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Source Description
Title from item or accompanying material.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
wm11d4785
label
Address Book; Articles of Amendment; Articles of Organization; Attendance sheet; Board of Directors
core
obj
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
wm11d4785
contentType
document
stage
normalized
title
Address Book; Articles of Amendment; Articles of Organization; Attendance sheet; Board of Directors
description
Title from item or accompanying material.
date
["1971–1973"]
year
1971
rights
Copyright held by Roxbury Community College.
rightsUri
This work is licensed for use under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License (CC BY-NC-ND).
reuseAllowed
creative commons
language
English
identifierLocal
SC1 30.6
creators
Rucker, Barbara
Dias, Marie
institution
Roxbury Community College Library
collections
Boston Black United Front
subjects
Community organization
Community activists
Community foundations
Community development, Urban
Nonprofit organizations
Fund raising
Articles of incorporation
Boards of directors
Boston Black United Front
Alleyne, Bertram
Rock, Leon
Bunte, Doris, 1933-
subjectsGeographic
Boston
Massachusetts
North and Central America
Suffolk (county)
United States
genreBasic
Books
Documents
Manuscripts
genreSpecific
Address books
typeOfResource
Text
Manuscript
country
United States
state
Massachusetts
county
Suffolk
city
Boston
thumbnailUrl
largeImageUrl
pageCount
1
source
import
extent
15 items
hasTranscription
yes
Source extras
institutionArkId
zg6503634
collectionArkId
vh542b76q
schema:latitude
42.35
schema:longitude
-71.05
notes
Title from item or accompanying material.
The United Black Appeal was introduced by the United Front Foundation, Inc. in order to raise funds for Foundation, United Front, and for the community. The Black Community was not receiving what it felt was its fair share of funds from the Massachusetts Bay United Fund and so brought United Black Appeal to the public. They approached large corporations, universities, and businesses within the community and asked that employees be allowed to stipulate that money be withheld from their paychecks for the United Black Appeal. Northeastern University was the first school to allow the deductions.
dcId
wm11d4785
type
document
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
52d3a43f0d33b4ec