scottsboro, the DeJonge and Herndon free speech cases, and in the International Juridical Association. Thus when the Popular Front was organized by the Communist Party in the 1930s, ACLU and Baldwin joined the effort since he was ever a coalition builder. Opponents continued to allege that the ACLU was a Communist front, especially since Harry Ward chaired both the ACLU and the American League for Peace and Democracy, the largest of the Popular Front organizations.
Communist Party attacks on a Socialist Party rally in Madison Square Garden in 1934 led Norman Thomas and John Haynes Holmes to call for banning Communists from ACLU leadership. In this same decade, the Dies Committee (the House Committee on Un-American Activities, popularly known as HUAC) concluded after its first hearings that one could not say with certainty whether or not the ACLU was a Communist organization. The ACLU responded by leading efforts to abolish the Dies Committee, assigning Abraham Isserman to write the first systematic analysis of the rights of witnesses before investigative committees (a report which Baldwin suppressed, perhaps in an agreement with HUAC) and working to clear the ACLU name. HUAC raids beginning in 1939, passage of the Smith Act in 1940 and state laws banning the Communist Party from the ballot served to increase concern about totalitarian organizations. In response to these growing concerns, the ACLU in 1940 adopted a policy barring Communist Party members from official positions in the organization, leading to the ouster of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn from the board and to the resignations of several others, including Harry Ward.
The 1930s witnessed an expansion of ACLU affiliates to St. Louis, San Francisco, Seattle, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Iowa, Indiana and Texas. By 1939 five affiliates had paid staff. At the New York headquarters, the ACLU hired its first staff counsel in 1941.
Civil Liberties During Wartime
Following the outbreak of war in Europe in 1939, the ACLU organized a conference on Civil Liberties in the National Emergency which was keynoted by Attorney General Frank Murphy. Lucille Milner wrote popular articles on conscientious objection and freedom of speech during wartime which carried the ACLU message to the general public. When war came in 1941, President Roosevelt pledged to continue constitutional freedoms even in a state of war, a policy generally followed except for one glaring exception.
Immediately after Pearl Harbor Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 which created military zones to be run by the War Relocation Authority to intern Japanese aliens and Japanese-American citizens. The ACLU denounced the order as contrary to liberty and due process and as racially-motivated since it applied only to Japanese.
While western affiliates sought test cases, an activity made difficult by Japanese acquiescence, the ACLU split on the question of what were the limits of government power during wartime. A resolution approved the President's order in principle, but provided four technical bases for bringing challenges to the order. Similarly the ACLU voted not to oppose a peacetime draft that included good protections for conscientious objectors (although the law did not provide political grounds for objection) and adopted the Seymour resolution not to defend individuals charged with sedition when no due process violations were involved. The national organization's willingness to compromise on civil liberties issues during wartime led to considerable opposition from affiliates, especially those on the West Coast. Eventually the ACLU handled two leading cases involving the internment camps, Korematsu and Hirabayashi.
The ACLU also created new committees during the war, a National Committee on Conscientious Objectors headed by Ernest Angell who met with President Roosevelt on the matter, a Committee Against Racial Discrimination chaired by Pearl Buck, and a Committee on Discrimination Against Women led by Dorothy Kenyon. ACLU's strong support for civil rights led to a split with some of its old labor allies. ACLU supported a bill of rights for union members and the growing movement for democracy in trade unions. The ACLU also aided the NAACP in cases that overthrew the white primary and restrictive covenants, and even took on a test of the segregated draft in the Winfred Lynn case which the NAACP would not accept.
Post-War Problems
The ACLU's long-standing debate regarding its relationship to the Communist Party in many ways limited its response to the Cold War anti-Communist crusade that followed the war. One faction on the board, led by Norman Thomas and Morris Ernst, was strongly anti-Communist. Others, led by Arthur Garfield Hays, Osmond Fraenkel and Walter Gellhorn, opposed any attempt to restrict political beliefs and associations.
The basic elements of the post-war attack on civil liberties were already in place even before the war began: HUAC, the Smith Act, state loyalty oaths and FBI surveillance of individuals and organizations. When President Truman issued E.O. 9835 establishing the federal loyalty program, the ACLU opted for quiet court tests and lobbying of Attorney General Tom Clark instead of a public opposition to the basic tenets of the order.
Baldwin, an activist throughout his life, had associations with many of the organizations found on the Attorney General's list of Communist Party affiliates, so he protected himself by regular attacks on the Communist Party which only served to limit his ability to oppose the internal security crusade. The ACLU sought to protect the rights of HUAC witnesses rather than take on HUAC itself.
The Smith Act cases which Judge Harold Medina presided over in New York led to convictions of the defendants for membership in the Communist Party. Moveover, Medina's contempt citations put a chill on lawyers who might have defended clients. When the Supreme Court's Dennis decision sustained the Smith Act, a dissident group of ACLU members, led by Corliss Lamont, left to form an Emergency Civil Liberties Committee to pay more attention to trial-level support rather than waiting for the appeals process which had been ACLU's forte. The ACLU also refused to pursue allegations of FBI abuse, often providing an active apology for the Bureau.
Even in this era, the ACLU remained a small organization with a membership of fewer than 10,000. Of its affiliates, only Boston, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles had paid staff. In response to the need for a stronger national organization, to the criticism of the Lamont faction, and to the perception that the ACLU had not responded effectively to the attacks of the anti-Communist crusade, in 1948 a Special Committee on Policy Planning under Walter Gellhorn urged that the ACLU become less involved in litigation and provide more public education. The Committee named civil rights and the fight against censorship as the key issues for the future and downplayed old causes like church-state questions and defense of minority parties. Finally, the Committee recommended that Roger Baldwin be relieved from executive responsibilities and given an ambassadorial role of speaking, writing and maintaining relations with other organizations. As a result of this recommendation, Roger Baldwin retired as executive director in 1950, at the close of the organization's first thirty years which is the period covered by this microfilm edition.
Description
The Records
The microfilm edition of the ACLU records covers the period from 1917 to 1950. It consists of the 1886 bound volumes of records through the year 1946, and 226 “volumes” of loose records for the 1946 to 1950 period, and three records center boxes known as Appendixes 1-3 which cover indexed material not previously filmed, mostly from 1940 to 1946. There is a small amount of material relating to an Industrial Workers of the World free speech trial in San Diego, California in 1912 that antedates the creation of the ACLU whose origin is unknown. Some ACLU-related materials during this period have not been filmed in this collection as described below.
The Nature of the Records
The volumes are generally devoted either to clippings or to correspondence, with each volume then relating to a single type of record, although sometimes there are several series in a single volume. The series lists which follow provide access by series even though the locations of the information are spread throughout the volumes.
While it is impossible to detail all of the information found in this massive collection, some sense can be given from two examples. The conscientious objector issue during World War I fills over thirty-seven volumes. The ACLU received hundred of letters from people objecting to military service. Some belonged to pacifist religions, others belonged to political groups opposed to the war. Some of the letters and diaries contain statements of belief and vivid accounts of camp and prison conditions and some describe non-combative service. ACLU supporters also reported on the treatment of CO's. When the ACLU took cases, its files include legal briefs, depositions, affidavits and court transcripts, as well as informal reports. In controversial cases, the files contain letters from officials in President Wilson's administration and letters from other figures such as Felix Frankfurter, John Dewey, Upton Sinclair, Jane Addams and Lillian Wald. Some cases generated extensive press coverage, much of it simply filed as clippings. For example, records document the ACLU's campaign to stop the practice of chaining objectors to the bars of their cells. The records also reveal the personal concerns of Roger Baldwin, and the political and legal preoccupations of his supporters.
The quality of material on labor issues matches that of the material on conscientious objectors. The files hold the letters of union organizers, labor activists and members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Some letters describe the ill treatment at the hands of the law, mob violence and lynchings. Others describe working conditions in mines, factories and lumber mills. The ACLU files include memoranda and trial documents such as the record of the ACLU involvement in the group trial of the IWW members in Chicago in 1918. Material on Samuel Gompers, Bill Haywood, Emma Goldman and others appear throughout this period. ACLU publications, press clippings and unpublished reports offer illuminating details on deportations, alien issues and the rise of what the ACLU called the “superpatriotic” organizations: the Ku Klux Klan, Knights of Liberty and others.
Self-Indexing Nature of the Volumes
In many ways the volumes themselves are self-indexing in that a fairly elaborate, although usually unpaginated, index outline is found at the front of each volume. The researcher should remember that the index while originally prepared for a single volume may now relate to material spread over two or more volumes created as a result of rehousing for conservation. The index outline for each volume is carried over throughout its contents with each new section of the outline listed on what is a blue paper section header pasted in before the records. While this blue paper marker helps to locate the sections of the outline in the bound volumes, finding it is somewhat more difficult due to the black and white nature of the film.
Arrangement of the Material in the Volumes
Throughout the records there is a clear division between correspondence and newspaper clippings. Materials are for the most part then arranged chronologically by year (or set of years in the early volumes) for each series. For each topic within a series (roughly equivalent to a file folder) there is also a chronological arrangement. There are of course occasional overlaps of material at the beginning and end of each year and breakdowns in the order as materials were pasted into volumes.
At the beginning of the run, there are relatively few series. Except for separate runs for organizational matters and conscientious objectors, most early materials fall under general correspondence/clippings or state case correspondence/clippings. Over time with the increasing complexity of the organization, other series dealing with academic freedom, censorship, federal agencies and legislation, outside organizations and labor injunctions become a part of the organization of these records. There are also special series for the records of the Pennsylvania Civil Liberties and the Philadelphia Branch (1930-1933), the New York City Civil Liberties Committee (1936-1950), and the personal papers of Walter Nelles (1920-1926).
While there is an apparent organization to these bound volumes, the task for the researcher is to determine which series (and there are often several, all of which may contain records) are appropriate for the research task. A combination of the reel and series lists, the card index, and the volume outlines found on the film should enable the researcher to find the appropriate records with a modest degree of effort.
Omissions from the Microfilmed Records
The microfilm does not include all ACLU records prior to 1950. The major series omitted, but available on other microfilm, are board minutes, mailings to the board, policy guides, legal briefs, press releases and publications. Portions of these series appear under appropriate topics (for instance board actions and publications are often found as related to a particular subject, but there are no complete runs of minutes or publications). Other materials relating to the Elizabeth Gurley Flynn ouster in 1940 and to labor and radio were not filmed since they came directly from the ACLU to Princeton at a later point in time.
Arrangement
1947-1995 Records [Boxes 1-2103]
Please see the ACLU finding aid, 1947-1995, for a description of theses records and their arrangement.
1917-1947 Records [Volumes 1-2762]
The first seven series contain newspaper clippings and their descriptions are arranged alphabetically by title of the series. The fourteen other series are correspondence series which are also arranged alphabetically by title. The researcher should understand that even though these materials are organized into discrete series descriptions, the records themselves are intermingled throughout the microfilm. In other words this is a conceptualization of the series found in these volumes if one were to bring like matter together; the material itself has not been rearranged.
Organized into the following series:
- Reel Contents - American Civil Liberties Union Microfilm
- Series 1: Academic Freedom--Clippings, 1917-1950
- Series 2: Censorship--Clippings, 1928-1950
- Series 3: Chronological--Clippings, 1947-1948
- Series 4: Federal Departments--Clippings, 1920-1950
- Series 5: General--Clippings, ( 1912, 1917-1946, 1949-1950)
- Series 6: Legislation--Clippings, (1917-1950)
- Series 7: States--Clippings, 1919-1946, 1949-1950
- Series 8: Academic Freedom--Correspondence, 1918-1950
- Series 9: Censorship--Correspondence, 1917-1921, 1930-1950
- Series 10: Conscientious Objectors--Correspondence, ( 1917-1921, 1927, 1940-1950
- Series 11: Federal Departments--Correspondence, 1924-1950
- Series 12: Federal Legislation--Correspondence, 1919-1921, 1926-1950
- Series 13: General--Correspondence, 1918-1950
- Series 14: Injunctions--Correspondence, 1931-1939
- Series 15: Labor and Liberal Organizations, ( 1921, 1931-1950)
- Series 16: Nelles Papers, Walter--Correspondence, (1920-1926)
- Series 17: New York City Committee--Correspondence, 1936-1950
- Series 18: Organizational Matter--Correspondence, (1917-1950)
- Series 19: Pennsylvania Civil Liberties Commmittee--Correspondence, (1930-1933)
- Series 20: State Legislation--Correspondence, 1928-1950
- Series 21: States--Correspondence, (1917-1950)
Access and Use
Access
Collection is open for research use.
Restrictions on Use and Copyright Information
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the University Archivist. Copyright is held by the Trustees of Princeton University.
Other Finding Aid(s)
A finding aid for the American Civil Liberties Union Records, 1947-1995, is available online: American Civil Liberties Union Records, 1947-1995.
The ACLU Card Index (1917-1946)
History of the Index
In 1978 the Princeton University Library received a Higher Education Act Title II-C grant to index the bound volumes of ACLU material for the 30-year period from 1917 to 1946. The bound nature of these archival materials had always been problematic in terms of use and copying, the paper copies were literally turning to dust, and researchers complained bitterly over the years of an inability to find relevant materials in these volumes.
Over a two-year period an index team created hundreds of subject categories, some used only for a single year and others stretching over the entire 30-year time span. In addition major or frequent correspondents or authors were indexed under a category called people. By the end of the grant, 57,500 cards (40 file drawers) had been filed to index the 1,886 volumes. Four additional cartons of loose materials from the pre-1947 period were also indexed as Appendices 1-4. Appendices 1-3 were newly filmed for this microform collection (Reels 280-288). Appendix 4 had previously been filmed as Volumes 1-7 of the 1946 correspondence (Reel 238).
The Nature of the Index
The index is first organized chronologically by year or set of years, which generally follows the manner in which the volumes themselves are organized. For each chronological division, the cards are then arranged under specific subjects.
Please use the list of subjects (pp. 19-48) and the list of names (pp. 49-66) which may be found under the subject heading “People,” to identify relevant index terms and the years they appear.
The cards themselves always provide volume numbers, and pages for volumes that are numbered. The reel numbers (often indicated on the card as r:) for Reels 1-69 (Volumes 1-380) are generally listed on the cards. Thereafter the cards usually read “No Film.” This only indicates that Princeton did not own a copy of the film when the index was prepared. Use the reel list (pp. 67-136) to determine the appropriate reel for the volume you want to use.
Limitations of the Index
The index requires the researcher to determine the relevant subject which is not always easy. Any number of relatively broad topics might well and often do encompass the proposed area of research. In addition, the index does not provide the view of the organization of the records that the reel and series lists provide.
Most legal cases are listed under a subject, so there is no centralized access to the cases by name, except for certain periods (like conscientious objector cases during World War I) or for certain well-known cases (for instance Scopes). Remember that legal cases are often filed under the clippings and correspondence for an individual state from which it initiated. Again the reel and series lists should not be overlooked as other means to find relevant material.
There are also limits to name access to correspondence. The indexing team included more names in the early years and fewer as the project progressed. In addition, not all names or every appearance of that name in a given year is indexed, especially for individuals active in ACLU affairs. Researchers should certainly look at reel and series lists to find other avenues of access.
Finally, the index does not include some of the loose material for 1946 (Volumes 8-18 found on reels 238-239 for which the originals seem to have been lost) or any of the materials for 1947 to 1950 (Volumes 19-189, Reels 240-274). The originals of these loose materials, except for the clippings, were recently reorganized as part of an ACLU processing project for the post-1946 un-bound ACLU records. Thus to gain access to these materials, one must use the reel and series lists.
Acquisition and Appraisal
Provenance and Acquisition
Gift of the Materials to the New York Public Library
On January 5, 1920, Albert DeSilver, the Director of the National Civil Liberties Bureau, wrote to Edwin H. Anderson, Librarian of the New York Public Library, indicating that the National Civil Liberties Bureau was winding up its affairs and proposing to send the records of the Bureau to the library. DeSilver indicated that the records consisted of approximately 70 volumes, one and one-half inches thick, of bound correspondence “relating to civil liberties and conscientious objection during the war” and “newspaper clippings covering the same period throughout the United States.” DeSilver modestly stated, “In our judgment this is a valuable collection for reference use as historical documents.” The next day Anderson replied positively to the proposal. Thus began a 30-year relationship between the New York Public Library and what soon became the ACLU.
When the first of these volumes were finally delivered to the library in December 1921, Roger Baldwin's cover letter noted: “I feel as if we ought to apologize for the condition of these volumes. It is due to the fact that they have been roughly handled, having been sent to Washington for a Senate Committee investigation and to the Lusk Committee in New York state for their use in compiling their report.” Both Baldwin and DeSilver enunciated the principle that these records be open to all “interested persons who made inquiries of us.” This desire to make known the work of ACLU almost immediately after the time during which the records were created has been a hallmark of the ACLU's approach to its records. Many materials that would be withheld today for a period of time due to concerns about privacy, privilege and confidentiality were available for all to see upon their annual transfer to the library. The records provide a detailed picture of the day-to-day life of this institution as it grew in the Baldwin years. Its local correspondents and the general public sent correspondence, reports, and hundreds of clippings from small papers across America relating to the issues that formed the ACLU's agenda.
Care of the Records at the New York Public Library
The first volumes sent to the Library were canvas-backed post-bound original documents or clippings pasted on paper. Volumes were numbered starting with 1 for each series for each year or set of years. Over the years the library employed conservation measures on many of these volumes that involved removing the originals from the post-bindings, and cutting and pasting them into scrapbooks. This process often increased the number of volumes and split materials described as a single volume between two or more volumes. In some cases volumes were renumbered as a part of the process, so one can see multiple numbering schemes for the filmed volumes.
At some point the ACLU began to forward loose materials arranged in series to the library which became responsible for the pasting and binding process. In order to improve access to the volumes, the library eventually renumbered the entire run of volumes starting with 1. In assigning the numbers, or upon undergoing conservation work, some volumes were numbered with a combination of volume and letter designations (i.e. 595A and 595B). There is also an enormous gap in the numbering system from 1099 to 2000 which appears to have been a mistake made by the person applying the numbers to the volumes. There are also some missing numbers, but there is no internal evidence which would indicate that those volumes are missing; again it is likely that those numbers were not assigned by mistake.
Preparation of the Microfilm
In 1952 the New York Public Library decided it could no longer house a vast and growing collection like that of the ACLU. The library made plans to film the materials on hand and then destroy them. For the future, the library planned to film on an annual basis, a strategy that was never implemented. The ACLU apparently hoped to preserve the originals, and in 1953 signed an agreement with Princeton to bring the records to the University's spacious new Firestone Library. By the 1970s, despite several additions to the main library, Princeton too had run out of space. Upon completion of the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library on the Princeton campus in 1976, the records were transferred to this still spacious facility.
When the New York Public Library prepared its microfilm between 1953 and 1957, it had already bound material into volumes through most of 1946, but the rest of the material through 1950 still remained loose in boxes. In addition, three boxes of pre-1950 indexed material at Princeton (that had not been filmed by the New York Public Library) were filmed as Appendixes 1-3 of this microfilm edition.
Processing and Other Information
Foreword
This microfilm publication of the records of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) during the tenure of Roger Baldwin as Executive Director is the culmination of a collaborative effort between the ACLU, the New York Public Library (NYPL), Princeton University Libraries and Scholarly Resources, Inc., which began in 1993. The ACLU has always taken pride in providing free and open access to its historical records, first at NYPL (1920-1953) which filmed these records, and then at Princeton (1953-present), which created the index for them. Scholarly Resources filmed the index and some additional materials found in the index but not originally filmed by NYPL. As a result, researchers who are unable to travel to Princeton now have access to these invaluable Records.
I am especially grateful to Samuel Walker's In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU (1990) which provided much of the background material for the history of the organization found on pp. 1-7. The work of Agnes Sherman in producing the index, accomplished under the direction of my predecessor, Nancy Bressler, should also be noted, as well as the support of the United States Department of Education for that worthy project. Nanci Young and Daniel Linke, Assistant Archivists at the Mudd Library reviewed the text, greatly helping to improve it. William L. Joyce, Associate University Librarian for Rare Books and Special Collections at Princeton, has been supportive of all the work of the Mudd Library at Princeton.
The support of the National Historical Publications and Records Commission of the National Archives for a recent project managed by Janet Linde in New York and Paula Jabloner in Princeton was the impetus for my desire to make sense of these early records. This guide makes access to these records possible in exciting new ways. Finally, I want to acknowledge the love and support of my wife, Terry, and my two sons, Christopher and David. They were left alone many evenings and weekends while work on this project progressed, but their contributions to my life are without measure.
Ben Primer
University Archivist and Curator of Public Policy Papers
Princeton University
6 May 1996
Descriptive Rules Used
Finding aid content adheres to that prescribed by Describing Archives: A Content Standard.
Encoding
Machine-readable finding aid encoded in EAD 2002 by Techbooks and Cristela García-Spitz on February 22, 2007.
Finding aid written in English.
Preferred Citation
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); American Civil Liberties Union Records, The Roger Baldwin Years, Box and Folder Number; Public Policy Papers, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
Subject Headings
These materials have been indexed in the Princeton University Library online catalog using the following terms. Those seeking related materials should search under these terms.
- African Americans -- Civil rights -- History -- 20th century.
- African Americans -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States -- 20th century.
- Aliens -- United States -- Civil rights -- 20th century.
- Amnesty -- United States -- 20th century.
- Anti-Communist movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Assemby, Right of -- United States -- 20th century.
- Censorship -- United States -- 20th century.
- Church and state -- United States -- 20th century.
- Citizen suits (Civil procedure) -- United States -- 20th century.
- Civil rights -- United States -- 20th century.
- Civil rights movements -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Civil rights workers -- United States -- 20th Century -- Correspondence.
- Communism -- United States -- 20th century.
- Conscientious objectors -- United States -- 20th century.
- Constitutional law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Discrimination -- United States -- 20th century.
- Draft resisters -- United States -- 20th century.
- Due process of law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Equality before the law -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of association -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of information -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of movement -- United States -- 20th entury.
- Freedom of religion -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of speech -- United States -- 20th century.
- Freedom of the press -- Minnesota -- 20th century.
- Indians of North America -- Civil rights -- 20th century.
- Labor laws and legislation -- United States -- 20th century.
- Law -- United States -- Cases -- 20th century.
- Lawyers -- United States -- 20th century -- Correspondence.
- Legal aid -- United States -- 20th century.
- Legal services -- United States -- 20th century.
- Loyalty oaths -- United States -- 20th century.
- Minorities -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States -- 20th century.
- Police power -- United States -- 20th century.
- Political questions and judicial power -- United States -- 20th century.
- Privacy, Right of -- United States -- 20th century.
- Race discrimination -- Law and legislation -- United States -- 20th century.
- Records -- United States -- Access control -- 20th century.
- Freedom of religion -- United States -- 20th century.
- Sacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921.
- Scottsboro Trial, Scottsboro, Ala., 1931.
- Sex discrimination -- United States -- 20th century.
- Strikes and lockouts -- United States -- Cases -- 20th century.
- Subversive activities -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Teaching, Freedom of -- United States -- 20th century.
- Textile workers -- Labor unions -- New Jersey -- Patterson -- History -- 20th century.
- Trials -- United States -- 20th century.
- Briefs.
- Correspondence.
- Clippings.
- Legal correspondence.
- Legal documents.
- Records.
Browse other finding aids related to the following terms:
- American history/20th century
- American politics and government
- Legal history
- Public policy/20th century
- World War II
- World War I
Reel Contents - American Civil Liberties Union Microfilm
Clippings--States--CA, 1912
Reel 1, Volume 1-2 Correspondence--Organizational Matters (Conferences, Mass Meetings, 1917-1918
Reel 1, Volume 3 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors: Camps, 1917-1918
[alphabetical by camp]
Reel 1, Volume 4-8 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors: Camps, 1917-1918
[alphabetical by camp]
Reel 2, Volume 9-14 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1917-1918
Reel 2, Volume 14-15 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1917-1918
Reel 2, Volume 15 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1917-1918
Reel 3, Volume 16-18 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors: States (AL-WI), 1917-1918
Reel 3, Volume 19-24 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1917-1918
Reel 3, Volume 25-26 Correspondence--Organizational Matters (IWW Trials)
Reel 4, Volume 27-28 Correspondence--States, 1917-1918
AK, AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 4, Volume 29 CA
Reel 4, Volume 30 CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, ID
Reel 4, Volume 31 IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 4, Volume 32 KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN
Reel 4, Volume 33 MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ
Reel 4, Volume 34 NY, NM, ND, NC
Reel 5, Volume 35 OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 5, Volume 36 PR, RI, SC, TX, UT, VA, VT
Reel 5, Volume 37 WA, WV, WI
Reel 5, Volume 38 Correspondence--Organizational Matters (Cooperating Attorneys), 1917-1918
Reel 5, Volume 39 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1917-1919
Reel 5, Volume 40 Clippings--General, 1917-1919
Amnesty Editorials
Reel 5, Volume 41 Chicago Industrial Workers of the World Case
Reel 5, Volume 42 Conscientious Objectors
Reel 5, Volume 43-44 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors (Publications), 1917-1919
Reel 5, Volume 44 Clippings--General (Conscientious Objectors), 1917-1919
Reel 6, Volume 45-50 [There is no Volume 49]
Clippings--General, 1917-1919
Conscientious Objectors--Court Martials
[alphabetically by camp]
Reel 6, Volume 51 Deportations
Reel 6, Volume 52 Espionage Act
Reel 6, Volume 53 Free Speech
Reel 6, Volume 54 IWW Cases
[by state]
CA, CT, DC, IL, IN, IA, ID, MO, KS, MN, MI, MA, MT, NJ, NE, NY
Reel 6, Volume 55 Espionage Act
Reel 6, Volume 56 Espionage Act
[arranged by state]
AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI
Reel 6, Volume 57 CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL
Reel 7, Volume 58 MN, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NC, ND
Reel 7, Volume 59 OH, OK, OR
Reel 7, Volume 60 PA, PR, RI
Reel 7, Volume 61 SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 7, Volume 62 Espionage Act
Reel 7, Volume 63 Patrioteering Organizations; Cooperating Organizations
Reel 7, Volume 64 People's Council; Non-Partisan League
Reel 7, Volume 65 Sedition
Reel 7, Volume 66 Socialists and Anarchists NY
Reel 7, Volume 67-68 Correspondence--Organizational Matters (Free Speech Publications), 1917-1921
Reel 7, Volume 69 Clippings--General--Mob Violence, 1917-1920
[arranged alphabetically by state]
Reel 8, Volume 70 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1917-1920
Correspondence--General
Reel 8, Volume 71 Amnesty, 1918-1923
Reel 8, Volume 72 Anglo-American Conference, National Council for Civil Liberties, 1919
Reel 9, Volume 73 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors [alphabetical] A-O, 1919
Reel 9, Volume 74-77 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors [alphabetical] P-Z, 1919
Reel 10, Volume 78 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors--Camp Questionnaire, 1919
Reel 10, Volume 80 Clippings--General (Court House NYC), 1919-1920
Reel 10, Volume 81 Correspondence--General, 1918
Court Martial
Reel 10, Volume 82 Demonstrations and Conferences, 1918-1919
Reel 10, Volume 83 Lincoln Day Demonstration; Liberties Conference; Freedom Convention
Reel 10, Volume 83 Deportation; Hindu Cases; Miscellaneous Deportation Cases
[alphabetically by name]
Reel 10, Volume 84 Clippings--General--Industrial Workers of the World Cases, 1918-1919
Reel 10, Volume 85 Correspondence--General, 1918-1919
Industrial Workers of the World Cases
Reel 11, Volume 86-87 Indictments, 1917-1918
[arranged alphabetically by case]
Reel 11, Volume 88 Jail Conditions, 1918-1919
Reel 11, Volume 89 Military Amnesty, 1919
Reel 11, Volume 89 Legal Defense Requests [by state], 1919
AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL
Reel 11, Volume 90 IA, KS, KY, MA, MI, MN, MO, MT, NE, NJ, NV, NM, NY
Reel 11, Volume 91 OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, WA, WV, WI
Reel 12, Volume 92 Military Prisons, 1919
Alcatraz Island; Fort Douglas; Fort Jay (Governor's Island); Jefferson Barracks
Reel 12, Volume 93 Fort Leavenworth
Reel 12, Volume 94 Miscellaneous, 1918-1919
Reel 12, Volume 95 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors (Camp Conditions; Farm Furloughs; Lunde, Theodore H.)
Reel 12, Volume 96 [There is no volume 97]
Correspondence--General--Political Amnesty, 1918-1919
Reel 12, Volume 98 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Speakers Requests, 1918-1919
Reel 13, Volume 99 Correspondence--General--Records and Briefs, 1918-1919
Reel 13, Volume 100 Correspondence--General--Records and Briefs, 1918-1919
[alphabetical]
A-B
Reel 13, Volume 101 C-E
Reel 13, Volume 102 F-L
Reel 13, Volume 103 M-P
Reel 14, Volume 104 R-Z
Reel 14, Volume 105 Correspondence--General--Sedition Bill, 1919
Reel 14, Volume 106 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1917-1919
Reel 14, Volume 107-108 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1918-1919
Reel 15, Volume 109 Correspondence--General
Enemy Aliens; Insanity Cases; Mob Violence; Patrioteering Organizations; Police Activities; Post Office Cases; Publications, Requests
Reel 15, Volume 109 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1919-1920
Reel 15, Volume 110-111 Clippings--General, 1919-1920
Civil Liberty, General Statements on Political Prisoners
Reel 15, Volume 112 Clippings--States, 1919-1920
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 15, Volume 114 KY, LA, MD, MA
Reel 16, Volume 115 Correspondence--General--Outside Organizations, 1919-1921
Reel 16, Volume 116 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1920-1921
Reel 16, Volume 117-118 Correspondence--States, 1920
CA, CO, ID, IL, MA, MO, MT, NV, NY, OH, OR, PA, TX, UT, WA, WI
Reel 16, Volume 119 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1920
Reel 16, Volume 120 Correspondence--General--Police Questionnaire, 1919-1921
Reel 16, Volume 121 Clippings--General, 1920-1921
Conscientious Objectors; Political Prisoners
Reel 16, Volume 122 Amnesty Campaigns
Reel 16, Volume 122 Raids and Deportations, 1919-1920
Reel 17, Volume 123-124 Correspondence--General--Proceedings of NY Assembly on Expulsion of Socialists, 1920
Reel 17, Volume 125-127 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1920
Reel 18, Volume 128 Clippings--Legislation, 1920
Reel 18, Volume 129 Clippings--General, 1920
Reel 18, Volume 130 Correspondence--General, 1920
Reel 18, Volume 131-132 Correspondence--States, 1920
AL, AK, AZ, CA
Reel 18, Volume 133 CA
Reel 18, Volume 134 Correspondence--States, 1920
Canada, CO, CT, FL, ID
Reel 19, Volume 135 IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 19, Volume 136 LA, KY, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT
Reel 19, Volume 137 NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OK
Reel 20, Volume 138 OR, PA, RI, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, VI
Reel 20, Volume 139 WA, WV, WI
Reel 20, Volume 140 Clippings--States, 1920
CA
Reel 20, Volume 141 CA
Reel 21, Volume 142 CO, CT, DE, DC, FL
Reel 21, Volume 143 IL
Reel 21, Volume 144 MN, MS, MO, MT
Reel 21, Volume 145 PA
Reel 21, Volume 146 WA
Reel 21, Volume 147, 149 WA: Centralia Murder Case
Reel 21, Volume 148, 150 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Weekly Reports on Civil Liberty Situation, 1920-1921
Reel 21, Volume 151 Correspondence--States, 1920-1921
AL, AZ
Reel 21, Volume 152 NY
Reel 22, Volume 153 GA, ID, IN, IA, AK, Haiti, HI, Philippine Islands
Reel 22, Volume 154 IL
Reel 22, Volume 155 NE, NV, NH, NM, NJ, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR
Reel 22, Volume 156 NY
Reel 22, Volume 157-158 RI, SD, TN, TX, VA, WV, WI
Reel 22, Volume 159 Correspondence--Walter Nelles Papers, 1920-1926
Law and Freedom Bulletins
Reel 22, Volume 159A Legal Case Files
Reel 22, Volume 159A Legal Notes
Reel 22, Volume 159B Legal Notes
Reel 22, Volume 159C Writings
Reel 22, Volume 159C Writings
Reel 23, Volume 159D Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1921
Clippings--General--Amnesty/Political Prisoners
Reel 23, Volume 160 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1921
Amnesty
Reel 23, Volume 161 Conscientious Objectors, 1920-1921
Salmon, Benjamin, case
Reel 23, Volume 162 Conscientious Objectors, 1920-1921
Amnesty
Reel 23, Volume 163 Correspondence--General--Labor Organizations, 1921
Correspondence--Organizational Matters
Reel 23, Volume 164 Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 23, Volume 164 Correspondence--States, 1921
AL, CA
Reel 23, Volume 165 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Baldwin Trips, 1921
Reel 23, Volume 166 Correspondence--General--Sedition, Espionage, 1921
Reel 24, Volume 167 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1921
Reel 24, Volume 168 Questionnaire on Condition of Civil Liberty, 1921
[arranged by state]
Reel 24, Volume 169 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1921
Clippings--General
Reel 24, Volume 170 Civil Liberties in Foreign Countries
Reel 24, Volume 170 Clippings--Legislation
Reel 24, Volume 171 Correspondence--States, 1921
SD, TN, TX, UT, Philippine Islands
Reel 24, Volume 172 Clippings--General, 1921
Labor and Radical Organizations
Reel 24, Volume 173 Open Shop Campaign
Reel 24, Volume 173 Espionage in Industry
Reel 24, Volume 173 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 24, Volume 174 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 24, Volume 174 Clippings--States, 1921
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA
Reel 24, Volume 175 MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE
Reel 24, Volume 176 NJ, NY
Reel 25, Volume 177 NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN
Reel 25, Volume 178 TX, VA, WA, WV, WI, Haiti, Philippine Islands, PR, Dominican Republic, VI
Reel 25, Volume 179 Correspondence--States, 1921
CO, CT, FL, GA, ID
Reel 25, Volume 180 Correspondence--States, 1921
IL
Reel 25, Volume 181 IN, IA, KS
Reel 25, Volume 182 KY, LA, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT
Reel 25, Volume 183 NE, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 25, Volume 184 ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI
Reel 26, Volume 185 WV, WI
Reel 26, Volume 186 Correspondence--States, 1921-1922
AL, AR, CA
Reel 26, Volume 187 Philippine Islands, PR, VT, VA, WA
Reel 26, Volume 188 Clippings--General, 1921-1922
Negroes
Reel 26, Volume 189 Outside Organization Opposed to Civil Liberties
Reel 26, Volume 189 Ku Klux Klan
Reel 26, Volume 190 Strikes
Reel 26, Volume 191 Strikes, 1921
[arranged by state]
Reel 27, Volume 192-194 Correspondence--General, 1922
Amnesty
Reel 27, Volume 195-196 Amnesty: Political Prisoners
Reel 27, Volume 197-198 Clippings--General, 1922
Amnesty: Political Prisoners
Reel 27, Volume 199 Labor Organizations Re: Civil Liberty
Reel 28, Volume 200 Anti-Labor Movements
Reel 28, Volume 200 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 28, Volume 200 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 28, Volume 200 Children's Crusade
Reel 28, Volume 201 Editorials, Feature Articles, etc. on ACLU
Reel 28, Volume 201 Clippings--Federal Departments
Reel 28, Volume 202 Clippings--General--Civil Liberties in Foreign Countries
Reel 28, Volume 202 Clippings--States
Reel 28, Volume 202 Haiti; Dominican Republic; VI; HI; Philippine Islands
Reel 28, Volume 202 Clippings--General
Reel 28, Volume 202 Negroes
Reel 28, Volume 202 Injunctions/Prosecutions
[arranged by state]
Reel 28, Volume 203 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 28, Volume 204 Clippings--Academic Freedom
Reel 28, Volume 205 Clippings--Legislation
Reel 28, Volume 205 Clippings--General, 1922
Supreme Court Decisions
Reel 28, Volume 205 Freedom of Speech, Press, Assembly
Reel 28, Volume 205 Strikes: Railway Shop Crafts' Strike
Reel 28, Volume 206 Strikes
[arranged by state]
Reel 28, Volume 207 Clippings--States, 1922
AL, AZ, AR, CO, FL, ID
Reel 28, Volume 208 Clippings--General--Strikes, 1922
[arranged by state]
Reel 28, Volume 209 Clippings--States, 1922
IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MI
Reel 29, Volume 210 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, SC, SD, TN, TX, VA, WA, WI, WY
Reel 29, Volume 211 Correspondence--States, 1922
AL, AR, AZ, CA
Reel 29, Volume 212 CA
Reel 29, Volume 213-214 CO, CT, FL, FL
Reel 29, Volume 215 FL, GA, IL, IN, IA
Reel 29, Volume 216 KS
Reel 29, Volume 217 KS, KY, LA
Reel 30, Volume 218 ME, MD, MA, MI, MI
Reel 30, Volume 219 MI
Reel 30, Volume 220 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 30, Volume 221 NY, ND, OH, OK
Reel 30, Volume 222 PA
Reel 30, Volume 223 PA, RI
Reel 30, Volume 224 SC, SD, TN, TX
Reel 30, Volume 225 UT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY, HI, Philippine Islands, VI
Reel 31, Volume 226 VI, Samoa
Reel 31, Volume 227 Clippings--General--Ku Klux Klan, 1922-1924
Reel 31, Volume 228 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1920-1922
Reel 31, Volume 228A-229 Clippings--General, 1923
Freedom in the Schools
Reel 31, Volume 230 Labor and Radical Organizations
Reel 31, Volume 230 Civil Liberty Issues in National Strikes
Reel 31, Volume 230 Civil Liberty Issues in the Coal Fields
Reel 31, Volume 230 Negroes
Reel 31, Volume 230 Clippings--General, 1923
Civil Liberties in Foreign Countries
Reel 31, Volume 230 Ku Klux Klan
Reel 31, Volume 231-232 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 32, Volume 233 Amnesty Campaign
Reel 32, Volume 233 Release of State Political Prisoners
Reel 32, Volume 233 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 32, Volume 234 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Reel 32, Volume 234 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Reel 32, Volume 234 Correspondence--General--Labor
Reel 32, Volume 234 Clippings--States, 1923
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 32, Volume 235 CO, CT, DE, CA
Reel 32, Volume 236 DC, FL, GA, ID, IN, IL, IA, KS, KY
Reel 32, Volume 237 LA, MD, MA
Reel 32, Volume 238 MI, MO, MS, MT, NE, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 33, Volume 239 NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 33, Volume 240 RI, TX, VA, WA, WV, WI, VI, Samoa, PR, Philippine Islands, HI, Haiti
Reel 33, Volume 241 Correspondence--States, 1923
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 33, Volume 242 CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, LA, MA
Reel 33, Volume 243 MI, MS, MO, MT, NM, NY
Reel 34, Volume 244 OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 34, Volume 245 RI, TX, Samoa, VI, WA
Reel 34, Volume 246 WV, WI
Reel 35, Volume 247 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1924
Reel 35, Volume 248 Correspondence--General--Amnesty
Reel 35, Volume 248 Clippings--General, 1924
Anti-Radical Propaganda
Reel 35, Volume 249 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 35, Volume 249 NY Commercial Articles
Reel 35, Volume 249 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1924
Reel 35, Volume 250 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1924
Reel 36, Volume 251 Clippings--General, 1924
Ku Klux Klan
Reel 36, Volume 252 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 36, Volume 252 Clippings--States, 1924
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 36, Volume 253 CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NV, NH, NJ
Reel 36, Volume 254 NY, NY, NY, NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, TN, TX, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 36, Volume 255 Correspondence--States, 1924
AL, AK, AZ, AR
Reel 36, Volume 256 CA
Reel 36, Volume 257 CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, ID
Reel 36, Volume 258 IL, IN, IA, KS, LA, ME
Reel 37, Volume 259 MA
Reel 37, Volume 260 MA, MI
Reel 37, Volume 261 MN, MS, MO, MT, NH
Reel 37, Volume 262 NJ
Reel 37, Volume 263 NY
Reel 37, Volume 264 NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 37, Volume 265 PA, RI
Reel 37, Volume 266 TX, VA, WA
Reel 38, Volume 267 WV, WI, WA
Reel 38, Volume 268 Philippine Islands, Samoa, VI
Reel 38, Volume 269 VI
Reel 38, Volume 270 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1925
Reel 38, Volume 271-272 Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 38, Volume 273-274 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1925
TN (Scopes Case)
Reel 39, Volume 275-277 TN (Scopes Case)
Reel 40, Volume 278 CA, CO, DE, DC, GA, IN, KS, MA, NJ, NY, OH, OR, PA, TX
Reel 40, Volume 279 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1925
Reel 40, Volume 280 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1925
Reel 40, Volume 281 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1925
Reel 41, Volume 282 Clippings--General, 1925
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 41, Volume 283 Negroes
Reel 41, Volume 283 Correspondence--States, 1925
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 41, Volume 284A CA
Reel 41, Volume 284B-C CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN
Reel 41, Volume 285 KS, KY, LA, ME, MA
Reel 42, Volume 286 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NJ
Reel 42, Volume 287 NY
Reel 42, Volume 288 NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, PA
Reel 42, Volume 289 TX, UT, VA, WA
Reel 42, Volume 290 WV, WI, WA
Reel 43, Volume 291 HI, Philippine Islands, VI
Reel 43, Volume 292 VI
Reel 43, Volume 293 Clippings--States, 1925
AL, AR, CA, CT, FL, GA, IL, IN
Reel 43, Volume 294 KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NJ
Reel 43, Volume 295 NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 43, Volume 296 TN, TX, UT, VA, WV, WA
Reel 44, Volume 297 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1926
General, NC, OH, OR, SC, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, NY
Reel 44, Volume 298 AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, GA, IL, KS, KY, LA, MA, MI, MS, MT, NJ, NY
Reel 44, Volume 299 Clippings--Legislation, 1926
Clippings---Federal Departments
Reel 45, Volume 300 Clippings--General--Negroes
Reel 45, Volume 300 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1926
Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Reel 45, Volume 301 Correspondence--General--Passaic Textile Strike
Reel 46, Volume 302 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1926
Reel 46, Volume 303 Correspondence--General
Attacks on ACLU
Reel 46, Volume 303 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 46, Volume 303 Clippings--General, 1926
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 47, Volume 304 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 47, Volume 304 United States Possessions
Reel 47, Volume 304 Civil Liberties in Foreign Countries
Reel 47, Volume 304 Correspondence--States, 1926
CA, CO, DC, IL, IN, KY, KS
Reel 47, Volume 305 MA
Reel 47, Volume 306 NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR
Reel 48, Volume 307 PA, TX, VA, WA, WV
Reel 48, Volume 308 HI, Philippine Islands, Samoa, VI
Reel 48, Volume 309 AR, CA, CO, DC
Reel 49, Volume 310 FL, GA, IL, KS, MD, MA, MN, MO, NY, TN
Reel 49, Volume 311 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1926
Reel 49, Volume 311 Clippings--States, 1926
AL, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MI
Reel 49, Volume 312 NJ (Passaic Strike)
Reel 49, Volume 313 NJ (Passaic Strike)
Reel 50, Volume 314 NY
Reel 50, Volume 314 NY, OH, PA, RI, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WI, WV
Reel 50, Volume 315 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Outside Publications, 1926-1929
Reel 50, Volume 316 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1927
General, AL, AR, FL, GA, IL, IN, LA, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NH, NM, NJ, NY, NC, ND, OK, PA, SC, TN, TX, WA, WV, WI
Reel 50, Volume 317 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1927
Reel 50, Volume 318 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors
Reel 50, Volume 318 Correspondence--General
Third Degree
Reel 50, Volume 318 Aliens
Reel 50, Volume 318 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 50, Volume 318 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 50, Volume 318 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 50, Volume 319 Attacks on ACLU
Reel 50, Volume 319 Attacks on ACLU
Reel 51, Volume 320 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1927
Reel 51, Volume 320 Clippings--Legislation, 1927
Reel 51, Volume 321 Clippings--General
Reel 51, Volume 321 Negroes
Reel 51, Volume 321 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 51, Volume 322 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 51, Volume 322 Labor Organizations
Reel 51, Volume 322 Territories
Reel 51, Volume 322 Foreign Civil Liberties
Reel 51, Volume 322 Clippings--States, 1927
AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, FL, GA, IL, IA, IN, KS, KY, LA
Reel 51, Volume 323 Correspondence--States, 1927
AZ, CA
Reel 51, Volume 324 CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 51, Volume 325 MA
Reel 51, Volume 326 MA, MI, MS, NE, NM, NJ
Reel 52, Volume 327 NY
Reel 52, Volume 328 NY, PA, TN, WA, WV, HI, Haiti, Haiti
Reel 52, Volume 329 PA, RI, TX, WA, WV
Reel 52, Volume 339 Correspondence--General--Patrioteering Organizations, 1927
Reel 52, Volume 331 Correspondence--General--Patrioteering Organizations, 1927
Reel 53, Volume 332-34 Clippings--States, 1927
MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NJ, NY, NM, ND, OH, PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, WA, WV, WI
Reel 54, Volume 335 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1928
AR, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, NY, NM, NC, OH, OK, OR, SD, TN, TX, WV, WA, General
Reel 54, Volume 336 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 Clippings--Censorship
Reel 54, Volume 337 Clippings--General
Race Discrimination
Reel 54, Volume 337 Lynchings
Reel 54, Volume 337 Labor Organizations
Reel 54, Volume 337 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1928
Reel 55, Volume 338 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Reel 55, Volume 338 Clippings--Legislation, 1928
Reel 55, Volume 339 Clippings--Federal Departments
Reel 55, Volume 339 Clippings--General
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 55, Volume 339 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 55, Volume 339 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1928
Reel 55, Volume 340 Correspondence--General, 1928
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 56, Volume 341 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 56, Volume 341 Correspondence--States, 1928
AR, CA
Reel 56, Volume 342 CO
Reel 56, Volume 343 CT, DE, DC, IL, IA, KS, KY, MD
Reel 57, Volume 344 MA
Reel 57, Volume 345 MI, MN, MO, MT, NJ
Reel 58, Volume 346 NM, NY, OH, OK
Reel 58, Volume 347 PA
Reel 59, Volume 348-349 PA, RI, TX, WA, WV, WI, WY, Philippine Island, Samoa, VI
Reel 60, Volume 350 Clippings--States, 1928
AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 60, Volume 351 GA, IL, KS, MA
Reel 60, Volume 352 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OK
Reel 60, Volume 353 PA, RI, TX, WV, WI
Reel 61, Volume 354 Correspondence--General--U.S. vs. Rosika Schwimmer, 1928-1929
Reel 61, Volume 355 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1929
AL, CA, DE, IL, IA, MA, MI, MO, NY, NC, OH, OK, PA, TN, WI, General, Federal Legislation, State Legislation
Reel 61, Volume 356 AR, CA, DE, IL, MA, MI, MO, NY, OH, PA, SD, TN, WA, WI, 1929
Reel 61, Volume 357 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1929
Reel 61, Volume 358 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1929
Reel 62, Volume 359 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1929
Reel 63, Volume 360 Correspondence--General, 1929
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 63, Volume 360 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 63, Volume 360 Clippings--Censorship, 1929
Clippings--General
Reel 63, Volume 361 Possessions
Reel 63, Volume 361 Foreign
Reel 63, Volume 361 Bail Fund
Reel 63, Volume 361 Race Discrimination
Reel 63, Volume 361 Mob Violence
Reel 63, Volume 361 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 64, Volume 362 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 64, Volume 362 American Federation of Labor
Reel 64, Volume 362 Clippings--States, 1929
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, DC, FL, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MA
Reel 64, Volume 363 CA: Mooney-Billings Case
Reel 64, Volume 364-365 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 65, Volume 366 NC
Reel 65, Volume 367-368 NC
Reel 66, Volume 369 OH, PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, WA, WV, WI
Reel 66, Volume 370 Correspondence--States, 1929
AZ, CA
Reel 66, Volume 371 CA, CO, CT
Reel 67, Volume 372 DC, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MA
Reel 67, Volume 373 MI, MN, MO, MT, NJ, NY
Reel 68, Volume 374 NY, NC
Reel 68, Volume 375 NC
Reel 69, Volume 376 OH, PA
Reel 69, Volume 377 PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WI, Haiti, VI
Reel 70, Volume 378 Correspondence--Legislation--Anti-Injunction Bill, by State, 1929-1932
Reel 70, Volume 379-80 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1930
AR, CA, GA, IN, MO, MS, MT, NY, NC, PA, RI, TN, WA, WI, Militarism in the Schools, General
Reel 71, Volume 381 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1930
Reel 71, Volume 382-384 Correspondence--Censorship, 1930
Reel 71, Volume 385 Clippings--States, 1930
NY: Communist Demonstrations
Reel 71, Volume 386 Clippings--Federal Departments--Congressional Committee to Investigate Radicalism (Fish Committee), 1930
Reel 71, Volume 387 Clippings--Federal Departments--Congressional Committee to Investigate Radicalism (Fish Committee), 1930
Reel 72, Volume 388-389 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1930
Reel 72, Volume 390 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1930
Reel 72, Volume 391 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1930
Reel 72, Volume 392-395 Clippings--Legislation, 1930
Reel 72, Volume 396 Clippings--States, 1930
CA (Mooney-Billings)
Reel 73, Volume 397 NY (March 6th Demonstration)
Reel 73, Volume 398-399 NY
Reel 74, Volume 400-401 Clippings--General, 1930
Labor; State Constabularies; Right of Asylum; Third Degree; Race Discrimination; Anti-Lynching Campaign;
Reel 74, Volume 402 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 74, Volume 403 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 74, Volume 404A Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1930
Bulletin Nos. 385-437
Reel 74, Volume 404B Clippings--States, 1930
AL, AR, AZ, CA, CO, CT
Reel 74, Volume 405 DE, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KY, LA
Reel 75, Volume 406 MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, RI, SC, TN, TX, VA
Reel 75, Volume 407 NJ
Reel 75, Volume 408 NC
Reel 75, Volume 409 ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 75, Volume 410 WA, WI
Reel 76, Volume 411 Haiti, Philippine Islands, HI, Cuba, PR, Nicaragua, Panama, Samoa, Indian Territory
Reel 76, Volume 412 Correspondence--States, 1930
AL, AR, AZ
Reel 76, Volume 413 AL, AR, AZ, CO
Reel 76, Volume 414 CO, CT, DC
Reel 76, Volume 415 CA
Reel 76, Volume 416-417 [Volumes 418 and 419 do not exist]
GA
Reel 76, Volume 420 GA
Reel 77, Volume 421 IL, IN, IA
Reel 77, Volume 422 KS, KY, LA, MA
Reel 77, Volume 423 MA, MD, ND, OH, OR
Reel 77, Volume 424 MI, MN, MO, MS, NE
Reel 77, Volume 425 NJ
Reel 77, Volume 426 NY
Reel 77, Volume 427-428 NY
Reel 78, Volume 429-431 NC
Reel 78, Volume 432-434 PA
Reel 78, Volume 435-437 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VA, WA
Reel 79, Volume 438 WA
Reel 79, Volume 439 WV, WI, WY, VI, Panama Canal Zone, Haiti
Reel 79, Volume 440 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Cmte. (Woodlawn Cases), 1930
Reel 79, Volume 441-442 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1930-1933
Reel 79, Volume 443 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1931
Reel 79, Volume 444 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1931
AL, AR, CA, IL, IA, KS, LA, MA, MI, MO, NJ, NY, NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, TX, TN, WA, WI
Reel 79, Volume 445 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1931
AL, CO, GA, IA, LA, ME, MI
Reel 79, Volume 446 MI, MN, NJ, NY, OH, PA
Reel 79, Volume 447 PA, RI, TN, TX, VA, WA, Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 80, Volume 448 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1931
Reel 80, Volume 449-452 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1931
Reel 80, Volume 453 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1931
Reel 80, Volume 454-455 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1931
Reel 80, Volume 456 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1931
Reel 81, Volume 457 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1931
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS, LA, ME, MA
Reel 81, Volume 458 MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 81, Volume 459 NC, ND, OH, OR, PA, RI, SC
Reel 81, Volume 460 SD, TN, TX, VA, WA, WI, WY
Reel 81, Volume 461 American Federation of Labor on State Legislation
Reel 81, Volume 461 Model State Bill on Injunctions
Reel 81, Volume 461 Clippings--General, 1931
Birth Control; Immigration Law Amendment; Drive for Extra Session; Amendment to Naturalization Law; Anti-Injunction; Miscellaneous Federal Legislation; State Legislation; City Legislation; Yellow Dog Contracts
Reel 81, Volume 462 Correspondence--Censorship, 1931
Reel 81, Volume 463 Correspondence--General
Reel 81, Volume 463 Negroes
Reel 81, Volume 463 Religious Freedom
Reel 81, Volume 463 International Civil Liberties
Reel 81, Volume 463 Clippings--General, 1931
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 81, Volume 464 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 81, Volume 464 Correspondence--General, 1931
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 81, Volume 465 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 81, Volume 465 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 81, Volume 465 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 82, Volume 466 Fish Committee Investigating Radicalism
Reel 82, Volume 466-467 Clippings--General, 1931
Race Discrimination; Lynchings; Labor Organizations; Third Degree; Religious Freedom; Birth Control; International Civil Liberties
Reel 82, Volume 468 Clippings--States, 1931
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 82, Volume 469 CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 82, Volume 470 CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 82, Volume 471 KY
Reel 82, Volume 472 LA, MD, MA, MI
Reel 82, Volume 473 MN, MS, MO, NE, NV, NJ
Reel 82, Volume 474 NY
Reel 83, Volume 475 PA
Reel 83, Volume 476 RI, SC, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, VI, Haiti, PR, Nicaragua, Cuba, Philippine Islands
Reel 83, Volume 477 Correspondence--States, 1931
CA
Reel 83, Volume 478-479 CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 83, Volume 480-482A CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 83, Volume 482B DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 84, Volume 482C KY
Reel 84, Volume 483-485 LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 84, Volume 486 MA
Reel 84, Volume 487 MI
Reel 84, Volume 488 MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 84, Volume 489 MO, MT, NE, NV, NJ
Reel 84, Volume 490 NY
Reel 85, Volume 491-493 NC, OH, OR
Reel 85, Volume 494 PA
Reel 85, Volume 494-497 PA
Reel 86, Volume 498 RI, SC, TN, TX
Reel 86, Volume 499 TX, UT, VA, WA, WV
Reel 86, Volume 500 WV, WI, Canada, Costa Rica, Haiti, Nicaragua, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 86, Volume 501 Correspondence--Censorship, 1931-1933
Reel 86, Volume 502-504 Correspondence--Censorship, 1931-1933
Reel 87, Volume 505-512 Correspondence--Censorship, 1931-1933
Reel 88, Volume 513-514 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1931-1933
Reel 88, Volume 515 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1931-1933
Reel 88, Volume 516 Correspondence--States, 1932-1933
NYC
Reel 88, Volume 517 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1931-1933
Reel 88, Volume 518 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1932
Reel 88, Volume 519 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1932
DC, IL, KY, LA, MD, MI, NY, NC, OH, OK, PA, TX, WA
Reel 88, Volume 520 WI
Reel 88, Volume 520 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1932
CA, FL, IL, IA, KY, LA, MD, MI, MS, NC, NY
Reel 88, Volume 521 NY, OH, OK, PA, TX, VA, WA
Reel 88, Volume 522 Clippings--General, 1932
Birth Control; Conscientious Objectors; Labor Organizations
Reel 89, Volume 523 Lynchings; Negroes; Patrioteering Organizations; Religious Freedom; Third Degree
Reel 89, Volume 523 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1932
Reel 89, Volume 524-525 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1932
Reel 89, Volume 526 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1932
Reel 89, Volume 527-528 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1932
Reel 89, Volume 529-532 Correspondence--General, 1932
International Civil Liberties; Negroes; Religious Freedom; Third Degree; Mob Violence Toward Lawyers
Reel 90, Volume 533 Indians
Reel 90, Volume 534-535 Correspondence--Injunctions, 1932
Federal Legislation
Reel 90, Volume 536 CT, KY, MA, NJ, NY, NC, PA, SD
Reel 90, Volume 537 Form Letters and Memoranda
Reel 90, Volume 537 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Bail Fund, 1932
Reel 90, Volume 538 Correspondence--General--Labor Organizations, 1932
Reel 90, Volume 538-539 Clippings--Legislation, 1932
Reel 90, Volume 540 Clippings--General
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 90, Volume 541 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 90, Volume 541 Correspondence--General, 1932
Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 91, Volume 542 Attacks on the ACLU
Reel 91, Volume 542 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 91, Volume 542 Clippings--States, 1932
AL
Reel 91, Volume 543 AR, CA
Reel 91, Volume 544 CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 91, Volume 545 CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 91, Volume 546 DC
Reel 91, Volume 547 FL, GA, IL
Reel 91, Volume 548 IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 91, Volume 549 KY
Reel 91, Volume 550 LA, ME, MD, MA, MI
Reel 91, Volume 551 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NJ
Reel 91, Volume 552 NY
Reel 92, Volume 553 NY, NC, ND, OH
Reel 92, Volume 554 OK, OR, PA, RI, SC
Reel 92, Volume 555 TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, VI, Haiti, Philippine Islands, PR, Nicaragua, HI
Reel 92, Volume 556 Correspondence--States, 1932
AL
Reel 92, Volume 557 AZ, CA
Reel 92, Volume 558 CA
Reel 92, Volume 559-561 Canada, CO, CT, DC
Reel 92, Volume 562 DC
Reel 93, Volume 563 FL, GA
Reel 93, Volume 564 GA
Reel 93, Volume 565 IL
Reel 93, Volume 566-567 IN, KY
Reel 93, Volume 568 KY
Reel 93, Volume 569-572 LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 93, Volume 573 MA
Reel 94, Volume 574 MI, MN
Reel 94, Volume 575 MN, MS, MO
Reel 94, Volume 576 NE, NV, NH, NJ
Reel 94, Volume 577 NJ
Reel 94, Volume 578 NY
Reel 94, Volume 579-580 NC, ND, OH
Reel 94, Volume 581 OH, OK
Reel 94, Volume 582 PA
Reel 94, Volume 583 Correspondence--States, 1932
PA
Reel 95, Volume 584 PA, RI, TN, TX
Reel 95, Volume 585 VT, VA
Reel 95, Volume 586 VA, WA, WV, WI, Haiti
Reel 95, Volume 587 Nicaragua, Philippine Islands, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 95, Volume 588 Clippings--States, 1932-1933
PA
Reel 95, Volume 589 Correspondence--NYC Committee--Police Brutality, 1932-1933
Reel 95, Volume 590 Clippings--Censorship, 1933
AR, CA, DC, IL, KS, LA, MA, MI, MN, NJ, NY, PA, VA, WI, Post Office, Press, Radio, Miscellaneous
Reel 95, Volume 591 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1933
AL, CO, DE, FL, KS, IL, IN, IA, MA, MD, MI, MO
Reel 95, Volume 592 MO, MN, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 95, Volume 593 NYC
Reel 96, Volume 594-595 NYC
Reel 96, Volume 595A-595B OH, OK, PA, RI, SD, TN, TX, UT, WV, Committee Matters
Reel 96, Volume 596 Correspondence--General, 1933
Aliens; International Civil Liberties; National Recovery Administration; Indians; Lynchings; Criminal Syndicalism Legislation; Third Degree
Reel 96, Volume 597A Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Bail Fund, 1933
Reel 96, Volume 598 Correspondence--General, 1933
Reel 96, Volume 598 Negroes
Reel 96, Volume 598 International Civil Liberties
Reel 96, Volume 599 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio
Reel 96, Volume 599 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1933
Reel 96, Volume 600 Correspondence--Organizational Matters
Reel 97, Volume 601 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1933
AR, CA, FL, IL, IA, KY, MD, MA, MI, MN, MO, NJ, NY, RI, TX, WA, WI, General News
Reel 97, Volume 602 Correspondence--Censorship, 1933
Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 97, Volume 603 Correspondence--Censorship, 1933
Books and Magazines; Customs and Post Office
Reel 97, Volume 603A Motion Pictures; Theatre
Reel 97, Volume 603B Correspondence--Censorship, 1933
Theatre
Reel 97, Volume 604 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1933
Criminal Prosecutions
Reel 97, Volume 605 Israel Lazar Case
Reel 97, Volume 606 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1933
Reel 97, Volume 607-608 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1933
Reel 98, Volume 609-611 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1933
Department of Labor
Reel 98, Volume 612 National Recovery Administration
Reel 98, Volume 613 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1933
Reel 98, Volume 614 Correspondence--General--Indians, 1933
Reel 98, Volume 615 Correspondence--Injunctions, 1933
AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 98, Volume 615A ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 98, Volume 615B MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NYC, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI
Reel 99, Volume 615C SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WY, AF of L, Judge Cotillo Decision, Miscellaneous
Reel 99, Volume 615D Correspondence--States, 1933
Haiti, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 99, Volume 616 Philippine Islands
Reel 99, Volume 617 Correspondence--General, 1933
Labor Organizations
Reel 99, Volume 618 State Police Systems; Martial Law; Repressive Laws
Reel 99, Volume 619 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee--Legislation, 1933
Reel 99, Volume 620 Clippings--Legislation, 1933
Reel 99, Volume 621 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1933
Labor Organizations; Meetings and Demonstrations
Reel 99, Volume 622 Meetings and Demonstrations; Deportations
Reel 100, Volume 623 Clippings--States, 1933
Reel 100, Volume 624-626 NYC
Reel 100, Volume 626A-626B Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee--Strikes, 1933
Reel 100, Volume 627-628 Clippings--General, 1933
Patrioteering Organizations; Lynchings; Negroes; Third Degree; Conscientious Objectors
Reel 100, Volume 629 Correspondence--General--Patrioteering Organizations, 1933
Reel 100, Volume 630 Clippings--General, 1933
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 100, Volume 631 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 100, Volume 631 Correspondence--PA Civil Liberties Committee, 1933
Reactionaries; Official Lawlessness
Reel 100, Volume 632 Clippings--States, 1933
AL
Reel 100, Volume 633 AL
Reel 101, Volume 634 AR, CA
Reel 101, Volume 635 CA
Reel 101, Volume 636 CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL
Reel 101, Volume 637 IL, IN, IA
Reel 101, Volume 638 KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI
Reel 101, Volume 639 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NJ, NM
Reel 101, Volume 640 NY
Reel 101, Volume 641 NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI
Reel 101, Volume 642 SC, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA
Reel 101, Volume 643 WV, WI, Panama Canal Zone, Cuba, Haiti, HI, Philippine Islands, Samoa, VI
Reel 101, Volume 644 Correspondence--States, 1933
AL
Reel 101, Volume 645-646 AL
Reel 102, Volume 647 AZ, AR, CA
Reel 102, Volume 648 CA
Reel 102, Volume 649 CA (Mooney-Billings Cases)
Reel 102, Volume 650-651 Canada, CO, CT
Reel 102, Volume 652 DE, DC, FL
Reel 102, Volume 653 GA
Reel 102, Volume 654 ID, IL
Reel 102, Volume 655 IL
Reel 102, Volume 656-657 IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 102, Volume 658 KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 103, Volume 659 MA, MI
Reel 103, Volume 660 MI
Reel 103, Volume 661-662 MN, MO, MT, NE, NH, NM
Reel 103, Volume 663 NJ
Reel 103, Volume 664-665 NY
Reel 103, Volume 666 Correspondence--States, 1933
NY
Reel 104, Volume 667-668 NC, OH
Reel 104, Volume 669 OH, OK, OR
Reel 104, Volume 670 PA
Reel 104, Volume 671-672 RI, SC, SD, TN
Reel 104, Volume 673 TX, UT, VT
Reel 104, Volume 674 VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 104, Volume 675 NC, PA, UT, WA, Haiti, HI, Philippine Islands, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 104, Volume 675A Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1917-1922
Reel 105, Volume 676-678 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1934
CA, DE, DC, FL, GA, IL, LA, MN, NH, NM
Reel 105, Volume 679 NY
Reel 105, Volume 680-683 NC, OH, PA, TN, WV
Reel 106, Volume 684 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1934
Reel 106, Volume 685 Clippings--General--Aliens
Reel 106, Volume 685 Clippings--Academic Freedom
Reel 106, Volume 686 Clippings--General--Aliens
Reel 106, Volume 686 Clippings-Censorship
Movie Censorship
Reel 106, Volume 686 Radio; Book; Press; Movie Censorship
Reel 106, Volume 687 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1934
Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 106, Volume 688-689 Correspondence--General--Aliens, 1934
Reel 106, Volume 690-691 Clippings--Censorship, 1934
Clippings--Academic Freedom
Reel 106, Volume 692 Correspondence--Censorship, 1934
AL, CA, IL, IN, IA, LA, MA, MI, MO, NY, OH, VA, WI, WY, Federal Censorship
Reel 107, Volume 693 Legion of Decency Campaign
Reel 107, Volume 694 National Council on Freedom from Censorship
Reel 107, Volume 694 Federal, Radio Censorship
Reel 107, Volume 694 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1934
Reel 107, Volume 695 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1934
Reel 107, Volume 696 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1934
Reel 107, Volume 697-698 Correspondence--Censorship, 1934
Reel 107, Volume 699 Correspondence--Censorship, 1934
Reel 108, Volume 700 Correspondence--General--Indian Affairs, 1934
Reel 108, Volume 701 Correspondence--Injunctions, 1934
AL, CA, IL, ME, MA, MI, MN, MT, NE, NJ, NY
Reel 108, Volume 702 NY, ND, OH, PA, RI, SD, TN, TX, VA, WY, Anti-Injunction Campaign
Reel 108, Volume 703 Clippings--General--Labor Rights Under NRA Codes, 1934
Reel 108, Volume 704-705 Clippings--Legislation
Reel 108, Volume 706 Clippings--General
Lynchings; Attacks on Civil Liberties; Third Degree; Wire-Tapping
Reel 108, Volume 707 Negroes; Indians; Conscientious Objectors; Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 109, Volume 708 Clippings--States--NYC, 1934
Reel 109, Volume 709-710 Correspondence--States--NYC, 1934
Reel 109, Volume 711-714 Correspondence--General, 1934
Patrioteering Organizations; Lynchings; General Civil Liberties Issues
Reel 109, Volume 715 Clippings--General, 1934
Propaganda For Civil Liberties; Civil Liberties Conference, DC
Reel 109, Volume 716 Correspondence--General, 1934
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 109, Volume 717 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 110, Volume 718 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 110, Volume 719-721 Clippings--States, 1934
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 110, Volume 722 CA
Reel 110, Volume 723 CA, Canada, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL
Reel 110, Volume 724 GA, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 110, Volume 725 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH, NJ
Reel 110, Volume 726 NM, NY
Reel 110, Volume 727 NY
Reel 111, Volume 728 NYC, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 111, Volume 729 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WV, WI, Panama Canal Zone, Haiti, HI, Philippine Islands, PR, VI
Reel 111, Volume 730 Correspondence--States, 1934
AL
Reel 111, Volume 731-732 AZ, AR, CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 111, Volume 733 CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 111, Volume 734 CA
Reel 111, Volume 735-738 CA, Canada, CO
Reel 112, Volume 739 CT, DE, DC
Reel 112, Volume 740 DC
Reel 112, Volume 741 GA
Reel 112, Volume 742 ID, IL
Reel 112, Volume 743 IL
Reel 112, Volume 744 IN, IA, KS
Reel 112, Volume 745 KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 112, Volume 746 MD, MA
Reel 112, Volume 747 MI, MN, MS, MO, NE, NH, NJ
Reel 112, Volume 748 NJ
Reel 113, Volume 749-750 NY
Reel 113, Volume 751 NC, ND, OH
Reel 113, Volume 752 OH, OK, OR
Reel 113, Volume 753 PA
Reel 113, Volume 754-755 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX
Reel 113, Volume 756 UT, VA, DC, WV, WI
Reel 113, Volume 757 Haiti, HI, Philippine Islands, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 114, Volume 758 AL, AR, CA, CT, DC
Reel 114, Volume 759 GA, ID, IL, IA, KS, KY
Reel 114, Volume 760 MA, MI, MN, MO, NJ, NY
Reel 114, Volume 761 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1935
Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 114, Volume 762 Correspondence--General, 1935
Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 114, Volume 763-765 Aliens, Visas, Deportations
Reel 114, Volume 766 Aliens, Visas, Deportations
Reel 115, Volume 767 Aliens, Visas, Deportations
Reel 115, Volume 768 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors
Reel 115, Volume 768 Correspondence--Censorship, 1935
Radio Censorship
Reel 115, Volume 769 Correspondence--Censorship, 1935
Radio; Press; Stage; Western Union; Post Office; Movie
Reel 115, Volume 770 Clippings--Censorship, 1935
Reel 115, Volume 771 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1935
Reel 115, Volume 772-773 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1935
Reel 116, Volume 774 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1935
Reel 116, Volume 775 Clippings--Legislation, 1935
Reel 116, Volume 776-777 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1935
Reel 116, Volume 778-780 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1935
Reel 117, Volume 781-784 Correspondence--General, 1935
Indians; Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 117, Volume 785 Clippings--General, 1935
Interference with Meetings; Injunctions; Indians; Labor and Radical Organizations; Anti-Labor Movements; Lynchings, Mob Violence
Reel 117, Volume 786 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1935
Reel 117, Volume 787 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1935
Reel 118, Volume 788 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1935
Reel 118, Volume 789 Clippings--Legislation, 1935
Reel 118, Volume 790 Clippings--States, 1935
NYC, NY
Reel 118, Volume 792 NYC
Reel 118, Volume 793-795 NYC
Reel 119, Volume 796-798 Correspondence--General--Outside Organizations, 1935
Reel 119, Volume 799-800 Clippings--General, 1935
Patrioteering Organizations; Negroes; Prosecution of Radicals; Religious Freedom; Third Degree; Violence and Discrimination under NIRA
Reel 119, Volume 801 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 119, Volume 802 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 119, Volume 803 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 120, Volume 804 Correspondence--Injunctions, 1935
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CT, DE, FL, GA, IL, KS, KY, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM
Reel 120, Volume 805 NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, WA, WV, WY, Labor Injunctions Committee Survey
Reel 120, Volume 806 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1935
Loyalty Oath Bills
Reel 120, Volume 807-808 Minority Parties on the Ballot
Reel 120, Volume 809-810 Sedition Bills
Reel 121, Volume 811 Clippings--States, 1935
NYC
Reel 121, Volume 812 AL, AZ, AR
Reel 121, Volume 813 CA
Reel 121, Volume 814-816 CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA
Reel 121, Volume 817 IL
Reel 121, Volume 818 IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 122, Volume 819 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH
Reel 122, Volume 820 NJ
Reel 122, Volume 821 NM
Reel 122, Volume 822 NC, ND, OH, OK, OR
Reel 122, Volume 823 PA, RI, SC, SD
Reel 122, Volume 824 TN, TX, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY, AK, Panama Canal Zone, Cuba, Haiti, Philippine Islands, VI
Reel 122, Volume 825 Correspondence--States, 1935
AL, AZ
Reel 122, Volume 826 AR
Reel 122, Volume 827 AR
Reel 123, Volume 828 CA (Mooney-Billings Case)
Reel 123, Volume 829-830 CA
Reel 123, Volume 831-833 CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 123, Volume 834 DC, FL, GA
Reel 123, Volume 835 ID, GA
Reel 124, Volume 836 IL
Reel 124, Volume 837 IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 124, Volume 838 KY
Reel 124, Volume 839 LA, ME, MD
Reel 124, Volume 840 MA
Reel 124, Volume 841 MI, MN
Reel 124, Volume 842 MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH
Reel 125, Volume 843 NJ
Reel 125, Volume 844-846 NM
Reel 125, Volume 847 NY
Reel 125, Volume 848-849 NY (Loyalty Oath Laws)
Reel 126, Volume 850-851 NC, ND
Reel 126, Volume 852 OH
Reel 126, Volume 853 OK
Reel 126, Volume 854 OR
Reel 126, Volume 855 PA
Reel 126, Volume 856-857 PA
Reel 127, Volume 858-859 SC, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA, WV
Reel 127, Volume 860 WI
Reel 127, Volume 861 Guam, Haiti, HI, Panama Canal Zone, Philippine Islands, PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 127, Volume 862 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1936
Reel 127, Volume 863-864 Correspondence--Organizational Matters
Reel 128, Volume 865-866 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1936
AL, AR, CA, CT, DC, GA, IL, IA, LA, ME, MD, MA, MN, MO, NJ, NYC, NY
Reel 128, Volume 867 NC, OH, OR, PA, RI, TN, TX, VT, WA, WI
Reel 128, Volume 869 Teachers Loyalty Oath; Flag Salute Laws; Compulsory Military Drill Laws; Student Peace Strikes Laws; General Student Trends; Propaganda for Academic Freedom; Propaganda against Academic Freedom
Reel 128, Volume 869 Correspondence--Academic Freedom--NYC, 1936
Reel 128, Volume 870-871 Correspondence--General--Religious Freedom--NYC, 1936
Reel 128, Volume 871 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1936
Reel 129, Volume 872-873 Correspondence--General
Religious Freedom; Free Speech
Reel 129, Volume 873 Aliens
Reel 129, Volume 874-875 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors
Reel 129, Volume 875 Clippings--Censorship, 1936
Film; Theatre; Press; Post Office; Radio Censorship
Reel 129, Volume 876 Movie; Theatre; Post Office Censorship
Reel 129, Volume 877 Clippings--Censorship, 1936
Press; Western Union; National Council on Freedom from Censorship; It Does Happen Here - Anti-Censorship Mass Rally
Reel 130, Volume 878 Clippings--Censorship
Reel 130, Volume 879 Clippings--General
Civil Liberty Issues in Election Campaigns
Reel 130, Volume 880 Negroes; Labor; Fascism and Nazism; Legal
Reel 130, Volume 880 Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 130, Volume 881 Propaganda against Civil Liberties
Reel 130, Volume 881 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1936
Reel 130, Volume 882-883 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1936
Reel 130, Volume 884 Clippings--Legislation, 1936
Reel 131, Volume 885 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1936
Reel 131, Volume 886-890 Clippings--General, 1936
Labor Organizations
Reel 131, Volume 891 Labor Spies; Injunctions; Negroes; Lynchings
Reel 131, Volume 892 State Legislation; City Legislation
Reel 132, Volume 893 Clippings--States, 1936
NYC
Reel 132, Volume 894-895 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1936
Reel 132, Volume 896 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1936
NY
Reel 132, Volume 897-900 NYC
Reel 133, Volume 900 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1936
Reel 133, Volume 901-903 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1936
Reel 133, Volume 904 Clippings--General--Patrioteering Organizations, 1936
Reel 133, Volume 905-906 Correspondence--General--Patrioteering Organizations, 1936
Reel 134, Volume 907-908 Clippings--General, 1936
Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 134, Volume 909-910 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 134, Volume 911-912 Correspondence--General--Radio, 1936
Reel 134, Volume 913-914 Clippings--States, 1936
AL, AK, AZ, AR
Reel 134, Volume 915 Clippings--States, 1936
CA
Reel 135, Volume 916 Canada, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL
Reel 135, Volume 917 GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 135, Volume 918 MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH
Reel 135, Volume 919 NJ
Reel 135, Volume 920 NM, NY
Reel 135, Volume 921 NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TN
Reel 135, Volume 922 TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, VI, Philippine Islands, PR, Nicaragua, HI
Reel 136, Volume 923 Correspondence--States, 1936
AL
Reel 136, Volume 924 AL, AZ, AR
Reel 136, Volume 925 AR
Reel 136, Volume 926 CA
Reel 136, Volume 927-929 CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 137, Volume 930 DC, FL
Reel 137, Volume 931 GA, ID
Reel 137, Volume 932 IL
Reel 137, Volume 933 IN
Reel 137, Volume 934 IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 137, Volume 935 KY, LA
Reel 138, Volume 936 ME, MD, MA
Reel 138, Volume 937 MA
Reel 138, Volume 938-939 MI
Reel 138, Volume 940 MN, MS, MO, MT
Reel 138, Volume 941 NE, NH, NJ
Reel 138, Volume 942 NJ
Reel 139, Volume 943 NJ, NM
Reel 139, Volume 944 NY
Reel 139, Volume 945 NC, ND, OH
Reel 139, Volume 946 OH, OK, OR
Reel 139, Volume 947 PA
Reel 139, Volume 948 RI, PA, SC, SD
Reel 139, Volume 949 Correspondence--States, 1936
TN, TX, UT, VT
Reel 140, Volume 950 VA, WA
Reel 140, Volume 951 WV, WI, Canada, Cuba, HI, Philippine Islands
Reel 140, Volume 952 PR, Samoa, VI
Reel 140, Volume 953 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1937
AR, CA, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MO, MT, NJ, NY, NYC, ND, OK, OR, PA, RI, TN, VA, WA; Academic Freedom for Teachers; Student Anti-War Strikes; Miscellaneous Student Problems; Harrison-Fletcher Federal Education Bill
Reel 140, Volume 954 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1937
AR, CA, CT, FL, GA,
Reel 140, Volume 955 IL, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA
Reel 140, Volume 956 MI, MN, MS, MO, NJ
Reel 141, Volume 957 NY, PA
Reel 141, Volume 958 RI, TN, TX, WA, WI
Reel 141, Volume 959 Committee on Academic Freedom Minutes
Reel 141, Volume 959 Subcommittee on Education Leaflets
Reel 141, Volume 959 American Federation of Teachers
Reel 141, Volume 959 Flag Salute Statutes
Reel 141, Volume 959 Teachers Loyalty Oath Laws
Reel 141, Volume 959 Correspondence--Censorship, 1937
Books and Magazines;
Reel 141, Volume 960 Post Office; Censorship Committee Meetings
Reel 141, Volume 961 Censorship Pamphlet; General
Reel 141, Volume 961 Clippings--Censorship, 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 Correspondence--Censorship, 1937
Theatre, Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 141, Volume 963 Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 141, Volume 964 Motion Picture, Post Office, Press, Radio, Theatre Censorship
Reel 142, Volume 965 General Statements on Censorship
Reel 142, Volume 965 Clippings--Legislation, 1937
Reel 142, Volume 966 Clippings--General--Labor Organizations
Reel 142, Volume 966 Correspondence--General, 1937
Civil Liberties in General
Reel 142, Volume 967 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Bail Fund, 1937
Correspondence--General
Reel 142, Volume 968 Third Degree; Religious Freedom; Mass Picketing and Violence in Strikes
Reel 142, Volume 965 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1937
Reel 142, Volume 969-971 Correspondence--Organizational Matters
Reel 143, Volume 972 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1937
Reel 143, Volume 973-974 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1937
Reel 143, Volume 975-978 Clippings--Legislation, 1937
Reel 144, Volume 979 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1937
Reel 144, Volume 980-983 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1937
Correspondence--General
Reel 144, Volume 983 International Civil Liberties
Reel 144, Volume 984 Indians
Reel 145, Volume 985 Negroes
Reel 145, Volume 985 Correspondence--Injunctions
AR, CA, CT, DE, FL, GA, IL, KY, ME, MD, MI, MO, NE, NV, NH, NJ, OH, OK,
Reel 145, Volume 986 PA
Reel 145, Volume 986 RI, SD, TX, WV
Reel 145, Volume 987 PA
Reel 145, Volume 988 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1937
Reel 145, Volume 989-992 Clippings--General, 1937
Labor Organizations; Injunctions; Negroes; Lynchings
Reel 145, Volume 993 Labor Spies
Reel 146, Volume 994 Clippings--States, 1937
NYC
Reel 146, Volume 995-996 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1937
Committee Business
Reel 146, Volume 997 Police Department; Strikes and Injunctions
Reel 146, Volume 998 Works Progress Administration; Public Assembly; Discrimination; Raymond Grusko Naturalization Case
Reel 146, Volume 999 Miscellaneous Cases; Legislation; Citizen's Union
Reel 146, Volume 1000 Legislation
Reel 146, Volume 1001 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1937
Legislation
Reel 147, Volume 1002-1003 Correspondence--General, 1937
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 147, Volume 1004 Attacks on American Civil Liberties Union
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 147, Volume 1005 Clippings--General, 1937
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 147, Volume 1006 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 147, Volume 1007 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 147, Volume 1008-1009 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio, 1937
Reel 147, Volume 1010 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Radio
Reel 148, Volume 1011 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee
Reel 148, Volume 1012 Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation, 1937
Reel 148, Volume 1013 Clippings--States, 1937
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 148, Volume 1014 CA
Reel 148, Volume 1015 CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID
Reel 148, Volume 1016 IL
Reel 148, Volume 1017 IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 148, Volume 1018 MI
Reel 149, Volume 1019-1020 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NH
Reel 149, Volume 1021 NJ
Reel 149, Volume 1022 NJ, NM
Reel 149, Volume 1023 NC, OH, OK, OR
Reel 149, Volume 1024 PA
Reel 149, Volume 1025 RI, SC, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 149, Volume 1026 Philippine Islands, VI, PR
Reel 149, Volume 1027 Correspondence--States, 1937
AL
Reel 150, Volume 1028 AZ, AR
Reel 150, Volume 1029 CA
Reel 150, Volume 1030-1032 CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 150, Volume 1033 DC
Reel 150, Volume 1034 FL
Reel 150, Volume 1035 FL
Reel 151, Volume 1036 GA
Reel 151, Volume 1037 GA, ID
Reel 151, Volume 1038 IL
Reel 151, Volume 1039-1040 IN, IA, KS
Reel 151, Volume 1041 KY, LA
Reel 152, Volume 1042 ME
Reel 152, Volume 1043 MD
Reel 152, Volume 1044 MA
Reel 152, Volume 1045 MI
Reel 152, Volume 1046-1047 MI
Reel 153, Volume 1048-1049 MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH
Reel 153, Volume 1050 NJ
Reel 153, Volume 1051-1052 NM, NY
Reel 153, Volume 1053 NC, ND, OH
Reel 154, Volume 1054 OH
Reel 154, Volume 1055 OK, OR
Reel 154, Volume 1056 PA
Reel 154, Volume 1057-1058 RI, SC, TN
Reel 154, Volume 1059 TX
Reel 154, Volume 1060 UT, VT, VA, WA, WI
Reel 154, Volume 1061 Guam, HI, Philippine Islands, Samoa, VI, PR
Reel 155, Volume 1062 PR
Reel 155, Volume 1063-1065 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1938
VA, WA, WV, WI, PR, Canada, Great Britain, CA, FL, IN, MA, MI, MN, MO, MT, NJ, NY, OR, PA, VA, VA, WA, WI
Reel 155, Volume 1066 General Statements re: Academic Freedom
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom Committee, 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1067 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1938
CA, CT, DE, GA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA
Reel 155, Volume 1068 MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NJ
Reel 155, Volume 1069 NY
Reel 155, Volume 1070 OK, TN, TX, WA, WI
Reel 156, Volume 1071 Correspondence--General--Attacks on American Civil Liberties Union, 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1072 Clippings--Censorship, 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 Correspondence--Censorship, 1938
Books and Magazine Censorship
Reel 156, Volume 1074 Post Office and Customs Censorship
Reel 156, Volume 1075 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Censorship
Reel 156, Volume 1075 Correspondence--Censorship
Theatre, Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 156, Volume 1076 Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 156, Volume 1077 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1078-1080 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1938
Reel 157, Volume 1081 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1938
Reel 157, Volume 1082 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1938
Reel 157, Volume 1083 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1938
Reel 157, Volume 1085-1087 Clippings--Legislation, 1938
Reel 157, Volume 1088 Clippings--Legislation
Reel 158, Volume 1089 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1938
Reel 158, Volume 1090-1093 Correspondence--General, 1938
Indians
Reel 158, Volume 1094 Indians; Negroes
Reel 159, Volume 1095 International Civil Liberties
Reel 159, Volume 1096 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1938
Reel 159, Volume 1097-1099 [There are no volumes 1100 to 1999]
Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1938
Reel 160, Volume 2000 Clippings--General, 1938
Labor Spies; Negroes; Lynchings; Religious Freedom; Wiretapping
Reel 160, Volume 2001 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1938
Reel 160, Volume 2002 Correspondence--State Legislation
Reel 160, Volume 2002 Correspondence--Injunctions
Reel 160, Volume 2002 Clippings--States, 1938
NYC
Reel 160, Volume 2003 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1938
Reel 160, Volume 2004-2007 Clippings--General, 1938
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 161, Volume 2008 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 161, Volume 2009 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 161, Volume 2010 Radio
Reel 161, Volume 2011 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio Censorship Cases, 1938
Reel 161, Volume 2012 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Radio Legislation
Reel 161, Volume 2013 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee
Reel 161, Volume 2014 Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation, 1938
Reel 162, Volume 2015 Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation
Reel 162, Volume 2016 Clippings--General
Reel 162, Volume 2016 Labor Organizations; American Bar Association
Reel 162, Volume 2016 Clippings--States, 1938
AL, AR, CA
Reel 162, Volume 2017 CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 162, Volume 2018 LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE
Reel 162, Volume 2019 NJ
Reel 162, Volume 2020-2022 NJ
Reel 163, Volume 2023 NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TX
Reel 163, Volume 2024 Correspondence--States, 1938
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 163, Volume 2025 CA (Mooney Case)
Reel 163, Volume 2026 CA - Northern CA
Reel 163, Volume 2027 CA - Southern CA
Reel 163, Volume 2028 CO, CT, DC
Reel 163, Volume 2029 FL, GA
Reel 164, Volume 2030 IL
Reel 164, Volume 2031 IL, IN
Reel 164, Volume 2032 IA
Reel 164, Volume 2033 KS, KY, LA
Reel 164, Volume 2034 ME, MD
Reel 164, Volume 2035 MA
Reel 164, Volume 2036 MI
Reel 164, Volume 2037 MN, MS, MO, NE, NH
Reel 165, Volume 2038 NJ
Reel 165, Volume 2039-2043 NJ, NM
Reel 165, Volume 2044 NY
Reel 165, Volume 2045 NY
Reel 166, Volume 2046 NC, ND
Reel 166, Volume 2047 OH
Reel 166, Volume 2048 PA
Reel 166, Volume 2049 PA, RI, TN
Reel 166, Volume 2050 TX
Reel 166, Volume 2051 VT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 166, Volume 2052 AK, Guam, HI, Philippine Islands, PR
Reel 166, Volume 2053 PR
Reel 166, Volume 2054 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1939
CA, CT, DE, FL, GA, IN, MA, MI
Reel 167, Volume 2055 MN, MT, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 167, Volume 2056 OH, PA, RI
Reel 167, Volume 2057 TN, TX, WA, WI, Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 167, Volume 2058 Correspondence--Censorship, 1939
Theatre; Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 167, Volume 2059 Motion Picture; Books and Magazines Censorship
Reel 167, Volume 2060 Post Office and Customs Censorship
Reel 167, Volume 2061 Clippings--Censorship, 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2063 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1939
Reel 168, Volume 2064-2067 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1939
Reel 168, Volume 2068 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1939
Reel 168, Volume 2069-2070 Clippings--Legislation, 1939
Reel 168, Volume 2071-2072 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1939
Alien Legislation
Reel 169, Volume 2073-2080 Dies Committee to Investigate Subversive Activity
Reel 169, Volume 2075-2079 National Labor Relations Act - Proposed Changes
Reel 169, Volume 2080 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1939
Reel 170, Volume 2081-2084 Correspondence--General, 1939
Negroes
Reel 170, Volume 2085 International Civil Liberties
Reel 170, Volume 2085 Correspondence--Injunctions
Correspondence--General--Indians
Reel 170, Volume 2086 Clippings--General, 1939
Labor and Liberal Organizations; American Bar Association; Indians; Negroes; Religious Freedom; Wiretapping
Reel 170, Volume 2087 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1939
Reel 171, Volume 2088-2091 Clippings--General, 1939
Labor Spies; Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 171, Volume 2092 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1939
Reel 171, Volume 2093 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1939
Reel 172, Volume 2094-2099 Correspondence--General, 1939
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 172, Volume 2100 Attacks on American Civil Liberties Union
Reel 172, Volume 2100 Clippings--General, 1939
Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 172, Volume 2101 Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 172, Volume 2102 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 172, Volume 2102 Radio
Reel 173, Volume 2103 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio Censorship, 1939
Reel 173, Volume 2104 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Radio
Reel 173, Volume 2104-2107 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee, 1939
Reel 173, Volume 2108-2110 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Department of State, 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2110 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2111-2112 Clippings--States, 1939
AL, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, IA, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 174, Volume 2113 NJ
Reel 174, Volume 2114-2115 NY, NC, OH
Reel 174, Volume 2116 OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, VA, WA, WV, WI, HI, Philippine Islands, PR, VI, Canada
Reel 174, Volume 2117 Clippings--Academic Freedom
Reel 174, Volume 2117 CA, GA, MA, MO, MT, NJ, NY, OH, PA, TN, WA, WI, General Statements re: Academic Freedom
Reel 174, Volume 2117 Correspondence--States, 1939
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 175, Volume 2118 CA - Northern CA
Reel 175, Volume 2119-2120 CA - Southern CA
Reel 175, Volume 2121-2122 CO, CT, DE
Reel 175, Volume 2123 DC, FL
Reel 175, Volume 2124 GA, IL
Reel 175, Volume 2125 IL
Reel 176, Volume 2126 IN, IA, KS
Reel 176, Volume 2127 KY, LA, ME
Reel 176, Volume 2128 MD, MA
Reel 176, Volume 2129 MA, MI
Reel 176, Volume 2130 MI, MN
Reel 176, Volume 2131 MS, MO, NE, NH
Reel 176, Volume 2132 NJ
Reel 176, Volume 2133 NJ
Reel 177, Volume 2134 NJ, NM, NY
Reel 177, Volume 2135 NC, OH
Reel 177, Volume 2136 OH, OK, OR
Reel 177, Volume 2137 PA
Reel 177, Volume 2138 PA, RI
Reel 177, Volume 2139 SC, TN, TX
Reel 177, Volume 2140 TX, VT, VA
Reel 177, Volume 2141 AK, Haiti, HI, Panama Canal Zone, Philippine Islands
Reel 178, Volume 2142 Philippine Islands, PR
Reel 178, Volume 2143 PR
Reel 178, Volume 2144 PR, VI
Reel 178, Volume 2145 WA, WI
Reel 178, Volume 2146 Correspondence--General, 1939
War Situation
Reel 178, Volume 2147 Civil Liberties in General
Reel 178, Volume 2147 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1940
AR, CA, CO, GA, MI, MO, MT, NJ, NY, OK, PA, TN, WI, Academic Freedom: General
Reel 178, Volume 2148 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1940
AR, CA, CO, CT, GA, IL, KS, LA, MA
Reel 178, Volume 2149 MI, NJ, NM, NY
Reel 178, Volume 2150 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1940
NY
Reel 179, Volume 2151 NY, OK
Reel 179, Volume 2152 PA, TN, WI
Reel 179, Volume 2153 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom, 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2154 Clippings--General, 1940
Birth Control; Negroes; Poll Tax; Religious Freedom; Wiretapping; Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 179, Volume 2155 Clippings--Censorship
Reel 179, Volume 2156 Correspondence--Censorship, 1940
Theatre; Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 179, Volume 2157 Books and Magazines; Post Office and Customs Censorship
Reel 179, Volume 2158 National Council on Freedom from Censorship
Reel 179, Volume 2158 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2159 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1940
Reel 180, Volume 2160-2166 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1940
Reel 180, Volume 2167 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1940
Reel 181, Volume 2168-2169 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1940
Reel 181, Volume 2170 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1940
Reel 181, Volume 2171-2173 Clippings--Legislation, 1940
Reel 181, Volume 2174-2175 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Alien Legislation, 1940
Reel 181, Volume 2176-2177 Correspondence--Federal Legislation , 1940
Alien Legislation
Reel 182, Volume 2178-2179 Dies Committee to Investigate Subversive Activities
Reel 182, Volume 2180-2081 National Labor Relations Act
Reel 182, Volume 2182 Miscellaneous
Reel 182, Volume 2183-2186 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1940
Reel 183, Volume 2187-2190 Clippings--General, 1940
Labor and Liberal Organizations; Anti-Labor Movements; Minority Parties Repression
Reel 183, Volume 2191 Correspondence--General, 1940
Minority Parties on the Ballot
Reel 183, Volume 2192-2193 Minority Parties on the Ballot; Indians
Reel 183, Volume 2194 Negroes; International Civil Liberties
Reel 183, Volume 2195 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1940
Reel 184, Volume 2196-2201 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1940
Reel 184, Volume 2202 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1940
Reel 185, Volume 2203-2206 Correspondence--General, 1940
Patrioteering Organizations; Civil Liberties in General
Reel 185, Volume 2207 Clippings--General, 1940
Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 185, Volume 2208 Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 186, Volume 2209 Conscientious Objectors
Reel 186, Volume 2209 War Hysteria
Reel 186, Volume 2209 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio, 1940
Reel 186, Volume 2210 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Radio
Reel 186, Volume 2210 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Federal Communications Commission
Reel 186, Volume 2211 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio
Reel 186, Volume 2212 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee
Reel 186, Volume 2213-2214 Correspondence--General
Religious Freedom; Census for 1940; American Bar Association; War Hysteria; Minority Parties on the Ballot
Reel 186, Volume 2215 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Bail Fund
Reel 186, Volume 2215 Correspondence--State Legislation
Reel 186, Volume 2215 Clippings--States, 1940
AL, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 187, Volume 2217 MT, NV, NJ, NY
Reel 187, Volume 2218 OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, VA, WA, WV, WI, Philippine Islands, PR, Foreign Countries
Reel 187, Volume 2219 Correspondence--States, 1940
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 187, Volume 2220 CA - Northern CA
Reel 187, Volume 2221-2222 CA - Southern CA
Reel 187, Volume 2223-2224 CO, CT, DE, DC
Reel 188, Volume 2225 DC
Reel 188, Volume 2226 FL, GA, ID
Reel 188, Volume 2227 IL
Reel 188, Volume 2228-2229 IN, IA, KS, KY
Reel 188, Volume 2230 LA, ME, MD
Reel 188, Volume 2231 MA
Reel 189, Volume 2232 MI
Reel 189, Volume 2233-2234 MN, MS
Reel 189, Volume 2235 MS, MO
Reel 189, Volume 2236 MO, MT, NE, NV, NH
Reel 189, Volume 2237 NJ
Reel 189, Volume 2238 NJ, NM, NY
Reel 189, Volume 2239 NC, ND, OH
Reel 190, Volume 2240 OK
Reel 190, Volume 2241 OK, OR
Reel 190, Volume 2242 PA
Reel 190, Volume 2243-2245 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX
Reel 190, Volume 2246 TX, UT, VT
Reel 190, Volume 2247 VT, VA
Reel 190, Volume 2248 WA, WV
Reel 191, Volume 2249 WI, WY, AK, Guam, Philippine Islands
Reel 191, Volume 2250 PR
Reel 191, Volume 2251 PR, VI, Committee on Civil Liberties in American Colonies
Reel 191, Volume 2252 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1934-1940
Reel 191, Volume 2252A Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1941
CA, CO, FL, GA, IN, KS, MI
Reel 191, Volume 2253 MO, NH, NJ, NY
Reel 191, Volume 2254 NY, OH, OK, PA, WA, Academic Freedom: General
Reel 191, Volume 2255 CA, IL, KS, MD, MA, MI, MN, MT, NY, NYC
Reel 191, Volume 2256 NYC, OK, OR
Reel 192, Volume 2257 PA, TN, VT, WA,
Reel 192, Volume 2258 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 192, Volume 2258 Clippings--General, 1941
Birth Control; Negroes; Poll Tax; Religious Freedom; Violence and Discrimination
Reel 192, Volume 2259 Correspondence--Censorship, 1941
Theatre; Motion Pictures; Books and Magazines; Post Office and Customs Censorship; General
Reel 192, Volume 2260 National Council on Freedom from Censorship
Reel 192, Volume 2260 Clippings--Censorship, 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261-2262 Correspondence--General--Civil Rights, 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2263 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2264-2266 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1941
Reel 193, Volume 2267-2269 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1941
Reel 193, Volume 2270-2273 Correspondence--General, 1941
ACLU Policy on Joint Ownership of Newspapers & Radio
Reel 193, Volume 2274 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1941
Reel 193, Volume 2275 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1941
Reel 193, Volume 2276 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1941
Reel 194, Volume 2277 Clippings--Legislation, 1941
Reel 194, Volume 2278-2279 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1941
Reel 194, Volume 2280-2282 Clippings--General, 1941
Labor
Reel 194, Volume 2283 Labor and Liberal Organizations
Reel 194, Volume 2284 Anti-Labor Movements
Reel 194, Volume 2284 Minority Parties Repression
Reel 194, Volume 2284 Minority Parties on the Ballot
Reel 194, Volume 2285 Minority Parties on the Ballot
Reel 195, Volume 2286-2287 Indians; Negroes; International Civil Liberties
Reel 195, Volume 2287 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1941
Reel 195, Volume 2288-2293 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1941
Reel 196, Volume 2294-2297 Clippings--General, 1941
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 196, Volume 2298 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 196, Volume 2299 Conscientious Objectors
Reel 196, Volume 2299 Miscellaneous
Reel 196, Volume 2299 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 196, Volume 2300 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 196, Volume 2301 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio, 1941
Reel 196, Volume 2302 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Radio, 1941
Reel 196, Volume 2303 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio
Reel 196, Volume 2303 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee
Reel 196, Volume 2303 Clippings--Censorship--Radio Censorship, 1941
Reel 197, Volume 2304-2305 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Bail Fund, 1941
Reel 197, Volume 2306 Correspondence--General
Reel 197, Volume 2306 Religious Freedom
Reel 197, Volume 2306 Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 197, Volume 2306 Civil Liberties in General
Reel 197, Volume 2306 Restitution for Prisoners Falsely Imprisoned
Reel 197, Volume 2306A-2306B Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation, 1941
Reel 197, Volume 2307 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1941
Reel 197, Volume 2308-2309 Correspondence--General--Strikes, 1941
Reel 198, Volume 2309A Clippings--General, 1941
Wiretapping; War Hysteria
Reel 198, Volume 2309B Clippings--States, 1941
AL, AR, CA
Reel 198, Volume 2310 CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KY, LA, MD, MI
Reel 198, Volume 2311 MN
Reel 198, Volume 2312 MS, NY, MO, MT, NJ, NM
Reel 198, Volume 2313 NY
Reel 198, Volume 2314 NY, NC, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 198, Volume 2315 SC, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, Philippine Islands, PR, Samoa,
Reel 198, Volume 2316 Correspondence--States, 1941
AL, AR, AZ
Reel 198, Volume 2317 CA - Northern CA
Reel 199, Volume 2318-2319 CA - Southern CA
Reel 199, Volume 2319-2320 CO, CT
Reel 199, Volume 2321 DE, DC, FL
Reel 199, Volume 2322 FL
Reel 199, Volume 2323 GA
Reel 199, Volume 2324 ID, IL
Reel 199, Volume 2325 IL
Reel 200, Volume 2326 IL, IN
Reel 200, Volume 2327 IN
Reel 200, Volume 2328 IA, KS
Reel 200, Volume 2329 KS, KY
Reel 200, Volume 2330 LA, ME, MD
Reel 200, Volume 2331 MA
Reel 200, Volume 2332 MI, MN
Reel 200, Volume 2333 MN, MS, MO
Reel 200, Volume 2334 MT, NH, NJ
Reel 200, Volume 2335 NJ
Reel 201, Volume 2336 NM, NY
Reel 201, Volume 2337 NY
Reel 201, Volume 2338 NC, OH, OK
Reel 201, Volume 2339 OK, OR, PA
Reel 201, Volume 2340 PA
Reel 201, Volume 2341 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX
Reel 201, Volume 2342 TX
Reel 202, Volume 2343 TX, UT, VT
Reel 202, Volume 2344 VA, WA, WV
Reel 202, Volume 2345 WI, WY, Cuba, Guam, Samoa, Philippine Islands, PR, HI, VI
Reel 202, Volume 2346 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Works Progress Administration Cases, 1940-1941
Reel 202, Volume 2346A-B Clippings--General, 1942
Birth Control; Poll Tax; Religious Freedom; Violence and Discrimination
Reel 202, Volume 2347 Clippings--Censorship, 1942
Reel 202, Volume 2348 Correspondence--Censorship, 1942
Books and Magazines; Post Office
Reel 202, Volume 2349 Theatre; Motion Pictures Censorship
Reel 203, Volume 2350 National Council on Freedom for Censorship
Reel 203, Volume 2350 Press - Radio
Reel 203, Volume 2351 Radio Censorship Cases; Radio Legislation; Federal Communications Commission; General; National Association of Broadcasters
Reel 203, Volume 2352 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee, 1942
Reel 203, Volume 2352 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1942
Reel 203, Volume 2353 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1942
Reel 203, Volume 2354-2358 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1942
Reel 203, Volume 2359-2360 Clippings--General, 1942
Enemy Aliens
Reel 204, Volume 2361 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1942
Reel 204, Volume 2362-2366 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1942
Reel 204, Volume 2367 Clippings--Legislation, 1942
State Legislation
Reel 204, Volume 2368 Anti-Labor Legislation
Reel 204, Volume 2368 Dies Committee to Investigate Subversive Activities
Reel 204, Volume 2369 Miscellaneous
Reel 204, Volume 2370 Correspondence--General, 1942
Indians; Negroes; International Civil Liberties
Reel 205, Volume 2371 Clippings--General, 1942
Japanese-American Cases
Reel 205, Volume 2372-2373 Labor and Liberal Organizations
Reel 205, Volume 2374 Anti-Labor Movements
Reel 205, Volume 2374 Minority Party Repression
Reel 205, Volume 2374 Correspondence--General, 1942
Reel 205, Volume 2375 Minority Parties
Reel 205, Volume 2375 Clippings--General, 1942
Indians; Aliens; Foreign Countries; Peonage; Leaflet Distribution; Lynching; Wiretapping; Sedition Cases
Reel 205, Volume 2376 Negroes
Reel 205, Volume 2377 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1942
Reel 205, Volume 2378-2382 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1942
Reel 206, Volume 2383-2384 Clippings--General, 1942
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 206, Volume 2385 Persecution of Radicals
Reel 206, Volume 2385 Correspondence--General, 1942
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 206, Volume 2386 Religious Freedom
Reel 206, Volume 2386 General
Reel 206, Volume 2386 General
Reel 206, Volume 2387 Clippings--General, 1942
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 206, Volume 2388 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 206, Volume 2389 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 206, Volume 2389 Clippings--States--PR, HI, 1942
Reel 206, Volume 2389 Clippings--General, 1942
Conscientious Objectors
Reel 206 Clippings--Censorship--Radio Censorship, 1942
Reel 206, Volume 2390-2391 Correspondence--General, 1942
Radio
Reel 206, Volume 2392 Clippings--General--War Agencies, War Hysteria, 1942
Reel 206, Volume 2393 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1942
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 206, Volume 2394 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 207, Volume 2395-2398 Clippings--States, 1942
AL, AZ, AR, CA, Canada, CT, DC, FL
Reel 207, Volume 2399 GA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 207, Volume 2400 NH, NJ, NY
Reel 207, Volume 2401 NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 207, Volume 2402 Correspondence--States, 1942
AL, AZ
Reel 207, Volume 2403 AR, CA
Reel 207, Volume 2404 CA
Reel 207, Volume 2405 CA
Reel 208, Volume 2406 CT, DE, DC, FL
Reel 208, Volume 2407 GA, ID
Reel 208, Volume 2408 IL
Reel 208, Volume 2409 IN, IA, KS
Reel 208, Volume 2410 KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 208, Volume 2411 MA
Reel 208, Volume 2412 MI, MN
Reel 208, Volume 2413 MS, MO
Reel 208, Volume 2414 MO
Reel 209, Volume 2415 MT, NE, NH, NJ
Reel 209, Volume 2416 NJ
Reel 209, Volume 2417 NM, NY
Reel 209, Volume 2418 NY
Reel 209, Volume 2419 NY, NC
Reel 209, Volume 2420 OH
Reel 209, Volume 2421 OK
Reel 209, Volume 2422 OR, PA
Reel 209, Volume 2423 PA
Reel 209, Volume 2424 RI, SC, SD, TN, TX
Reel 210, Volume 2425 TX, UT, VT
Reel 210, Volume 2426 VA
Reel 210, Volume 2427 WA, WV, WI
Reel 210, Volume 2428 WI, WY, Haiti, Jamaica, HI, VI, PR
Reel 210, Volume 2429 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1943
Clippings--General--Aliens, Radio
Reel 210, Volume 2430 Clippings--Censorship
Reel 210, Volume 2430 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Alien Legislation, 1943
Reel 210, Volume 2431 Clippings--General, 1943
Birth Control; Indians; Japanese-Americans
Reel 210, Volume 2432 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1943
Reel 210, Volume 2433-2434 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Censorship, 1943
Reel 211, Volume 2435 Correspondence--Censorship--Magazine Censorship
Reel 211, Volume 2435 Correspondence--Censorship, 1943
Magazine Censorship
Reel 211, Volume 2436 Books; Post Office Censorship
Reel 211, Volume 2437 Post Office Censorship
Reel 211, Volume 2438-2440 Poll Tax
Reel 211, Volume 2440 Clippings--Censorship--Radio, Movie Censorship, 1943
Reel 211, Volume 2441 Clippings--General
Denaturalizations
Reel 211, Volume 2441 Exclusion Cases
Reel 211, Volume 2441 Conscientious Objectors
Reel 211, Volume 2442 Correspondence--General, 1943
Eastern Defense Command (East Coast Order)
Reel 211, Volume 2443 Denaturalization
Reel 211, Volume 2443 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 211, Volume 2444 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1943
Reel 211, Volume 2445 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1943
Reel 211, Volume 2446 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1943
Reel 212, Volume 2447-2456 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1943
Reel 212, Volume 2457 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1943
Reel 213, Volume 2458-2460 Correspondence--General, 1943
Associated Press Suit; Attacks on ACLU
Reel 213, Volume 2461 Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 213, Volume 2461 Correspondence--General
Enemy Aliens
Reel 213, Volume 2462 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 213, Volume 2463-2469 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 214, Volume 2470 Clippings--General, 1943
Labor; American Newspaper Guild
Reel 214, Volume 2471 National Association of Manufacturers
Reel 214, Volume 2471 Associated Press
Reel 214, Volume 2471 Clippings--Legislation, 1943
Reel 214, Volume 2472-2475 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1943
Reel 214, Volume 2476-2478 Clippings--General--Negroes, 1943
Reel 214, Volume 2479-2481 Correspondence--General, 1943
Negroes
Reel 215, Volume 2482 DC Sedition
Reel 215, Volume 2482 Clippings--States, 1943
NYC
Reel 215, Volume 2483-2484 Clippings--General--Miscellaneous Cases
Clippings--Legislation
Reel 215, Volume 2485 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1943
Reel 215, Volume 2486-2488 Correspondence--General, 1943
Religious Freedom
Reel 215, Volume 2488 Negroes
Reel 215, Volume 2488 Poll Tax
Reel 215, Volume 2489-2490 Clippings--General, 1943
Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 215, Volume 2491 Peonage; Poll Tax
Reel 215, Volume 2491 Propaganda for Civil Liberties
Reel 215, Volume 2491-2492 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee, 1943
Reel 216, Volume 2493-2494 Clippings--General, 1943
Religious Freedom; Radio
Reel 216, Volume 2495 Sedition
Reel 216, Volume 2496 Correspondence--General, 1943
Sedition Cases
Reel 216, Volume 2497-2504 Sedition Cases
Reel 217, Volume 2505-2506 DC Sedition Cases
Reel 217, Volume 2507 War
Reel 217, Volume 2508 Correspondence--State Legislation
Reel 217, Volume 2509-2510 Clippings--General, 1943
Violence and Race Discrimination
Reel 217, Volume 2511 Clippings--States, 1943
AL, AR, CA
Reel 217, Volume 2512 CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, IN, KS, LA, MD, MA
Reel 217, Volume 2513 MI
Reel 217, Volume 2514 MI, MN, MS, MO
Reel 217, Volume 2515 NE, NJ
Reel 217, Volume 2516 NY, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 218, Volume 2517 RI, SC, TN, TX, VA, WA, WV, PR, HI, Foreign Countries
Reel 218, Volume 2518 Correspondence--States, 1943
AL, AK, AZ, AR
Reel 218, Volume 2519 CA
Reel 218, Volume 2520-2521 CO, CT, DC, FL
Reel 218, Volume 2522 GA, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS
Reel 218, Volume 2523 HI
Reel 218, Volume 2524 KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 218, Volume 2525 MA, MI
Reel 218, Volume 2526 MI, MN
Reel 218, Volume 2527 MN
Reel 219, Volume 2528 MS
Reel 219, Volume 2529 MO, MT, NE, NV, NH
Reel 219, Volume 2530 NJ, NM, NY
Reel 219, Volume 2531 NY
Reel 219, Volume 2532 OH
Reel 219, Volume 2533 OK, OR
Reel 219, Volume 2534 PA, TN
Reel 219, Volume 2535 TX
Reel 219, Volume 2536-2537 VT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 219, Volume 2538 Correspondence--General, 1944
Advertising
Reel 219, Volume 2539 International Civil Liberties
Reel 219, Volume 2539 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--
Reel 219, Volume 2539 Race Discrimination Committee
Reel 219, Volume 2539 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2540-2541 Correspondence--General--Indians, 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2542 Clippings--General, 1944
Associated Press
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Aliens
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Carlo Tresca
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Clippings--Academic Freedom
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Clippings--Censorship--Book Censorship
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Correspondence--General--Associated Press, 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2544 Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 220, Volume 2544 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom Committee, 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2544-2545 Clippings--Censorship, 1944
Post Office; Press; Radio Censorship
Reel 220, Volume 2546 Correspondence--Censorship, 1944
Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 220, Volume 2547 Censorship
Reel 220, Volume 2548-2550 Civil Service Dismissals
Reel 220, Volume 2551 Civil Service Dismissals
Reel 221, Volume 2552 Clippings--General, 1944
Communists; Foreign Countries
Reel 221, Volume 2553 Clippings--Federal Departments
Reel 221, Volume 2553 Clippings--General--Conscientious Objectors, 1944
Reel 221, Volume 2554 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1944
Reel 221, Volume 2555-2562 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1944
Individual Cases (A-D)
Reel 222, Volume 2563 Individual Cases (D-J)
Reel 222, Volume 2564 Individual Cases (K-M)
Reel 222, Volume 2565 Individual Cases (M-R)
Reel 222, Volume 2566 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1944
Individual Cases (R-S)
Reel 222, Volume 2567 Individual Cases (S-Z)
Reel 222, Volume 2568 Correspondence--General, 1944
Deportations
Reel 222, Volume 2569-2570 Enemy Aliens; Foreign Agent Registration
Reel 222, Volume 2571 Evacuations; Denaturalization
Reel 222, Volume 2572 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1944
Reel 222, Volume 2573-2574 Clippings--Legislation, 1944
Reel 223, Volume 2575-2581 Correspondence--General--International Civil Liberties, 1944
Reel 223, Volume 2582 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Army, 1944
Reel 223, Volume 2582 Clippings--General--Japanese-Americans, 1944
Reel 223, Volume 2583 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1944
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 223, Volume 2584-2585 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 224, Volume 2586-2590 Correspondence--General--Labor
Reel 224, Volume 2591 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1944
Reel 224, Volume 2592 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1944
Reel 224, Volume 2593-2595 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1944
Reel 224, Volume 2596 Correspondence--General, 1944
Poll Tax; Race Discrimination; Religious Freedom
Reel 224, Volume 2597 Clippings--General, 1944
Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 225, Volume 2598 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 225, Volume 2599 Propaganda Against Civil Liberties
Reel 225, Volume 2599 Race Discrimination
Reel 225, Volume 2600 Radio
Reel 225, Volume 2601 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Radio Committee, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2602 Clippings--General--Sedition, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2603-2604 Correspondence--General--Sedition, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2605 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Sedition Committee, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2605-2606 Correspondence--General--Spanish Americans, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2607 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Special Committees, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2608 Clippings--State Legislation, 1944
Reel 225, Volume 2609 Clippings--General
Labor; Patrioteering Organizations
Reel 225, Volume 2609 Clippings--States
HI, PR, VI, Philippine Islands
Reel 225, Volume 2609 AL, AR, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, 1944
Reel 226, Volume 2610 IA, IN, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NE
Reel 226, Volume 2611 NJ, NY
Reel 226, Volume 2612 NY, NC, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, TN
Reel 226, Volume 2613 TX, UT, VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 226, Volume 2514 Correspondence--States, 1944
AL, AZ, AR
Reel 226, Volume 2615 CA, CA, DC, FL, GA, ID
Reel 226, Volume 2616 IL
Reel 226, Volume 2617 IL, IN, IA, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 226, Volume 2618 MI, MN
Reel 226, Volume 2619 MS, MO, NJ
Reel 226, Volume 2620 NJ, NM
Reel 226, Volume 2621 NY
Reel 226, Volume 2622 NY
Reel 227, Volume 2623 NC, OH, OK, OR
Reel 227, Volume 2624 PA
Reel 227, Volume 2625-2626 Philippine Islands, PR, RI, SC, TN, TX
Reel 227, Volume 2627 TX, UT, VT, VA, WA
Reel 227, Volume 2628 WV, WI, WY, HI, VI
Reel 227, Volume 2629 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1945
Reel 227, Volume 2630-2632 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1945
Reel 227, Volume 2633 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1945
Reel 227, Volume 2634 Clippings--Censorship, 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635-2636 Correspondence--Censorship, 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2637-2639 Clippings--General--Conscientious Objectors, 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2640 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2641-2643 Individual Cases (A-C)
Reel 228, Volume 2644 Individual Cases (D-L)
Reel 228, Volume 2645 Individual Cases (M-N)
Reel 228, Volume 2646 Individual Cases (O-S)
Reel 228, Volume 2647 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1945
Individual Cases (S-Z)
Reel 229, Volume 2648 Clippings--General, 1945
Conscription; Communists; International Civil Liberties
Reel 229, Volume 2649 Clippings--Federal Departments
Reel 229, Volume 2649 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1945
Reel 229, Volume 2550 Clippings--Legislation, 1945
Reel 229, Volume 2651 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1945
Reel 229, Volume 2652-2656 Correspondence--General--International Civil Liberties, 1945
Reel 229, Volume 2657 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1945
Reel 229, Volume 2657 Correspondence--General, 1945
Indians
Reel 230, Volume 2658 Clippings--General, 1945
International Civil Liberties
Reel 230, Volume 2659 Indians; Japanese-Americans
Reel 230, Volume 2659 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1945
International Civil Liberties Committee
Reel 230, Volume 2660 Correspondence--General
Reel 230, Volume 2660 International Civil Liberties
Reel 230, Volume 2660 International Civil Liberties
Reel 230, Volume 2661 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Reel 230, Volume 2662-2664 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 230, Volume 2662-2664 Japanese-American Internment Cases (E-L)
Reel 230, Volume 2665 Japanese-American Internment Cases (N-T)
Reel 230, Volume 2666 Japanese-American Internment Cases (U-Y)
Reel 230, Volume 2667 Correspondence--General--Labor
Reel 230, Volume 2668 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1945
Reel 230, Volume 2669 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1945
Reel 231, Volume 2670-2671 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1945
Reel 231, Volume 2671 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1945
Reel 231, Volume 2672-2673 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1945
Reel 231, Volume 2674 Clippings--General, 1945
Poll Tax; Radio; Race Discrimination; Religious Freedom
Reel 231, Volume 2675 Sedition; United Nations Charter
Reel 231, Volume 2675 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 231, Volume 2676 Propaganda For Civil Liberties
Reel 231, Volume 2677 Correspondence--General, 1945
Race Discrimination
Reel 231, Volume 2678 Race Discrimination
Reel 231, Volume 2679 Sedition
Reel 231, Volume 2679 Radio
Reel 231, Volume 2680 Religious Freedom
Reel 231, Volume 2681 Aliens
Reel 231, Volume 2681 Aliens
Reel 231, Volume 2682 Denaturalization
Reel 231, Volume 2682 Deportations
Reel 231, Volume 2682 Deportations
Reel 231, Volume 2683 Deportations
Reel 232, Volume 2684 Enemy Aliens
Reel 232, Volume 2684 Enemy Aliens
Reel 232, Volume 2685 Sedition
Reel 232, Volume 2686 Mexican-Americans
Reel 232, Volume 2686 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1945
Correspondence--Censorship
Reel 232, Volume 2687 Post Office; Motion Pictures Censorship
Reel 232, Volume 2687 Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation, 1945
Clippings--General--Labor
Reel 232, Volume 2688 Clippings--States, 1945
PR, HI, Philippine Islands, VI
Reel 232, Volume 2688 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1945
Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Civil Rights Conference
Reel 232, Volume 2689 Clippings--States, 1945
AL, AR, CA, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL
Reel 232, Volume 2690 IN, KY, LA, MA, MI, MN, MO, NJ, NY, NYC
Reel 232, Volume 2691 NYC, NC, OH, OR, PA, TN, TX, VA
Reel 232, Volume 2692 Correspondence--States, 1945
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 232, Volume 2693 CA
Reel 232, Volume 2694 DC, FL
Reel 232, Volume 2695 GA, IL
Reel 232, Volume 2696 IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD
Reel 232, Volume 2697 MA, MI
Reel 233, Volume 2698 MN, MS, MO, NE
Reel 233, Volume 2699 NV, NJ
Reel 233, Volume 2700 NY
Reel 233, Volume 2701-2703 NC, OH
Reel 233, Volume 2704 OH, OR, PA
Reel 233, Volume 2705 PA
Reel 233, Volume 2706 Philippine Islands, PR, TN
Reel 233, Volume 2707 TX
Reel 233, Volume 2708 UT, VA, WA, WI
Reel 233, Volume 2709 VI, HI
Reel 233, Volume 2710 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Local Committees (Affiliated Committees)
Reel 233, Volume 2711 Local Committees (Affiliated Committees)
Reel 234, Volume 2712 Aliens
Deportations
Reel 234, Volume 2713 Clippings--General, 1946
Associated Press; Aliens; Baldwin
Reel 234, Volume 2714 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1946
Reel 234 Clippings--Censorship, 1946
Reel 234 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2715 Clippings--Censorship, 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2716 Clippings--General, 1946
Conscientious Objectors
Reel 234, Volume 2716 Communists
Reel 234, Volume 2716 International Civil Liberties
Reel 234, Volume 2716 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Censorship Committee, 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2717 Correspondence--Censorship, 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2717-2719 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2720-2724 Correspondence--General
Deportations; Enemy Aliens
Reel 235, Volume 2725 Deportations
Reel 235, Volume 2726-2727 Enemy Aliens
Reel 235, Volume 2728 [There is no Volume 2729]
Clippings--Federal Departments, 1946
Reel 235, Volume 2730 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1946
Reel 235, Volume 2731 Correspondence--General--International Civil Liberties, 1946
Reel 235, Volume 2732-2733 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Dies Committee
Reel 235, Volume 2733 Correspondence--General--Civil Liberties in General, 1946
Correspondence--Academic Freedom
Reel 235, Volume 2734 Clippings--General, 1946
Labor; Race Discrimination; Religious Freedom
Reel 235, Volume 2735 Clippings--States
Reel 235, Volume 2735 HI, Philippine Islands, PR
Reel 235, Volume 2735 Clippings--Legislation, 1946
Reel 235, Volume 2736 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1946
Reel 235, Volume 2737 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1946
Reel 236, Volume 2738 Clippings--General, 1946
Poll Tax; Radio; Sedition; United Nations; Veterans; Civil Liberties Issues
Reel 236, Volume 2739 Correspondence--General--Religious Freedom, 1946
Reel 236, Volume 2740 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Reel 236, Volume 2741-2742 Clippings--Legislation--State Legislation, 1946
Clippings--General--Labor
Reel 236, Volume 2743 Clippings--States, 1946
AL, AR, CA, CT, DC, FL, GA
Reel 236, Volume 2744 IL, IN, KY, LA, MA, MI, MS, MO
Reel 236, Volume 2745 NJ
Reel 236, Volume 2746 NYC, NY
Reel 236, Volume 2747 NC, OH, OR, PA, SC, TN, TX, VA
Reel 236, Volume 2748 Correspondence--States, 1946
AL, AR, CA
Reel 236, Volume 2749 CO, CT, DC, FL
Reel 236, Volume 2750 GA, HI, IL
Reel 237, Volume 2751 IL, IN
Reel 237, Volume 2752 KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS
Reel 237, Volume 2753 MO, NE
Reel 237, Volume 2754 NJ
Reel 237, Volume 2755-2756 NY
Reel 237, Volume 2757-2758 NC, OH, OR
Reel 237, Volume 2759 PA
Reel 237, Volume 2760 PR, RI, SC, TN, TX
Reel 237, Volume 2761 VA, WA, WV, WI
Reel 237, Volume 2762 Correspondence--General, 1946
Indians; International Civil Liberties
Reel 238, Volume 1 International Civil Liberties
Reel 238, Volume 2 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 238, Volume 3-5 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1946
Reel 238, Volume 6-7 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Reel 238, Volume 8 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1946
Reel 238, Volume 9 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1946
Reel 239, Volume 10 Correspondence--General--Labor, 1946
Reel 239, Volume 11 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1946
Reel 239, Volume 12-13 Correspondence--General, 1946
United States Possessions
Reel 239, Volume 14-15 Race Discrimination
Reel 239, Volume 16 Sedition; Mexican-Americans
Reel 239, Volume 17 Radio; Veterans
Reel 239, Volume 18 Clippings--Clippings, Chronological, 1947
January-October
Reel 240, Volume 19-27 November-December
Reel 241, Volume 28-29 Correspondence--General--General Issues, 1947
Reel 241, Volume 30 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1947
Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 241, Volume 30 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1947
Reel 241, Volume 30 Correspondence--General
Religious Freedom
Reel 241, Volume 30 Aliens; Deportations; Immigration and Naturalization
Reel 241, Volume 31 Visas
Reel 241, Volume 32 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1947
Reel 241, Volume 32-33 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1947
Reel 242, Volume 34-35 Correspondence--Censorship, 1947
Reel 242, Volume 34-35 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1947
Reel 242, Volume 36 Correspondence--General--International Civil Liberties, 1947
Reel 242, Volume 37 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1947
Reel 242, Volume 38-39 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1947
Reel 243, Volume 40 Correspondence--General, 1947
Indians; Indian Civil Rights Committee
Reel 243, Volume 41 International Civil Liberties
Reel 243, Volume 42 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Reel 243, Volume 42 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 243, Volume 42 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 243, Volume 43 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1947
Reel 244, Volume 44-45 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1947
Reel 244, Volume 45-46 Correspondence--General--Labor
Reel 244, Volume 46 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1947
Reel 245, Volume 46-47 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1947
Reel 245, Volume 48 Correspondence--States, 1947
Haiti, VI, PR, Pacific Islands, Philippine Islands, HI
Reel 245, Volume 48 Correspondence--General, 1947
Policies; Race Relations; Radio; Sedition; United Nations; Veterans
Reel 245, Volume 49 Correspondence--States, 1947
AL, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 246, Volume 50 CA, CT, DC, FL, GA
Reel 246, Volume 51 IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 246, Volume 52 MI, MN, MS, MO, NE, NV, NH
Reel 246, Volume 53 NJ
Reel 247, Volume 54 NM, NY
Reel 247, Volume 55 NY, NYC
Reel 247, Volume 56 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1947
Reel 247, Volume 57 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1947
Reel 248, Volume 58 Correspondence--States, 1947
NC, OH, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD
Reel 248, Volume 59 TN, TX, UT, VA, WI, WA, WY
Reel 248, Volume 60 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1947-1948
Roger Baldwin Trips to Japan and Germany
Reel 248, Volume 61 Clippings--Clippings, Chronological, 1948
January-June
Reel 249, Volume 62-66 Clippings--Chronological, 1948
July-December
Reel 250, Volume 67-73 December, 1948
Reel 251, Volume 74 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1948
Reel 251, Volume 75 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 251, Volume 75 Correspondence--General
Religious Freedom
Reel 251, Volume 76 Aliens
Reel 251, Volume 76 Deportations
Reel 251, Volume 76 Visas and Passports
Reel 251, Volume 76 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1948
Reel 251, Volume 77-78 Correspondence--States, 1948
Guam, Pacific Islands, PR, VI
Reel 252, Volume 79 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1948
American Colonies Committee
Reel 252 American Colonies Committee Minutes, Censorship
Reel 252 Correspondence--Censorship, 1948
Reel 252, Volume 79-80 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1948
Reel 252, Volume 80 Correspondence--General, 1948
Occupied Areas
Reel 252, Volume 81 Japan; Korea; Germany
Reel 252, Volume 81 Germany; International Civil Liberties
Reel 252, Volume 82 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1948
Reel 252, Volume 83 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1948
Reel 253, Volume 84-85 Correspondence--General, 1948
Communism; Presidential Conventions, 1948; Communism; Indians; Indian Cases;
Reel 253, Volume 86 International Civil Liberties
Reel 254, Volume 87-88 Jehovah's Witnesses
Reel 254, Volume 89 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Reel 254, Volume 89 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 254, Volume 89 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Reel 254, Volume 89 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Reel 255, Volume 90-92 Correspondence--General--Labor; Labor Cases, 1948
Reel 255, Volume 93 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1948
Reel 256, Volume 94 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1948
Reel 256, Volume 94 Correspondence--General, 1948
Race Relations; Sedition; United Nations
Reel 256, Volume 95 Correspondence--States, 1948
AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA
Reel 256, Volume 96 CT, DC, FL, GA, HI, IL
Reel 256, Volume 97 IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI
Reel 257, Volume 98 MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NH
Reel 257, Volume 99 NJ, NY
Reel 257, Volume 100 NYC
Reel 257, Volume 101 NYC, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA
Reel 258, Volume 102 PA, Panama Canal Zone, PR, RI, SC, SD, TN
Reel 258, Volume 103 TX, UT, VT, VA, WV
Reel 258, Volume 104 Foreign Countries
Reel 258, Volume 105 Correspondence--General, 1948
Roger Baldwin-Director
Reel 258, Volume 106 Clippings--General, 1949
General Civil Liberties Matters
Reel 259, Volume 107 ACLU Policies
Reel 259, Volume 107 Clippings--Academic Freedom, 1949
Reel 259, Volume 107 Clippings--General, 1949
Religious Freedom
Reel 259, Volume 108 Aliens
Reel 259, Volume 108 Clippings--Organizational Matters, 1949
Local Affiliates
Reel 259, Volume 109 Baldwin, Roger N.
Reel 259, Volume 109 Board of Directors
Reel 259, Volume 110 Clippings--Censorship, 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 Clippings--General--Conscientious Objectors, 1949
Reel 259, Volume 112 Clippings--General--Communism
Reel 259, Volume 112 Clippings--Federal Departments, 1949
Reel 259, Volume 113 Clippings--General
Indians
Reel 259, Volume 114 International Civil Liberties
Reel 259, Volume 114 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 259, Volume 115 Jehovah's Witnesses
Reel 259, Volume 115 Clippings--Legislation, 1949
Reel 259, Volume 115 Clippings--States, 1949
AL, CA, CO, DC, FL, GA, IL, KS, MD, MA, MO, NH
Reel 259, Volume 116 NY, OR, TX, WA,
Reel 259, Volume 117 Clippings--General, 1949
Labor
Reel 259 Meetings and Conferences
Freedom of the Press
Reel 259, Volume 118 Publications
Reel 259, Volume 118 Race Relations
Reel 259, Volume 119 Radio and Television
Search and Seizure
Reel 259, Volume 120 Women's Equal Rights
Reel 259, Volume 120 Clippings--States, 1949
CA, CT, DC, GA, HI, IL, ME, MD, MA, MI
Reel 259, Volume 121 NJ, NY
Reel 259, Volume 122 NYC, PA, VT, VA
Reel 259, Volume 123 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1949
Reel 260, Volume 124 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Academic Freedom Committee
Reel 260, Volume 124 Correspondence--General
Religious Freedom
Reel 260, Volume 125 Aliens; Deportations
Reel 260, Volume 125 Deportations
Reel 260, Volume 126 Passports; Visas
Reel 260, Volume 127 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1949
Reel 260, Volume 128 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1949
Reel 261, Volume 129-130 Correspondence--Censorship, 1949
Reel 261, Volume 131 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1949
Reel 261, Volume 132 Correspondence--General--Communism, 1949
Reel 261 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1949
Reel 262, Volume 133-134 Correspondence--Federal Departments , 1949
Reel 263, Volume 135 Correspondence--Organizational Matters--Indian Civil Rights Committee, 1949
Reel 263, Volume 136 Correspondence--General
Indians
Reel 263, Volume 136 Correspondence--General, 1949
International Civil Liberties
Reel 263, Volume 137 Correspondence--Federal Departments
Reel 263, Volume 137 Japanese-American Internment
Reel 263, Volume 137 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1949
Reel 263, Volume 138 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1949
Reel 264, Volume 139 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1949
State Legislation (AL--MA)
Reel 264, Volume 140 State Legislation (MI--NC)
Reel 264, Volume 141 State Legislation (ND--WI)
Reel 264, Volume 142 Correspondence--General, 1949
Labor
Reel 264, Volume 143 Libel
Medicine
Reel 265, Volume 144 National Committee
Reel 265, Volume 144 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1949
Reel 265, Volume 145 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1949
Reel 265, Volume 146 Correspondence--General, 1949
Race Relations
Reel 265, Volume 147 Sedition
Reel 265, Volume 148 State Correspondents
Reel 265, Volume 148 Questions and Answers on Civil Liberties
Reel 265, Volume 148 United Nations
Reel 265, Volume 149 United Nations
Reel 266, Volume 150-151 Correspondence--States, 1949
AL, AZ, CA, CT
Reel 266, Volume 152 DE, DC, FL, GA
Reel 266, Volume 153 HI, IL, IN, KS
Reel 266, Volume 154 KY, LA, ME, MD, MA
Reel 266, Volume 155 MI, MO, MT, NV, NH
Reel 266, Volume 156 NJ
Reel 267, Volume 157 NY
Reel 267, Volume 158-159 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1949
Reel 267, Volume 160 Correspondence--States, 1949
NC, ND, OH, OK, OR
Reel 267, Volume 161 PA, Philippine Islands, PR, RI, SC, TN, TX, UT
Reel 267, Volume 162 VT
Reel 267, Volume 163 VA
Reel 267, Volume 163 WA
Reel 267, Volume 163 WV
Reel 267, Volume 163 WI
Reel 267, Volume 163 Correspondence--Academic Freedom, 1950
Reel 268, Volume 164-165 Correspondence--General, 1950
Reel 268, Volume 166 Religious Freedom
Reel 268, Volume 166 Jehovah's Witnesses
Reel 268, Volume 167 Aliens
Reel 268, Volume 168-169 Passports
Visas
Reel 269, Volume 170 Deportations
Reel 269, Volume 170 Correspondence--Organizational Matters Board of Directors, 1950
Board of Directors Minutes
Reel 269, Volume 171 National Committee
Reel 269, Volume 171 Local Affiliates
Reel 269, Volume 172-173 Standing Committees
Reel 269, Volume 174 Correspondence--Censorship, 1950
Pressure Group; Books; Newspapers; Magazine Censorship
Reel 270, Volume 175 Motion Picture Censorship
Reel 270, Volume 176 Post Office; Atomic Energy Commission Censorship
Reel 270, Volume 177 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1950
Reel 270, Volume 178 Correspondence--General--Communism, 1950
Reel 270, Volume 178 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1950
Reel 271, Volume 179 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1950
Loyalty Program
Reel 271, Volume 180-181 Procedures in Legislative Hearings
House Committee on Un-American Activities
Reel 271, Volume 182? Correspondence--General, 1950
Indians
Reel 272, Volume 183 International Civil Liberties
Reel 272, Volume 184 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1950
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 272, Volume 184 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1950
Reel 273, Volume 185-186 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1950
Reel 274, Volume 187-189 Correspondence--State Legislation, 1950
Reel 275, Volume 190 Correspondence--General, 1950
Labor
Reel 275, Volume 191-193 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1950
Meetings and Conferences
Reel 276, Volume 194 Correspondence--General, 1950
Medical Freedom
Reel 276, Volume 195 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1950
Reel 276, Volume 196-197 Correspondence--General, 1950
Communism and Subversion
Reel 276, Volume 198-199 State and Local Anti-Subversion Legislation
Reel 277, Volume 200-201 Political Freedom
Reel 277, Volume 202 Freedom of the Press
Reel 277, Volume 203 Outside Publications and Films
Reel 277, Volume 204 Race Relations
Reel 277, Volume 205-207 Race Relations
Reel 278, Volume 208 Search and Seizure
Treason
Reel 278, Volume 209 Radio and Television
Reel 278, Volume 209 United Nations
Reel 278, Volume 210 Wiretapping
Reel 278, Volume 211 Correspondence--States, 1950
AL, AZ, CA, Canada, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, HI
Reel 278, Volume 212 IL, IN, IA, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI
Reel 278, Volume 213 MO, NV, NH, NJ, NY, NYC, 1950
Reel 279, Volume 214 Correspondence--NYC Committee, 1950
Organizational Matters
Reel 279, Volume 215 Cases
Reel 279, Volume 215 NYC Council
Reel 279, Volume 215 Correspondence--States, 1950
NC, OH, PA, TN, TX, VT, Foreign Countries
Reel 279, Volume 216 Clippings--General, 1950
General Civil Liberties Matters
Reel 279, Volume 217 Baldwin, Roger N.
Reel 279, Volume 217 Malin, Patrick Murphy
Reel 279, Volume 217 Board of Directors
Reel 279, Volume 218 Clippings--Academic Freedom
Clippings--General--Aliens
Reel 279, Volume 219 Clippings--Censorship
Reel 279, Volume 220 Clippings--General
Conscientious Objectors
Reel 279, Volume 220 Communism
Loyalty-Security
Reel 279, Volume 221 Clippings--Federal Departments--House Committee on Un-American Activities
Reel 279, Volume 221 Clippings--Legislation
Reel 279, Volume 222 Clippings--General
Labor
Reel 279, Volume 223 Race Relations
Reel 279, Volume 224 Radio
Reel 279, Volume 224 Wiretapping
Reel 279, Volume 224 Clippings--States, 1950
CA, IL, IN, MA, NJ, NY, PA, Foreign Countries
Reel 279, Volume 225 Clippings--General, 1950
Meetings and Conferences
Reel 279, Volume 226 Occupied Areas
Reel 279, Volume 226 ACLU Publications
Reel 279, Volume 226 Appendix
Four additional cartons of loose materials were indexed as Appendices 1-4. Appendices 1-3 (Reels 280-288) correspond to Boxes 1-9 of American Civil Liberties Union Records, 1947-1955, i.e. the original records found in Appendix 1 (Reels 280-282) are found physically in Boxes 1-3 of the ACLU Records.
Appendix 4 had previously been filmed by the New York Public Library. It may be found as Vols. 1-7 of Reel 238. These records are also located physically in Boxes 9-12 of the ACLU Records.
Correspondence--Censorship, 1937
Corresponds to Box 1 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 280, Volume A1-1 Correspondence--General
Labor, 1934
Corresponds to Box 1 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 280, Volume A1-1 Communists, 1935
Corresponds to Box 1 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 280, Volume A1-1 Patrioteering Organizations, 1940
Corresponds to Box 1 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 280, Volume A1-1 Correspondence--General, 1940
Patrioteering Organizations
Corresponds to Box 2 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 281, Volume A1-1/3 Patrioteering Organizations, 1940
Corresponds to Box 3 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 282, Volume A1-3 Labor, 1946
Corresponds to Box 3 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-1 American Legion
Corresponds to Box 3 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-1 Correspondence--Federal Legislation--Atomic Energy
Corresponds to Box 3 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-1 Correspondence--Federal Legislation, 1946
Atomic Energy; Equal Rights Amendment
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--General
Labor; Race Relations/Discrimination
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Federal Departments--FCC
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Organizational Matters
Congress on Civil Rights
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--State Legislation--Civil Rights, 1943
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Federal Departments--Civil Service
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 283, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Federal Departments--FEPC, 1946
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--State Legislation--CA FEPC
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Foreign Agents Registration
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Censorship--Press
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--States--Guam
Corresponds to Box 4 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-2 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1943-1946
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--General, 1946
Race Relations/Discrimination, Lynchings
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--Federal Legislation
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--States
Haiti, Japanese Islands, Philippine Islands, Guam
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 284, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1943
Japanese-American Internment
Reel 284 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1946
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1946
Corresponds to Box 5 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-3 Correspondence--General, 1938, 1946
Negroes, Poll Tax
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--States, 1945-1946
Pacific Islands, Philippine Islands, PR
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1946
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1943-1946
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 285, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--General, 1945-1946
Race Relations/Discrimination, Sedition, Labor
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--Censorship--Radio, 1946
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--Federal Departments, 1946
Corresponds to Box 6 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-4 Correspondence--General, 1946
United Nations, Veterans, Visas, Voting Rights
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-5 Correspondence--Labor and Liberal Organizations, 1946
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-5 Correspondence--States, 1946
VI, West Indies
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-5 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1946
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A2-5 Correspondence--Organizational Matters, 1943
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 286, Volume A3-1 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1943
Max Stephens Case
Corresponds to Box 7 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 287, Volume A3-1 Correspondence--General, 1941
International Civil Liberties, Jehovah's Witnesses
Corresponds to Box 8 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 287, Volume A3-2 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1941-1942
Corresponds to Box 8 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 287, Volume A3-2 Correspondence--General--Race Relations/Discrimination, 1943
Corresponds to Box 8 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 287, Volume A3-2 Correspondence--General--Race Relations/Discrimination, 1943
Corresponds to Box 8 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 288, Volume A3-2 Correspondence--Conscientious Objectors, 1943, 1945
Corresponds to Box 9 of the ACLU Records, 1947-1995.
Reel 288, Volume A3-3
Contents List
Clipping Series
Subgroup Description
The ACLU through a clipping service and from its local committees and agents received hundreds of clippings annually which it organized. The sheer variety of journals included in these series is staggering. Much material is taken from left-wing press and little-known local and regional papers. A small sample volume included over thirty-six different papers ranging from the Seattle Industrial Worker and the Riverside, California Press on the West Coast to the Providence Journal and the Baltimore Post on the East Coast, from the Albion, Michigan Recorder and Minnesota Labor Review in the mid-west to the El Paso Herald and Denver Rocky Mountain News in the mountain west
Series 1 - Academic Freedom--Clippings, (1917-1950)
Series Description
This series provides access to information on academic freedom cases from roughly 1925 when the Academic Freedom committee came into existence until 1950. There is a small amount of general material prior to 1925. Clippings are generally arranged by state, but there are a few subject files as well. Of special note are the many volumes of clippings on the Scopes trial found under Tennessee. Subjects found under this series are Bible reading laws, anti-evolution laws, loyalty oaths, conscientious objectors, flag burning, bans on lectures, bans on unions, flag salute cases, discrimination, compulsory military training, textbook censorship, Communists in the schools, dismissals of teachers and students and individual cases of various college and university professors.
Alabama
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 Arkansas
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 California
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 1950
Reel 279, Volume 219 Canada
1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Colorado
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 Compulsory Military Drill Laws
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Connecticut
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Delaware
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 District of Columbia
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Flag Salute Laws
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Florida
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 General
1917-1919
Reel 5, Volume 40 1920
Reel 18, Volume 130 1921
Reel 23, Volume 160 1922
Reel 28, Volume 205 1923
Reel 31, Volume 230 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 685-86 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2255 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2543 1945
Reel 227, Volume 2633 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2714 1949
Reel 259, Volume 107 1950
Reel 279, Volume 219 General Student Trends
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Georgia
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 Great Britain
1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Harrison-Fletcher Federal Education Bill
1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Illinois
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Indiana
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 Iowa
1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 Kansas
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 Kentucky
1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Louisiana
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Maine
1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 Maryland
1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Massachusetts
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1949
Reel 259, Volume 107 Michigan
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2253 Minnesota
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Miscellaneous Student Problems
1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Mississippi
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 Missouri
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2254 Montana
1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 New Hampshire
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2254 New Jersey
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 867 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2254 1950
Reel 279, Volume 219 New Mexico
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 New York
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 868 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2254-5 1949
Reel 259, Volume 107 1950
Reel 279, Volume 219 New York City
1936
Reel 128, Volume 868 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 North Carolina
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 North Dakota
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Ohio
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2255 Oklahoma
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2255 Oregon
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Pennsylvania
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2255 1950
Reel 279, Volume 219 Propaganda against Academic Freedom
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Propaganda for Academic Freedom
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Puerto Rico
1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Rhode Island
1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 South Carolina
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 Student Anti-War Strikes
1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 Student Peace Strikes Laws
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Teachers Loyalty Oath
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Tennessee
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 Tennessee (Scopes Case)
1925
Reel 39, Volume 275-78 Texas
1925
Reel 40, Volume 279 1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2543 Vermont
1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 Virginia
1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Washington
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1941
Reel 191, Volume 2255 West Virginia
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 Wisconsin
1927
Reel 50, Volume 317 1929
Reel 61, Volume 356 1931
Reel 79, Volume 445 1932
Reel 88, Volume 520 1933
Reel 97, Volume 602 1936
Reel 128, Volume 869 1937
Reel 140, Volume 954 1938
Reel 155, Volume 1066 1939
Reel 174, Volume 2117 1940
Reel 178, Volume 2148 Series 2 - Censorship--Clippings, ( 1928-1950, 1933-1946, 1949-1950)
Series Description
Most of this series is arranged by state, although there are a number of subjects as well including censorship of books, comics, magazines, motion pictures, newsstands, the mails, the press, radio, theater, and war correspondents. See also the States Clippings series (Series 7) for clippings on censorship, especially in the period prior to 1933.
Alabama
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 Anti-Trust
1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 Arkansas
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 Atomic Energy Commission Censorship
1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Bingo
1943
Reel 210, Volume 2430 Book Censorship
1934
Reel 106, Volume 687 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2543 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2714 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2716 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 California
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 California
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Colorado
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Comics Censorship
1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 Commentators Censorship
1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 Connecticut
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 Delaware
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 District of Columbia
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 Florida
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 Fly, James L. (FCC) - ACLU Luncheon
1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261 Georgia
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 General
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1929
Reel 63, Volume 361 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1935
Reel 115, Volume 771 1937
Reel 142, Volume 965 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261 1943
Reel 210, Volume 2430 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2716 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Illinois
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Iowa
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Kansas
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 Kentucky
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 Louisiana
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Magazine Censorship
1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261 1942
Reel 202, Volume 2348 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 Maine
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 Maryland
1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Massachusetts
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Michigan
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 Minnesota
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 Missouri
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Montana
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Motion Picture Censorship
1929
Reel 63, Volume 361 1934
Reel 106, Volume 686 1934
Reel 106, Volume 687 1935
Reel 115, Volume 771 1936
Reel 129, Volume 876 1937
Reel 142, Volume 965 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2262 1942
Reel 202, Volume 2348 1943
Reel 211, Volume 2441 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2714 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 Nebraska
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 New Jersey
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 New Mexico
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 New York
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 1950
Reel 279, Volume 220 New York City
1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 Newsstand Censorship
1942
Reel 202, Volume 2348 North Carolina
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 North Dakota
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 Ohio
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 Oklahoma
1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Oregon
1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 Pennsylvania
1928
Reel 54, Volume 337 1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 692 1937
Reel 141, Volume 962 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073 1939
Reel 167, Volume 2062 1940
Reel 179, Volume 2156 1936
Reel 130, Volume 879 Petrillo Ban
1943
Reel 210, Volume 2430 Post Office Censorship
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1936
Reel 129, Volume 876 1937
Reel 142, Volume 965 1941
Reel 192, Volume 2261 1942
Reel 202, Volume 2348 1944
Reel 220, Volume 2546 1945
Reel 228, Volume 2635 1946
Reel 234, Volume 2714 1949
Reel 259, Volume 111 Press Censorship
1933
Reel 95, Volume 591 1934
Reel 106, Volume 687 1935
Reel 115, Volume 771 1936
Reel 129, Volume 876 1937
Reel 142, Volume 965 1938
Reel 156, Volume 1073