Bibliography

Oberlin College Archives Sources:

Former Student File: Alice Elvira Rivers. Record Group 28/1, Box 215. Oberlin College Archives.

 

Former Student File: Almira Scott (Mrs. John C. Jones). Record Group 28/1, Box 135. Oberlin College Archives.

 

Former Student File: Blanche Virginia Harris (Mrs. Elias Toussaint Jones). Record Group 28/2, Box 543. Oberlin College Archives.  

 

Former Student File: Diza Rivers. Record Group 28/1, Box 215. Oberlin College Archives.

 

Former Student File: Frankie Ann Robinson. Record Group 28/2, Box 871. Oberlin College Archives.

 

Oberlin College Archives, Mutual Improvement Club Records. 1913-1914. RG 31/006/014.

Other Primary Sources:

Addams, Jane. “Why Women Should Vote.” New York, N.Y.: Internet History Sourcebooks Project, 199. 3-4.  

 

“City Directory.” Oberlin Heritage Center. Web address, accessed 5 May 2015.

 

“John A. Berry Dies by Own Hand.” Oberlin News. 15 November 1916.

 

“Meeting the New Year.” Christian Work and the Evangelist LXVIII, no. 1977 (1905), Accessed 22 April 2015.

 

“Mothers to Organize for Civic Betterment: Oberlin Council of Colored Women to Be Formed Here Soon.” Oberlin News. 5 April 1916.

 

“Mrs. Blanche Virginia Harris Jones.” Oberlin News. 4 September 1918. Obituaries sec.

 

Oberlin Heritage Center: for the map R1995.001.01 Bobbie Carlson Collection.

 

Oberlin Heritage Center. Oberlin Churches. “Mt. Zion.” R2011.02.

 

“Pronounced Insane at Hearing,” Oberlin News. 14 July 1909.

Secondary Sources:

“Annie Heavener (Mrs. T. L. Cowan),” Alumni Magazine, 1916. page 637.

 

“Blanche Harris Jones,” Alumni Magazine, 1918.

 

Bigglestone, William E. In They Stopped in Oberlin: Black Residents and Visitors of the Nineteenth Century. 2nd ed. Oberlin, OH: Innovation Group. 1981.  

 

Carman, Bliss et al., eds.  The World’s Best Poetry. Volume VI. Fancy. 1904.

 

Chapman, George. “Musasus of Hero and Leander.” In The Works of George Chapman: Poems and Minor Translations. London: Chatto & Windus. 1875.

 

Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay, and Sieglinde Lemke. Lifting as They Climb. African-American Women Writers, 1910-1940. New York : London: G.K. Hall : Prentice Hall International, 1996.

 

“Downtown Oberlin Walking Tour of Civil War Monuments.” Downtown Oberlin Walking Tour of Civil War Monuments. Web address, accessed 8 May 2015.

 

Dunbar, Paul Lawrence. “Slow through the Dark.” Beltway Poetry Quarterly. Web address, accessed 8 May 2015.

 

Gray, Lillian. “Strange Paths Lie Before Us.” Friend’s Intelligencer LXIII. no. 2 (1905). Accessed April 22, 2015.

 

“Henry Churchill King (1858-1934).” Oberlin Alumni Magazine. 1 March 1934.

 

“Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.” Iz Quotes. 2015. Accessed 7 May 2015.

 

“HISTORY OF.” Rust Church History. Oberlin.edu. Accessed 8 May 2015.

 

“History of Patent Medicine.” History of Patent Medicine : Patent Medicine Exhibit : Hagley Museum and Library. Accessed May 8, 2015.

 

“Irene O. Bows · Westwood Database.” Oberlin Westwood Cemetery. web address, accessed 25 August 2015.

 

McMillan, Angela. “Dr. Kelly Miller: Online Resources.” (Virtual Programs & Services, Library of Congress). Accessed May 8, 2015.  

 

“Minnie Belle Quinn · Westwood Database.” Oberlin Westwood Cemetery. web address, accessed 25 August 2015.

 

“Mount Zion Baptist Church 47 Locust Street Oberlin, Ohio 44074.” Mt. Zion. Oberlin.edu. Fall 2003. Accessed 8 May 2015.

 

Nadasen, Premilla. “National Association of Colored Women.” Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History. 2006.

 

Okocha, Victor. “Pickens, William (1881-1954).”  The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed. Accessed May 5, 2015.

 

Sangster, Margaret Elizabeth Munson. Poems of the Household. Boston: James R. Osgood and Company. 1882. 119.  

 

Shakespeare, William. The Taming of the Shrew. London: Printed for J. Tonson, and the Rest of the Proprietors. 1734.

 

Spain, Daphne. How Women Saved the City, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 2001. 83.

 

White, Deborah G., “The First Step in Nation Making.” In Too Heavy a Load: Black Women in Defense of Themselves. 1894-1994, 27, 1st ed, New York: W.W. Norton, 1999.

 

“WWI Timeline: 1914.” PBS. Accessed May 8, 2015.