Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. xvi, [4], [21]-179p. Original red cloth. 20cm. No jacket. INSCRIBED on front free endpaper by Downs to "Brother A. P. Shipley" who appears to have been a Methodist minister who later served for many years at Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church in Washington, DC. (and whose bookplate appears on the front pastedown). Consists mostly of short biographial sketches of 61 prominent African Americans.
Published by The Methodist Youth Fellowship Southern California-Arizona Annual Conference, Los Angeles, CA, 1943
Seller: K. L. Givens Books, Bella Vista, AR, U.S.A.
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: VG-. No Jacket. 2nd Edition. Book is bound in reddish cloth-covered boards with black titles, 179 pages, lengthy INSCRIPTION SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR on front end page. Former owner's named stamped neatly on two end pages, otherwise clean, tight, unmarked book. Contains approximately 60 brief bios of outstanding black Americans from all walks of life including jazz great Duke Ellington; baseball great Sachell Paige; Olympian Jesse Owens; boxing champions Henry Armstrong and Joe Louis among others. Black and white illustrations. Prepared Methodist Youth Fellowship Conference in their quest for racial equality. Stated Second Edition. Inscribed By the Author. Book.
Language: English
Published by The Methodist Youth Fellowship, Southern California-Arizona Annual Conference, 1943
Seller: A Squared Books (Don Dewhirst), South Lyon, MI, U.S.A.
Signed
hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. 1943, signed; red cloth covered boards with black titles; paper jacket encased in a Brodart dustjacket; wear and discoloration around edges; jacket has wear and creases around corners are edges; spine is taped; 8vo, 7 3/4" to 9 3/4" tall; author signature on ffep; Interior is clean and unmarked; 179 pages. Photos available upon request. Signed by Author.
Published by The Methodist Youth Fellowship Southern California-Arizona Annual Conference (The Login Press), 1943
Seller: Stacks Abound Books, Santa Maria, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Stated first edition. Lovely copy of an important mid-20th century text written for use "in the building of racial brotherhood," as stated on the dust jacket flap. Features numerous biographical sketches of noteworthy African-Americans, as well as parables, brief Christian instruction in racial goodwill, and extensive bibliographies for further research and study. Minor shelf and handling wear. Erasures of pencil marks on ffep. Light soiling, edge wear and tear to dust jacket, which is now enclosed in a protective mylar cover.
Published by The Login Press, 1943
Seller: Bibliodisia Books, Caxton Club, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
Association Member: MWABA
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Calvin Bailey (illustrator). First Edition. Original red cloth with black title. Profiles of all the famous and near-famous U.S. Black historical figures with sketches by Bailey. This book was meant to inspire both young and adult Black and White readers about their heritage, and was widely used in schools and colleges. Much scarce historical information. A fine copy in an archival Mylar jacket.
Published by Samuel Huston College, Austin, Texas, 1933
Condition: Good. 13 7/8" x 10½". Newsprint. Pp. [4]. Good: heavily creased at old folds with a few small tears at intersections, removing one word of text; 1.5" tear to front not affecting legibility; edge wear; spotted and toned. This is a rare issue of the official publication of Samuel Huston College, the precursor to Huston-Tillotson University (HTU) in Austin, Texas. It was edited by a young man who went on to become a widely influential African American orator and minister, role model to Jackie Robinson and the youngest college president in the United States, Karl Downs. Downs' life was cut short when he died at the age of 35 after being denied life-saving medical care because of his race. HTU, the first institution of higher learning in Austin, was formed in 1952 when two HBCUs came together: Samuel Huston College (SHC), chartered in 1876, and Tillotson College. A notable alumnus (and former president) of SHC, Karl Downs was the editor-in-chief of this publication while a student there. He also served as chairman of the Austin Student Inter-racial Commission and bandleader of the school orchestra. Continuing on to seminary, Downs played a leading role in the interracial Methodist student movement and delivered talks at various conferences. In 1938, at the age of 25, Downs became pastor at Scott United Methodist Church in Pasadena, California, where Jackie Robinson's mother worshiped. In a short time he added a nursery, toy and book lending library, social service department, basketball court and other amenities to the historic Black church. He also stepped into a role as mentor and role model to Jackie Robinson, who had been arrested with the possibility of a jail term just before his 19th birthday. A few years later, Downs returned to SHC, becoming the youngest college president in the nation, and he brought Jackie Robinson with him. Two years before breaking the color barrier in Major League Baseball, Robinson coached the SHC basketball team. During Downs' 4½-year tenure at SHC, enrollment tripled, the campus expanded and he organized a lecture program to help Black religious leaders get their writing distributed to the wider public. He also wrote a book, Meet The Ne*ro, a series of biographical vignettes of successful Black Americans. Downs died at the age of 35 in a segregated ward in an Austin hospital after not receiving medical care that could have saved his life. According to Jackie Robinson's wife, Rachel, "we believe Karl would not have died if he had received proper care, and there are a number of whites who evidently shared this belief. After Karl's death, the doctor who performed the operation was put under such pressure that he was forced to leave town . . ." The leading article in this issue, which we presume to be written by Downs based on his interests and later career, covered the First Texas Students Inter-Racial Conference, attended by 129 delegates from Black and white colleges of Texas "aimed toward a constructive program of cooperation between the races." One article celebrated Professor J. Mason Brewer, the first African American invited to speak to the "exclusive white cultural organization" the Texas Folklore Society and first "Ne*ro contributor" to the Society's official publication. There is also notice of a talk given by Celestine Smith; working in Nigeria, Smith was the only African American YWCA secretary to go abroad with the YWCA prior to World War II. The Bulletin also announced an upcoming Scientific Exposition, a College Field Day for high school seniors and additions to the SHC faculty. There were blurbs on school sports, Greek life, the Dramatic Club and choir, as well as alumni notes, gossip and an original poem. Four photographic images include a shot of "Miss 'Samuel Huston'," Octavia Sayles, and one of "Karl Downs and His Dragonians," SHC's orchestra and "Texas' best College band." OCLC shows three institutions with a combined 13 total issues of the Bulletin, and none have this particular issue. There is a collection of Sam Huston College records at HTU which has catalogs and bulletins of the school but the earliest is from 1940. Also important is that there is only one other known issue of the paper that was edited by Downs: his Meet the Ne*ro is well known, and an online biography stated Downs "published a number of religious articles," but OCLC shows him as the author of only one other work and Google searches also revealed nothing else by him. That makes this newspaper exceptionally rare physical evidence of Downs' work as an editor, and he almost certainly wrote the columns on race relations. Danky Hady 1273.