Title: Two publications about the Southern Negro education and medical Author: Place: Publisher: Date: 1937-1946 Description: Includes: American Church Institute for Negroes. Down Where The Need Is Greatest, A Record in the Field of Negro Education through Divinity School, College, Junior Colleges, Industrial High and Normal Schools, Training School for Nurses, Summer Schools, Farmers Conferences NY, [1937]. Original printed wrappers. Illustrated. 48pp. The Infantile Paralysis Fight at Tuskegee. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 1946. Second Printing. Original pictorial wrappers, 30pp. Illustrated. The Church Institute, headed by a white Episcopal Bishop, sponsored nine Colleges and Industrial Schools in North and South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. The newly-established Infantile Paralysis Center at Tuskegee was a “tiny battle station in the nationwide fight” against the disease also called Polio, which, ten years later, would be largely eliminated among both Black and white children by the Salk vaccine. Lot Amendments Condition: The first publication with very light soiling to wrappers; very good. Item number: 244387
Title: Two publications about the Southern Negro education and medical Author: Place: Publisher: Date: 1937-1946 Description: Includes: American Church Institute for Negroes. Down Where The Need Is Greatest, A Record in the Field of Negro Education through Divinity School, College, Junior Colleges, Industrial High and Normal Schools, Training School for Nurses, Summer Schools, Farmers Conferences NY, [1937]. Original printed wrappers. Illustrated. 48pp. The Infantile Paralysis Fight at Tuskegee. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 1946. Second Printing. Original pictorial wrappers, 30pp. Illustrated. The Church Institute, headed by a white Episcopal Bishop, sponsored nine Colleges and Industrial Schools in North and South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana. The newly-established Infantile Paralysis Center at Tuskegee was a “tiny battle station in the nationwide fight” against the disease also called Polio, which, ten years later, would be largely eliminated among both Black and white children by the Salk vaccine. Lot Amendments Condition: The first publication with very light soiling to wrappers; very good. Item number: 244387
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