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Esther Means to Governor Fred Hall

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Creator: Means, Esther

Date: February 15, 1956

Level of Description: Item

Material Type: Government record

Call Number: Governor's records, Hall, Box 6 Folder 1

Unit ID: 214660

Summary: Esther Means of Charleston, South Carolina, writes to Kansas Governor Fred Hall of Topeka arguing that the U. S. African American population should be distributed equally across all of the United States at the rate of ten whites to one black. She claims that according to the 1950 census Kansas's black population was below this standard. Means encouraged Governor Hall to accept any black person wanting to migrate to Kansas. The mid to late 1950s was a time a social unrest in the South. Events such as Brown vs. Board of Education, the murder of Emmett Till, and the Montgomery bus boycott challenged southern customs concerning black equality and helped propel the nation into the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

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Title (Main title): Esther Means to Governor Fred Hall

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    Means, Esther