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Fannie Frank Cook Papers

 Collection
Identifier: A0322

Scope and Contents

The Fannie Cook Papers reflect the life and work of a versatile writer who was actively interested in problems of contemporary society and whose literary works of fiction and non-fiction were often based on her political and social attitudes. Soon after receiving her Master's degree from Washington University in 1916 she began part-time university teaching and a career as a public servant, participating in community efforts along educational lines and in the field of race relations. It was not until 1935 that she gave up teaching to begin her professional career as a writer. The bulk of the Fannie Cook Papers pertain to these years, 1935 until her untimely death in 1949, documenting not only her development as a writer, but her active role as a lecturer and civic leader. The papers contain correspondence regarding St. Louis race relations and southern Missouri sharecroppers; records of the St. Louis Race Relations Commission, St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of Sharecroppers, and People's Art Center; correspondence with publishers and literary agents; literary manuscripts including those for articles, essays, poems, short stories and novels; scrapbooks; and photographs. The The Fannie Cook Papers are arranged by form of material into five major series: 1) Correspondence; 2) Literary Productions; 3) Printed Material; 4) Photographic Material; and 5) Scrapbooks. Series I, Correspondence, has been arranged in four sub-series which reflect the major interests of Fannie Cook's life. The subseries are as follows: 1) Family Correspondence (1874-1884; 1909-1949); 2) General Correspondence (1925-1949); 3) Public Service Correspondence (1923-1949); 4) Literary Career Correspondence (1920-1949) Letters from relatives and members of Fannie Cook's immediate family, her husband, Jerome, and two sons, Robert Jerome and Howard Frank Cook, are filed in the Family Correspondence Sub-series of the Correspondence Series. The collection contains only a few letters from each of them as well as two letters written by Fannie Cook's father, Julius Frank, a German Jew who came to the United States in 1881 and settled in St. Charles, Missouri. His letters, written in 1896 to his brother William, discuss the current political scene and financial question of free silver. The greater part of the Family Correspondence Sub-series is a selection of correspondence from relatives in Germany seeking Fannie Cook's help in obtaining affidavits, making it possible for them to come to the United States to escape Hitler's persecution of the Jews. The letters, written between 1937-1940, concern the families of Fannie Cook's two aunts, Bertha Frank Oppenheimer and Adeiheid Frank Lehman. Translations of several of the German letters are available. Additional letters in the subseries are letters of congratulation from relatives on the occasion of the publication of her novels. Family legal documents and memorabilia have also been filed here. The General Correspondence Sub-Series (1925-1949) contains letters of request, letters of appreciation and congratulatory mail. Fannie Cook was a popular lecturer at schools, churches, synagogues, civic organizations and public gatherings when the topics for discussion were interracial, legislative or literary subjects. Correspondence includes letters making arrangements for these talks, often followed by letters of appreciation for her appearances; other letters refer to a variety of civic occasions in which she participated. Letters of congratulation are from friends and the public following the publication of her first novel, The Hill Grows Steeper, and the announcement in 1945 that she had won the George Washington Carver Award for Mrs. Palmer's Honey. Additional letters of congratulations can also be found in several of her scrapbooks. Public Service Correspondence Sub-Series (1923-1949) documents Fannie Cook's involvement over a twenty-five year period with civic organizations and committees, both local and national, which engaged the social and political issues of the day. Material in the sub-series has been arranged according to the name of the committee or organization. The organizational records, when available, such as minutes, financial documents, reports and position papers, have been kept with the correspondence. Her commitment to working for better relations between the races was demonstrated by the leadership roles she assumed with several committees and organizations. For several years she was chairperson of the Department of Race Relations of the Community Council of St. Louis which acted as a clearinghouse to remove misunderstanding among the races, and served as the arbiter for controversial questions in the community. Correspondence, reports, minutes of executive committee meetings and subcommittees provide important information concerning several controversies: the location of hospital #2 (Homer G. Phillips Hospital); the use of Franklin School as a vocational school for Negroes; the question of a consolidated high school for Negroes in the county; and the establishment of training courses for Negro social workers at Washington University. Her short story, "Black Liberty," was based on the experience she had while serving as a chairman of the committee and being charged with the responsibility of getting unanimity on the location for Homer G. Phillips Hospital. In January 1939, following the sharecroppers sit-down strike along south-east Missouri highways, Fannie Cook and fellow novelist Josephine Johnson, organized the St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of the Sharecroppers (sometimes referred to as the Missouri Committee for the Rehabilitation of the Sharecroppers). The committee sought immediate ways to provide relief for the homeless families who were protesting unfair practices in the Sharecropper system. After an initial purchase of 90 acres of land near Poplar Bluff, Missouri, where several hundred of the farm workers settled, the committee continued to work for improved conditions for the sharecroppers and to promote general interest in their welfare. As chairman of this committee for ten years, Fannie Cook's files hold a wealth of primary material documenting the settlement of Cropperville (the name given to the sharecropper camp) and the succeeding years as a cooperative homesteading community. Correspondence with businessmen and church leaders, as well as political and government officials, including Eleanor Roosevelt and members on the staff of the Farm Security Administrations (FSA) tells of the organizing effort of the St. Louis Committee and the continued struggle to address the inequities in the sharecropping system. Extensive information may be found regarding FSA's cooperative farm projects in southeast Missouri. Correspondence with Owen Whitfield, the black minister-union official who led the sharecroppers in their exodus on to the highway, provides candid details of the sharecroppers' plight and the role of the Southern Tenant Farmer's Union and The United Cannery, Agricultural Packing and Allied Workers of America Union in addressing the situation. Subsequent letters to Fannie Cook throughout the decade from Owen, his wife Zella, and other camp leaders provide excellent commentary on the day-to-day living in Cropperville. The building of a clinic and bathhouse/laundry facility are well documented in the correspondence with officials of the American Friends Service Committee. This organization conducted summer work camps at Cropperville in 1941 and 1942, and their reports and a journal kept by Holland Hunter, a summer camp worker, are of particular interest. Additional organizational material belonging to the committee includes financial records, minutes and legal documents. Some of Fannie Cook's writings which reflect her experience with the sharecroppers are her novel Boot-Heel Doctor, and "A Killer's Knife Aint Holy," "Zorella's Hat," and "Seeds Without Soil," stories which appeared in national magazines. From 1943-1946, Fannie Cook served on the St. Louis Race Relations Commission, a committee of 72 black and white citizens, active in civic affairs, appointed by the mayor. Its purpose was to promote good will between racial groups, and to adopt measures which would bring greater equality of opportunity in the field of housing, health, employment, education and recreation. An active member of the commission's Executive Committee and Public Relations Committee, Fannie Cook's papers reveal her continuous effort to abolish segregation in public accommodations. Correspondence with committee members and minutes and progress reports of sub-committees provide significant information regarding the effort of the commission to integrate the St. Louis department store lunch counters and to have St. Louis Board of Aldermen adopt a Fair Employment Practice Ordinance. Correspondence also describes her efforts to end segregation of hotels and theaters: it was because of her determination to see the commission make a stand for full integration of the theaters that the chairman of the commission asked for her resignation, which she tendered, September 26, 1946. Her third novel, Mrs. Palmer's Honey, published in 1946, is a treatment of the race issue and segregation practices in St. Louis. Several other committees occupied Fannie Cook's time and attention during the 1930s-1940s, but her involvement with these committees were usually for shorter periods of time. The quantity of material in the collection is limited generally to one or two folders for the following committees: Committee on Household Service Problems (Urban League); Missouri Citizens for Wallace; National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism; National Wallace for President Committee; Permanent Council on Relief Needs; Progressive Citizens of America; Progressive Party of Missouri; and St. Louis Citizens' Committee on Displaced Persons. Another significant group of material in this subseries is Fannie Cook's files concerning her work as a member of several civic organizations. Records and correspondence from her early involvement with the League of Women Voters of St. Louis in the 1920s focus on her work as chairperson of the Education Committee and the League's interest in the Forest City Manufacturing Company's strike. In the mid-forties, she became involved with the Liberal Voters League of St. Louis, serving on the Board of Directors as well as the Political Action Committee. These files contain material concerning the 1944 Congressional elections, local membership drives, and the debate concerning the St. Louis chapter's affiliation with a national progressive organization. In 1946 she was selected to serve on the Executive Committee of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), hut there is little in the collection concerning her involvement with the group. There is more extensive material, however, pertaining to her involvement with the People's Art Center, an organization begun in 1942 as part of the Missouri WPA Art Project, and on whose Board of Directors Fannie Cook served for several years. Her collection of correspondence, organizational reports, and minutes provide a fairly comprehensive account of the center's work and effort to survive as a place in St. Louis where people of all races could study art in the 1940s. Additional correspondence pertaining to Fannie Cook's own personal effort to better race relations in her community, outside of her committee and organizational responsibilities, have been filed at the end of the subseries in Letters to the Editors and Race Relations. Among these files is correspondence with Irving Dillard and Ralph Coghlan of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Henry Wheeler of the St. Louis American, Bishop William Scarlett of the Diocese of Missouri, and George L. Vaughn, the attorney in the celebrated Shelly vs. Kraemer case. Fannie Cook's professional correspondence as a writer is filed in the Literary Career subseries. In the summer of 1935, realizing her desire to write was greater than the work she was doing, she gave up teaching and lecture courses, and for a few years organizational affiliations, to devote the better part of each day to writing. She attended the Writer's Conference at the University of Colorado, and at the end of a year had her first major encouragement: she won one of the ten first prizes, ($1,000) in the Reader's Digest contest for new writers. A versatile writer, over the next decade she produced numerous short stories, articles, poetry and five novels, relying extensively on her experience in the life of the community for subject matter. Her work contains much that was actual though the material was frequently adopted to fictional form. Occasionally she worked up a theme into more than one type of literary form, both as short story and as article. Her professional correspondence with literary agents, publishers, and editors of numerous magazines and journals have been arranged accordingly. Not only do they record the negotiations regarding the sale of her manuscripts, but the letters document the progress of her work and are a glimpse of an emerging writer learning her craft. Of particular interest is her extensive correspondence with two literary agents, Ann Watkins (1937-1944) and Maxim Lieber (1944-1949). They provided generous remarks on her works-in-progress to which Fannie Cook responded in kind. Also of note is the correspondence with editors at G.P. Putnam's Sons (publisher of The Hill Grows Steeper, 1938), Dodd, Mead & Company (publisher of Boot-Hill Doctor, 1941), and Doubleday & Company, Inc. (publisher of Mrs. Palmer's Honey, 1946, Storm Against the Wall, 1948, and The Long Bridge, 1949). These letters, too, offer critical support of manuscripts as well as business information relating to publication of her novels. Correspondence with editors of more than 70 magazines and journals provide a thorough accounting of her publishing career documenting her submissions, rejections, and publications of articles and short stories from 1920 to 1949. Her short stories (usually humorous accounts of situations containing pathos) and articles appeared in several national magazines, among them the New Republic, Common Ground, Southwest Review, New Anvil, Coronet, and Mademoiselle. Also included in the subseries is correspondence with literary colleagues and organizations, young writers seeking advice and encouragement, and two manuscript repositories, the Western Historical Manuscript Collection at the University of Missouri, Columbia, and the Missouri Historical Society. Series II, Literary Productions, consists primarily of Fannie Cook's manuscripts towards her novels, poetry, short stories, essays, and articles whose themes generally reflect her involvement in contemporary political and social issues. Included in her papers are manuscripts for three of her published novels: Mrs. Palmer's Honey, Storm Against the Wall, and The Long Bridge. Manuscripts for several unpublished novels are also in the collection: Beyond the Clinic Window, My Father's Family and several sets of drafts for a novel about the 19th century U.S. Army surgeon William Beaumont, variously titled With Passion and With Pride, Great Ajax!, In Astor's Empire, and Surgeon William Beaumont, U.S.A. Her manuscripts include all stages of drafts from notes to the final version. Typescripts and carbon typescripts, with numerous autograph revisions and corrections, comprise the bulk of the material. Final versions for two of her novels, Mrs. Palmer's Honey and Storm Against the Wall, include the publisher's copy edited manuscript and galley proofs. The material has been arranged according to literary form and includes work for her novels, 62 short stories, 40 poems, 45 articles, 22 book reviews, and several editorials and radio scripts. Also among Fannie Cook's literary productions are autograph notes and typescript drafts for 23 speeches and six radio interviews. The radio interviews generally occurred following the publication of the author's novels. While some of the interviews were given from a prepared script, the papers show that frequently Fannie Cook worked from an outline or set of questions with autograph notes in the margins. Her speeches reflect her interest in education, literary and interracial issues, and include those delivered over the radio, at conventions, and before church and civic groups. Again, it appears she was comfortable working not only from a prepared text, but from note cards as well. Series III, Printed Material, contains ephemera, reports, periodicals, newsletters and newspaper clippings found among Fannie Cook's papers which support and document her interest and work in the community. A significant portion of the material refers to the sharecroppers and the issue of race relations in the community. Other items pertain to her literary career or are personal belongings such as her 1947-1948 engagement calendar or membership cards. To assist the researcher, brochures, flyers, memorandums, monographs, press releases, reports, periodicals and newsletters have been listed by title on the container list. Subject matter and dates of newspaper clippings are also listed. Series IV, Photographic Material, includes photographs and cartes de visite of Fannie Cook's relatives in Germany. Those that are identified include her paternal grandmother, Fannie von Beisenfeld Frank; her father, Julius Frank; two aunts, Bertha Frank Oppenheimer and Adeiheid Frank Lehman; and twin boys, Hans and Bernard Leienthal. The twins, Sons of Fannie Cook's cousin, Fannie Oppenheimer and her husband Kurt, were the children Fannie Cook was asked to secure affidavits for during World War II. Also in this series are two photographs of Fannie Cook posing with unidentified groups of St. Louis citizens, ca. 1948, and 17 photographs of the Friends Summer Work Camp at Cropperville in 1941. Series V is a collection of 11 scrapbooks whose individual themes reflect Fannie Cook's interest in writing, race relations, her community, her state, and the sharecroppers of southeast Missouri. Scrapbooks for each of these interests contain numerous clippings, brochures, programs, circulars and articles, either of events in which Fannie Cook participated (often as the featured speaker), or which provide information related to her special interests. Scrapbooks for each of the four novels published in her lifetime contain telegrams, letters, clippings and memorabilia pertaining to the publication of the book. Clippings and tear-sheets of Fannie Cook's early publications of short stories, poems, book reviews and letters to the editors are arranged in another scrapbook. Dates and titles of each book are listed in the container list of the register.

Dates

  • 1874-1949

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research use.

Conditions Governing Use

For permission to publish, quote from, or reproduce material in this collection, please contact the Archives Reference Desk at archives@mohistory.org. Copyright restrictions may apply. The researcher assumes full responsibility for conforming to the laws of copyright.

Biographical Sketch

Fannie Frank, daughter of Julius and Jennie Frank, was born October 4, 1893, in St. Charles, Missouri. Her family moved to St. Louis when Mr. Frank became connected with the Rice-Stix Dry Goods Company of St. Louis, in 1898. She graduated from Soldan High School (1911), the University of Missouri (1914), and received her master's degree from Washington University in 1916. She married Dr. Jerome Cook, director of medicine and chief of staff at Jewish Hospital; they had two sons. Fannie Cook was a versatile writer who was actively interested in problems of contemporary society and whose literary works of fiction and nonfiction were often based on her political and social attitudes. She died August 25, 1949, following a heart attack.

Life Events

1893
Born in St. Charles, Missouri, on October 4; daughter of Julius and Jennie Frank; brothers, Simon M. Frank and J. William Frank.
1898
Family moved to St. Louis when father became connected with the Rdice-Stix Dry Goods Company of St. Louis; father vice-president of the Frank & Meyer Neckwear Company at time of his death in 1917; she attened St. Louis public schools; submitted poetry and stories to the St. Nicholas Magazine before she was 12, and while not published, received encouraging criticism.
1911
Graduated from Soldan High School; entered the University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, in the fall.
1913
Attended summer school at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.
1914
Received Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Missouri after three years and the summer session at the University of Wisconsin.
1915
Entered Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, to study for her Master's degree; married Dr. Jerome F. Cook, October 28; Dr. Cook, a practicing physician, became director of medicine and chief of staff at Jewish Hospital.
1916
Received her M.A. degree from Washington University. First son, Robert Jerome Cook, born.
1918-1935
Part-time lecturer in English at Washington University.
1919
Second son, Howard Frank Cook, born.
1924
Began long career of public service: was member of the League of Women Voters of St. Louis and chairman of their Education Committee; was editor of the Missouri Bulletin, the state publication of the League of Women Voters, from 1931-1935; was also member of the Women's National League for Peace and Freedom and edited their newsletter for one year.
1930
Appointed chairman of the Race Relations Committee of the Community Council of St. Louis; held that position for several years.
1935
Resigned teaching position and all organizational responsibilities to devote major effort to writing; attended the Writer's Conference in the Rocky Mountains-University of Colorado.
1936
Entered the Reader's Digest contest for new writers and won one of the ten first prizes ($1,000) for her article, “The House That Cannot Succeed.”
1937
Began her association with literary agent, Ann Watkins.
1938
First novel, The Hill Grows Steeper, published by G.P. Putnam's Sons.
1939
Formed a committee with St. Louis novelist, Josephine Johnson, to aid the sharecroppers in southeast Missouri following their roadside demonstration in January along Highways 60 and 61 near Sikeston, Missouri; was chairperson of the St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of the Sharecroppers until it was dissolved in 1949.
1941
Second novel, Boot-Heel Doctor, published by Dodd, Mead & Company, September 9.
1943
Appointed to the St. Louis Mayor's Race Relations Commission; was a mem9ber of the Executive Committee and served on the Public Relations Committee; resigned from the commission in 146. Was among those who started the People's Art Center, an interracial cultural institution which grew out of the Missouri WPA Art Project of 1942; served on Board of Directors until her death.
1944
Received, along with Josephine Johnson Cannon, the Urban League Citation of Merit for their work with the sharecroppers. Joined the Liberal Voters League and served on their Board of Directors and Political Action Committee.
1946
Third novel, Mrs. Palmer's Honey, published by Doubleday & Company, Inc.; received the George Washington Carver Memorial Award ($2,500) given by Doubleday for the novel showing “. . .the importance of the Negro's place in American life.” Received the St. Louis Argus Award for her “Outstanding Contributions to Inter-Racial Welfare.” Pursued her interest in painting as a means of improving her writing; exhibited water-color portrait, “Millicent,” at the St. Louis Artists Guild.
1948
Supported formation of the Progressive Party of Missouri; served on the Missouri Citizens for Wallace Committee and the National Wallace for President Committee. Fourth novel, Storm Against the Wall, published by Doubleday & Company, Inc., March 11. Had solo art exhibit in spring of 1948.
1949
Died August 25, following a heart attack; memorial service held September 23, 1949, at the Sheldon Memorial. Fifth novel, The Long Bridge, published posthumously by Doubleday & Company, Inc.

Extent

17.0 Cubic Feet ( (31 boxes; 12 volumes))

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The Papers of Fannie Cook (1893-1949), St. Louis writer, lecturer and civic leader, include personal and professional correspondence, literary productions, printed material and scrapbooks of clippings and memorabilia reflect her life-long interest in the common ground of literature and social problems. Believing literature could be a great molder of public opinion, Fannie Cook wrote novels, short stories, essays and poetry, a significant portion of which portrayed a strong social conscience. Much of the material for her writings came from her years of involvement in civic organizations and committees concerned with racial prejudices and social injustices in her community and state. The papers span her literary career and consist of extensive correspondence with agents, publishers and magazine editors. Letters deal with a broad range of issues from negotiations regarding the sale of manuscripts, remarks on her works-in-progress, to her more personal observations about life and work. Her manuscripts include various stages of drafts of published and unpublished novels, short stories, essays, poetry, book reviews, editorials and radio scripts. Notes and drafts for numerous speeches and radio interviews are also included. Not only do her papers record the development of a writer, but they give us an insight into the struggle for justice and human rights in St. Louis during the 1930s and forties. Assuming her full share of leadership in civic activities, she chaired the Department of Race Relations of the Community Council of St. Louis (1930-1934), the St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of Sharecroppers (1939-1949), and was a member of the Executive Committee of the St. Louis Race Relations Commission (1943-1946). Committee records and correspondence among her papers document the work of these groups as they dealt with the contemporary issues of education and health care for blacks, integration of public facilities, and the plight of the sharecroppers in southeast Missouri. The papers also include material from her involvement with the League of Women Voters of St. Louis, the Liberal Voters League and the People's Art Center. Records and correspondence from Fannie Cook's early years with the League of Women Voters center around her work as chairperson of the League's Education Committee. Files of the Liberal Voters League tell of her work as a member of the Board of Directors and Political Action Committee and the organization's interest in promoting the causes of liberal candidates. As a member of the Board of Directors of the People's Art Center, her papers document the organization's purpose and work as the only integrated art center in the metropolitan area in the 1940s. The Fannie Cook Papers span the years from 1874-1949 with the bulk of the collection covering her active years as a writer.

Arrangement

Series I. Correspondence, 1874-1884; 1909-1949. Boxes 1-18 This series is divided into four subseries: Family, General, Public Service, and Literary. Family Correspondence is the smallest of the subseries and is arranged chronologically. It contains letters from Fannie Cook's immediate family as well as those from relatives in Germany and the United States. Family legal documents and memorabilia are also filed in the subseries. General Correspondence contains letters of appreciation and congratulatory mail from friends and the public following publication of her novels. Additional correspondence pertains to the arrangements for numerous speaking engagements, both here in the St. Louis area and through-out the mid-west. Public Service Correspondence reflects Fannie Cook's involvement with numerous civic organizations and committees over a 25-year period. These files are arranged alphabetically by name of the committee or organization, with material within the files arranged chronologically. Organizational records, when available, have been kept with the correspondence. Literary Career Correspondence contains Fannie Cook's professional correspondence with literary agents, publishers, editors of magazines and journals, aspiring writers, literary colleagues, organizations, and manuscript repositories. The material has been arranged alphabetically by name of the agent/publisher/magazine, etc., with chronological arrangement within each file. Series II. Literary Productions. Boxes 19-28 Literary Productions is divided into four sub-series: Manuscripts, Speeches, Radio Interviews, and Research Notes/Outlines for Literary Productions. Manuscripts include work for several literary forms: novels (arranged chronologically by date of writing, if published, or date of publication); short stories (arranged alphabetically by title); articles/essays/ book reviews arranged alphabetically by title; editorials, radio scripts arrange chronologically by date of publication or date of broadcast; poetry arranged alphabetically by title; speeches and radio interviews arranged chronologically by date of presentation. Series III. Printed Material. Boxes 29-30 Printed Material is divided into seven subseries: Ephemera, Reports, Periodicals, Newsletters, Dramatization, Newspaper Clippings, and Rare Book. Ephemera is arranged chronologically according to format: appointment calendar, brochures, circulars, flyers, membership cards, memorandum, monographs, press releases, tear sheets, drawings, and programs. Reports are arranged alphabetically by author. Periodicals and Newsletters are arranged alphabetically by name, and Newspaper Clippings arranged chronologically according to subject matter. The Rare Book is Fannie Cook's copy of The North Georgia Gazette, and Winter Chronicle, 2d ed., London: John Murray, 1822. Series IV. Photographic Material. Box 30 (3 folders) Photographic Material includes photographs and cartes de visite of Fannie Cook's relatives in Germany. Not all are identified. Additional photographs are of Fannie Cook posing with two unidentified groups of St. Louis citizens, and a series of photographs of the Friends Summer Work Camp at Cropperville. Series V. Scrapbooks. Filed with scrapbooks Series V is a collection of 11 scrapbooks whose individual themes reflect Fannie Cook's interest in writing, race relations, her community, her state, and the sharecroppers of southeast Missouri. The container list provides titles and dates for each scrapbook. Series IV Addendum contains miscellaneous manuscripts and correspondence of Fannie Cook.

Physical and Technical Requirements

There are no physical or technical restrictions.

Donor Information

Fannie Cook donated her papers to the Missouri Historical Society over a period of years from 1946-1949.

Related Materials

Copies of Fannie Cook's novels and selected publications may be found in the Missouri Historical Society's research library.

Processing Information

Processed by Jean Douglas Streeter, 1988.

This index is an alphabetical listing of individual, civic organizations, and committees referred to in the Fannie Cook Papers, as well as Fannie Cook's articles, novels, and short stories. After each entry follows the box and folder number(s) in the collection where the reference(s) can be found.
A.A. Ahner (private detective agency, St. Louis, Missouri) (B10/F3)
Abele, Ralph: (Eden Seminary) (B5/F7, 10, 11, 12; B7/F1, 2; B8/F2, 22)
"After the Armistice" (B17/F25)
Akins, Zoe (writer) (B18/F29)
"Amelia Roman" (also "Take Amelia Romano") (B12/F9, 10, 12; B16/F17; B18/F28)
American Civil Liberties Union, (New York, New York) (B2/F4; B5/F1; B10/F3)
American Civil Liberties Union, (St. Louis) (B5/F1)
American Friends Service Committee (B7/F1-7)
American Friends Summer Work Camp (Cropperville) (B7/F1-4, 7, 11; B8/F2, 3, 23)
American Theatre (St. Louis, Missouri), picketing of (B11/F3, 7, 8; B29/F4)
"And That Was What He Thought" (B16/F29; B17/F25, 29)
Ann Watkins, Inc. (literary agent) (B13/F1-10)
Arrow Rock, Missouri (B26/F30)
"Aunt Ellie's Passion" (B13/F7, 8; B16/F36)
Authors' Guild of the Authors' League of America (New York) (B18/F23-25)
Baasch, Hans H. (Manager of the FSA LaForge ProJect) (B5/F5; B6/F4; B7/F9, 15)
Bagley, Lindell F. (B5/F1)
Baldwin, Roger (B3/F15; B5/F1)
Bartholomew, Harland (St. Louis City Planner) (B10/F26; B30/F21)
[Beaumont] (reference to Fannie Cook's unpublishhed novel), also titled With Passion and with Pride; Great Ajax! A Story of Surgeon William Beaumont U.S.A.; In Astor's Empire (B2/F3, 4; B7/F3; B12/F17; B13/F2-7, 17; B14/F13, 15, 16; B19/F2-13; B20)
[Beaumont] researcher, Alma Myer (B14/F15, 16)
"Before the Swim" (B17/F25)
Bernays Plan (campaign to improve civil liberties status of Negroes in St. Louis) (B9/F5, 24)
"Beyond the Clinic Window" (B12/F3, 4, 5; B15/F1, 21; B16/F8; B17/F28)
"Beyond the Hill of Her Daily Thoughts" (B16/F25; B17/F28, 35)
Biggs, Fred J., Dr. (Cropperville) (B6/F10, 11; B7/F1, 2)
"A Big Silent Man" (B12/F11)
"Black Angels" (B12/F17, 18; B13/F1-4; B16/F17, 18)
"Black Liberty" (B12/F6, 9; B14/F4, 5; B16/F4, 17; B17/F20, 24)
Bliven, Bruce (Editor, New Republic) (B17/F5, 6, 7)
Board of Education, City of St. Louis (B10/F1)
Boot-Heel Doctor (B3/F2; B7/F10; B12/F3, 4, 10, 12, 16; B13/F10, 14, 17; B14/F9-15; B15/F14; B16/F4; B30/F23; (Scrapbook #8)) (See also They Are My People (original title))
Boot-Heel Doctor (first book jacket) (B14/F9)
Boot-Heel Doctor (second book jacket) (B14/F10)
Bowles, Carrie King (B4/F1, 2; B8/F3; B10/F4; B16/F17; B18/F6)
Boy Scouts of America, St. Louis Council (B2/F1; B4/F2; B5/F1)
Buck, Pearl (B9/F9; B10/F18)
Buder Park (B11/F7)
Burgess, David, Reverend (Independent Tenants Committee for Delmo Homes) (B5/F14, 15; B6/F7)
"The Business of Being a Bride" (B14/F8; B16/F29)
Cally, Ann (Cropperville nurse) (B6/F11; B7/F4, 5; B8/F3)
Campbell, Elmer Simms (St. Louis Black cartoon artist) (B10/F18)
Citizens Civil Rights Committee (St. Louis, Missouri) (B9/F3, 4, 23; B11/F6)
"Citizens of the Sky" (B13/F7, 17, 24; B16/F14, 27; B17/F9)
City Hospital #2 (B4/F2, 6, 7) (See also Homer G. Phillips Hospital)
Civil Liberties Committee of St. Louis (B2/F4; B5/F5)
Clark, Bennett, U.S. Senator (B5/F11)
Clark, John T. (Executive Secretary, Urban League of St. Louis) (See Urban League of St. Louis)
Cochran, Louis (B18/F7)
Coghlan, Ralph (Editor, St. Louis Post-Dispatch) (B11/F1, 2)
Committee of County High School for Negroes (B4/F4)
Committee on Household Service Problems (B4/F1)
Communist Party of Missouri (B29/F12)
Communist Party of the United States (B29/F24)
Community Chest for St. Louis and St. Louis County (B3/F3, 4)
Conroy, Jack (writer) (B17/F3; B18/F8)
Cook, Howard Frank (son) and Joanna (wife) (B1/F9, 10)
Cook, Jerome, Dr. (husband of Fannie Cook) (B1/F5, 9; B13/F7, 8; B29/F16; B30/F5, 21)
Cook, Robert Jerome (son) (B1/F5, 10)
Cosmopolitan Choral Society (B3/F2; B11/F7)
"Cousin Hugo" (B12/F5, 6, 7, 8, 10; B16/F19)
"Cousin Oliver Said" (B12/F11, 12)
Cropperville (Boxes 5, 6, 7)
Cropperville bathhouse (B7/F3, 4; B8/F3)
Cropperville clinic (B6/10; B7/F1, 2, 5, 7; B8/F2)
Cropperville photographs (B14/F10)
Cropperville school (B6/F12-14)
Cropperville windmill (B6/F15; B7/F4; B8/F3, 4)
Cropperville workcamp (See American Friends Summer Work Camp)
Cropperville WPA library and nursery school (B7/F13)
Dale, Elvira (president, Local 61, CIO, Earle, Arkansas) (B5/F6, 7, 12; B8/F2)
Davidson, Jo (artist Ch. Independent Citizens' Com.) (B4/F16; B10/F10)
Davison, Edward (Director, Writer's Conference of Colorado) (B18/F21, 22)
"Dean of Our Second-Hand Men" (B12/F10; B17/F20)
Delmo Labor Homes (B5/F14, 15; B6/F7; B8/F5; B11/F2; B29/F2, 25; B30/F14, 25; (Scrapbook #6))
Department of Race Relations of the Community Council of St. Louis (B4/F1-12)
Dickerson, Pauline (Secretary and Acting Director, People's Art Center) (B10/F17, 18, 24)
Dillard, Irving (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) (B5/F6; B11/F1, 2)
Dodd, Mead, Company (publisher of Boot-Heel Doctor) (B14/F9-18)
Donnell, Forrest C. (Missouri Governor, Senator) (B5/F8, 13, 14)
Doubleday & Company, Inc. (B14/F18-25)
"Drama in the Artic" (B16/F15; B17/F3, 4)
"A Dramatic Season in the Artic" (B16/F18, 35)
Eden Theological Seminary (B5/F7, 10)
Elias Michael School (B1/F17; B2/F4)
"Emma's Divorce" (B13/F15, 16; B17/F28)
Equal Rights Amendment (1934) (B1/F19, 20; B26/F2, 4, 14; B28/F4, 15)
Ethical Society of St. Louis (B3/F2, 4, 5, 6, 14, 15; B30/F15)
Eugene Field Society (B2/F2)
Eulogy of Fannie Cook by Alexander Langsdorf (B18/F29)
"Exodus of the Sharecroppers" (chant) (B12/F10; B17/F1)
Fair Employment Practice Ordinance (St. Louis) (B9/F5, 9, 10, 21; B29/F5)
Famous Barr Department Store (integration of lunch counter) (See Race Relations)
Farm Security Administration, U.S. Department of Agriculture (B5/F11, 15; B6/F2, 4; B7/F2, 3, 5, 7, 9-12, 15; B11/F2; B14/F11, 12; B17/F7; B29/F14, 26, 27, 28; B30/F24 (Scrapbook #4))
"Fathers are Phosphates" (B12/F16; B13/F4)
"Federal Marriage" (B12/F11, 12)
Fischer, William (President, Missouri Agriculture Workers Council) (B5/F3, 4-7, 9)
Fisk University (regarding Rachel Stix Michael Scholarship) (B2/F1)
Fitzpatrick, Daniel Robert (Cartoonist) (B18/F2)
Foley, Martha (B12/F2, 8; B13/F7, 8; B14/F11; B17/F28; B18/F21)
"For All Time" (B14/F8)
Forest City Manufacturing Company strike (B10/F3; B29/F5)
"For Young and Old" (B12/F3; B17/F34)
Frank, J. William (Fannie Cook's brother) (B27/F12)
Frank, Jacob (Fannie Cook's grandfather) (B1/F12)
Frank, Jennie Michael (Fannie Cook's mother) (B1/F13, 14)
Frank, Julius (Fannie Cook's father) (B1F1, 11, 13, 14, 16; B30/F29)
Frank, Simon (Fannie Cook's brother) (B1/F4, 6, 7, 10; B5/F9, 17; B8/F1)
Franklin School controversy (B4/F4, 5, 8; B28/F1, 2, 14; B29/F4)
Freed, Mildred (writer) (B6/F1; B7/F14; B30/F2)
"From Easel to Typewriter" (B13/F21; B17/F26)
G.P. Putnam's Sons (publisher of The Hill Grows Steeper) (B12/F15; B15/F3-13)
Gaines, Lloyd (Petition for Mandamus) (B10/F15)
Galston, Gottfried and Helen (B2/F6, 14; B29/F16a)
Gasparotti, Elizabeth Seifert (writer) (B18/F2)
Gellhorn, Edna Fischel (Mrs. George) (B2/F3, 11; B3/F1, 5, 8; B4/F1, 15; B5/F2; B8/F5; B9/F9; B11/F4; B14/F4; B18/F28)
Gellhorn, Martha (B15/F8; B18/F28)
George Washington Carver Award (Scrapbook #6)
Goldbeck, Cecil (G.P. Putnam's Sons) (B14/F7; B15/F6, 8, 9)
Gottlieb, Augusta (B2/F13)
Green, Elizabeth (Director, People's Art Center) (B10/F17, 18, 19)
"Gustav's Luck" (B13/F3, 4)
Haack, Arno J. (President, Liberal Voters League, 1947) (B10/F10)
Hall, Leonard (President, Liberal Voters League, 1944-1946) (B10/F10)
Harris Teachers College (B10/F1)
Hayti, Missouri (B5/F11)
"He Had Ranked Third" (B12/F2; B16/F30, 31; B17/F25)
"Helen of Troy" (B14/F8)
Hellman, Lillian (writer) (B13/F2; B18/F9)
Henderson, George Wylie (writer) (B18/F10)
Herzog, Fred (B2/F3; B3/F7; B12/F14)
The Hill Grows Steeper (B1/F23; B12/F3-13; B13/F9-10; B15/F4-9, 11-12, 16, 17; B30/F22; Scrapbook #7)
The Hill Grows Steeper first bookjacket (B15/F5)
"Holiday - Morning" (B12/F18; B13/F1; B16/F4; B17/F10)
Homer G. Phillips Hospital (B14/F4; B24/F4)
Hotels in St. Louis (segregation of) (B11/F4)
"The House [Home] That Cannot Succeed" (B12/F8,10-12; B15/F22; B16/F10, 31, 38, 39; B17/F15, 32) (See also "Member of the Household")
Howell, Bertha (Secretary, Department of Race Relations) (B4/F1-11)
Hughes, E.L. (State President, UCAPAWA) (B5/F6,8-10; B6/F4; B7/F15)
Hunter, Holland (American Friends Service Committee Cropperville) (B5/F9; B6/F15; B7/F2-4, 7, 8; B8/F3)
Hunter, Holland, Journal kept at Cropperville (B7/F8)
Hynd, J. Hutton (Minister, The Ethical Society of St. Louis) (B1/F24; B2/F1, 3, 6, 14; B3/F3, 4, 6, 7, 10)
"I Chose Public Schools" (B16/F35)
"I Have Promised Him Nothing" (B12/F12)
"I Met A Floater" (B12/F10-12)
Independent Citizens' Committee of the Arts, Sciences and Professions, Inc. (New York, New York) (B2/F6; B10/F10)
"In Search of Heaven" (B12/F10)
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (Locals 181-182, St. Louis) (B10/F3; B29/F5)
"Invisible Banner" (B12/F11; B16/F8, 25, 34; B17/F3)
Isserman, Ferd (Rabbi, Temple Israel) (B1/F23; B3/F6; B29/F30)
"Jennie Buys a Weapon" (B12/F3, 5, 6, 11, 12; B14/F4, 8; B16/F5, 8, 38; B17/F3, 25, 35)
"Jim Brady's Paws" (B16/F35)
Johnson, Josephine (Mrs. George Cannon) (writer) (B7/F1, 2, 4, 10; B8/F4, 6; B17/F5, 6; B18/F11, 14; B30/F27)
Johnson, Walter (Cropperville camp leader) (B5/F3, 4, 5; B8/F1, 22)
Karamu House (Cleveland, Ohio) (B6/F15)
Kaufman, A.P. (Mayor of St. Louis) (B2/F13; B3/F13; B9/F7, 8; B11/F6, 7)
A Kick From the Bootheel by [ ] McWilliams (B18/F20)
"A Kid to Support" (B12/F16; B13/F3; B16/F4; B17/F18, 30) (See also "A Letter From Him")
"A Killer's Knife Ain't Holy" (B13/F1, 2, 3; B16/F17)
Kruger, Fania (writer) (B18/F12)
LaForge Farms Project (B7/F9, 15; B11/F2)
Langston University (Oklahoma) (B3/F11, 12, 13)
Le Galliene, Eva (Director, The Civic Repertory Theatre, Inc.) (B13/F11)
League of Struggle for Negro Rights (St. Louis, Missouri) (B4/F5)
League of Women Voters of St. Louis (B10/F1-7; B28/F2; B30/F17)
Lehman, Justin (cousin) (B1/F4, 5, 6, 10)
"A Letter From Him" (B12/F10, 16, 18; B16/F38; B17/F25) (Revision of "A Kid to Support")
Letters to the Editor (B11/F1, 2; Scrapbooks #2 & #6)
Liberal Voters' League (St. Louis, Missouri) (B10/F8-14; B16/F14)
Liebenthal, Curt and Fannie Oppenheimer (cousins) (B1/F5, 6, 8; B30/F29)
Liebenthal, Hans and Bernard (twin sons of Curt and Fannie) (B1/F7; B30/F29)
Lieber, Maxim (literary agent) (B2/F7; B13/F17-23)
Lien, Arnold (Professor, Department of Political Science, Washington University) (B9/F11)
"Life and Letters" (B14/F8)
Lincoln University (Jefferson City, Missouri) (B1/F18; B2/F8, 9; B11/F8)
Lock, Gregory J. (Minister, Poplar Bluff, Missouri) (B5/F4, 5; B6/F10; B7/F1)
Lomask, Milton (writer) (B18/F14)
The Long Bridge (B13/F21, 22; B16/F14; B23/F2-4)
"Love Wears an Old Cloak" (B14/F8)
Lunch counters (integration of) (B11/F2) (See Race Relations)
"Maggie Defends Her Young" (B16/F38)
"Mama Likes To Be Happy" (B13/F7, 8, 17, 18, 24; B17/F26; B18/F13)
Manfred, Ernest Fred (writer) (B2/F7)
"Many" (B16/F29; B17/F5)
"A Marriageable Daughter" (B12/F3)
Meissner, Edna (Mrs. Edwin B.) (B2/F12; B15/F7)
Meissner, Edwin B. (B2/F6, 8; B3/F1; B5/F15; B9/F1-11, 13-19; B11/F5, 7)
"Member of the Household" ("The Home That Cannot Succeed") (B17/F5, 34)
Michael, Jennie (See Jennie Michael Frank)
Michael, Elias (Fannie Cook's uncle) (B26/F32)
Michael, Rachel Stix (Fannie Cook's aunt) (B26/F5, 28)
Middlebush, Frederick A. (President, University of Missouri) (B7/F10; B18/F30)
Miller, Edward R. (American Friends Service Committee) (B7/F15, 11)
Missouri Agricultural Workers' Council (B6/F3, 4, 6; B7/F4)
Missouri Citizens for Wallace (B4/F13)
Missouri Historical Society (B18/F29; B27/F10)
"The Missouri Okies Remained at Home" (B13/F1; B17/F5, 6)
Missouri Society for Crippled Children (B1/F22; B2/F1)
Mitchell, H.L. (Southern Tenant Farmers' Union) (B5/F1, 20; B6/F3; B11/F6; B29/F7)
Mitchell, J.E. (Managing editor, The St. Louis Argus) (B11/F7)
Monticello, College (Alton, Illinois) (B2/F13; B3/F1)
Moon, Bucklin (Doubleday & Company, Inc.) (B13/F18; B14/F18-20)
Mound City Medical Forum (B4/F2)
"Mountains at Twilight" (B12/F17, 18; B16/F4)
"Mrs. Crumps Repeats Herself" (B12/F3; B16/F36; B17/F25; B18/F22)
Mrs. Palmer's Honey (B3/F2; B13/F13, 17, 18-23, 25; B17/F2; B18/F13; B21; Scrapbooks #8 & #9)
"Munition Era" (B16/F40)
"My Father's Family" (B12/F7, 11-16, 19; B15/F9, 10)
Nagel, Charles, Jr. (President, People's Art Center Association) (B10/F17, 18)
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), St. Louis Chapter (B10/F15, 16)
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), St. Louis Chapter, Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (B11/F4)
National Committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism (B4/F14, 15)
National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, Inc. (B18/F3, 4)
National Council to Aid Agricultural Workers (B7/F14)
National Urban League Exhibit of Negro Artists, 1946 (B10/F18; Scrapbook #6)
National Wallace for President Committee (B4/F16,17)
Negro Progressive Association (St. Louis County, Missouri) (B4/F3)
"The Negro Woman's Contribution to American Life," by Carrie K. Bowles (B18/F6)
"North Georgia Gazette" (B17/F8, 17)
"Old Minnie" (B17/F25)
Oppenheimer, Bertha Frank (Fannie Cook's aunt) (B1/F3, 5, 6; B30/F29)
Oppenheimer, Monroe (Farm Security Administration, Office of the Solicitor) (B5/F1)
Owen, Edgar (Cropperville resident) (B5/F1, 3, 5)
"Owen Whitfield: A Profile" (B13/F2, 3, 4; B16/F18; B17/F4, 14)
"Ozark Shadows" (B12/F10)
Pen and Brush (National Literary Organization) (B18/F26)
People's Art Center (B3/F7; B10/F17-28; Scrapbook #6; B27/F8)
People's Institute of Applied Religion (B5/F8, 13; B29/F6)
Permanent Council on Relief Needs (St. Louis, Missouri) (B4/F18)
Petry, Ann (writer) (B18/F26)
"Picnic-Living in Wartime" (B13/F4)
Piney-Woods Country Life School (B11/F6)
The Pioneers (St. Louis Literary Organization) (B18/F27)
Ploeser, Walter C., U.S. Congressman, 12th District, St. Louis Missouri (B2/F4)
Portugal, Ruth (Ann Watkins, Inc.) (B12/F10, 11, 16-19; B13/F17)
"Presents From Uncle Herman" (B16/F17)
"Pretty Phrases" (Play) (B15/F20)
Progressive Citizens of America (B4/F19)
Progressive Party of Missouri (B4/F20; B13/F21)
Pruitt, Wendell O. (B9/F16, 17)
Race Relations (B3/F4, 5; B4/F1-12, 17; B9/F1-25; B11/F4-8; B17/F7; B24/F4; B25/F26; B26/F16, 20, 29; B27/F5; B28/F1-3, 7, 9-11, 17-21; B29/F2, 4, 9, 24, 32; Scrapbooks #5 & #6)
Readers Digest Award (B14/F1, 2; B15/F21; B16/F8; B17/F15; B18/F2)
Redmond, Sidney R. (president, NAACP) (B10/F15)
Rhoda, Bertha B. (Secretary, People's Art Center) (B10/F17, 18; B11/F6)
Robeson, Paul (actor) (B4/F13, 16, 17, 19; B13/F21; B30/F27)
Rockwood, Irene (Cropperville nurse) (B6/F10; B7/F7; B8/F2, 22, 24)
Rombauer, Irma (B2/F2; B3/F16; B10/F19)
Roosevelt, Eleanor (B6/F2; B12/F16; B14/F11; B17/F5)
St. Louis American (B11/F7)
St. Louis Argus (B11/F7; B29/F4)
St. Louis Citizens Committee on Displaced Persons (B4/F21; B30/F17)
St. Louis Committee for Fair Employment Practice Ordinance (B9/F10)
St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of Sharecroppers (B58; B30/F8, 25)
St. Louis Mercantile Library (B2/F4)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (B11/F1, 2)
St. Louis Public Library (B2/F5, 6, 13, 14; B3/F1, 2, 10; B11/F1)
St. Louis Race Relations Commission (B9/F121)
St. Louis Star-Times (B3/F5; B11/F3)
St. Louis Writers' Guild (B2/F9; B3/F2; B18/F4)
"Sara's Brothers" (B12/F12; B16/F38)
Sartre, Jean-Paul, article "The Situation of the Jew: Reflections on the Jewish Questions I & II" (B16/F16)
Scarlett, William (Bishop of Missouri, Christ Church Cathedral) (B5/F1, 7, 15; B11/F4)
"Seeds Without Soil" (B12/F18; B13/F1-3, 6; B16/F18)
Seifert, Adele (writer) (B3/F7)
Seifert, Elizabeth (See Elizabeth Seifert Gasparotti)
Seifert, Shirley (writer) (B18/F2)
Sentner, William (Vice President, United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, District Council Eight) (B2/F10; B9/F9-13, 15-19; B11/F6)
"Sergeants and the City" (B16/F27; B17/F30)
"Shadows in the Household" (B16/F26)
Shady Oak Theater, segregation of (B11/F8)
Sharecroppers (Boxes 5-8; B11/F1, 2; B17/F3, 4; B18/F20; B26/F8, 23, 24, 34; B27/F19, 31; B29/F3, 6, 10, 13, 26-28, 31, 34; B30/F2, 6, 21, 25; Scrapbook #4)
"Sharing with a Nigger" (B13/F17, 24; B16/F27)
Shelly Case (B11/F6, 7, 8)
Sikeston, Missouri, lynching (B7/F11; B14/F15; B17/F7; B29/F4, 12, 32; B30/F24)
"A Silly Man" (B12/F17)
"The Sisters" (B16/F3, 7, 12, 29; B17/F5, 19, 23)
Smith, Ann Ludlow (Editor, The Village Press) (B2/F8)
Smith, Gerald L.K. (America First Committee) (B11/F7)
Snow, Thad (writer) (B5/F2, 5, 6; B8/F2; B11/F1; B12/F17, 18; B29/F14; B30/F13, 24, 25; Scrapbook #4)
"Sons in Khaki" (B13/F5, 6; B16/F26)
Southern Tenant Farmers Union (B29/F7, 10, 33; Scrapbook #4) (See also H.L. Mitchell)
Stark, Lloyd (Governor of Missouri) (B5/F3)
"Stars Above the Desert" (B13/F7)
Steward, John T. (Area Director, Southeast Missouri, FSA) (B7/F10)
"Stop-Over Privileges Only" (B12/F12, 14, 15; B16/F22; B17/F28)
Storm Against the Wall (B3/F6; B13/F21-23, 25; B22/F1-9; B23/F1; Scrapbook #11)
Stowe Teachers College (B3/F13, 14) (See also Harris Teachers College)
Sweet, Sidney-E. (Dean, Christ Church Cathedral) (B2/F4; B4/F4, 6)
"Tea For Me" (B12/F17, 18)
Thalinger, Thelma Wiles (Mrs. Oscar), (Treasurer, St. Louis Committee for the Rehabilitation of Sharecroppers) (B8/F16)
They Are My People (original title for Boot-Heel Doctor) (B12/F16-18; B13/F1-4)
"They Live Forever" (B17/F25)
"This Man Shorty" (B12/F10; B17/F25)
"Thomas Wolf's Wife" (B13/F7; B16/F36)
Todd, Helen (writer) (B13/F8; B18/F17-19)
"Tom Cartright's Wife" (B14/F8)
Trent, Lucia (B18/F2, 3)
"The Triumphant Touch" (B13/F17, 18; B16/F36)
Truman, Harry S. (B3/F1; B5/F11, 14)
Turner, Lilly (Federated Press) (B14/F1; B15/F1, 2)
"Twinges" (B12/F3, 4, 7, 8; B14/F4)
"Uncle Oliver Said So" (B16/F38)
Unitarian Liberal Club (University of Missouri) (B3/F4, 5)
United Cannery, Agricultural, Packing and Allied Workers of America (UCAPAWA) (B5/F9; B7/F14; B29/F13, 34, 35)
University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri, 1915 graduation program (B29/F17)
University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri, 1939 reunion speech (B28/F6)
University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri, race relations (B3/F4, 5, 10)
University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri, School of Journalism (B18/F4)
University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri, Western Historical Manuscript Collection (B18/F30)
Urban League of St. Louis (B2/F8; B4/F1-4; B5/F15; B7/F15; B8/F3; B11/F5, 6, 8; B28/F8; B29/F11; B30/F10)
Usher, Roland (professor) (B5/F11; B7/F12; B8/F2; B11/F2)
Van Ravenswaay, Charles (Director, Missouri Historical Society) (B10/F19; B18/F29)
Vaughn, George L. (lawyer in Shelley vs. Kraemer Case) (B11/F6, 7, 8)
"Verses by a Little Dog" (B16/F33)
The Ville (B2/F10)
Wallace, Henry (B2/F12, 13, 14; B3/F1; B4/F13, 16, 17, 20; B26/F40; B30/F27)
Wallace, Henry, Mrs. (B3/F9; Scrapbook #6)
Wallhausen, Art (Editor/publisher, The Charleston Enterprise-Courier) (B11/F1)
Warren, Robert Penn (Managing Editor, The Southern Review) (B15/F14; B17/F25)
Washington University (B3/F7; B4/F11; B11/F8; B29/F2; Scrapbook #6)
"We Formed a Committee" (B13/F1-3)
Weir, Marian (Mrs. W. Victor) (Chairman, St. Louis Consumer Federation) (B10/F3; B2/F10)
Wesley House (St. Louis settlement house) (B4/F5)
West Virginia State College (B3/F11-14)
Western Historical Manuscript Collection (See University of Missouri, Western Historical Manuscript Collection)
"Whatever Comes" (B12/F3, 10; B16/F35)
"What Is a Woman" (B16/F28)
"What! No Maids?" (B17/F15)
"What's Wrong with the Relationship" (B12/F18)
Wheeler, Henry Winfield (The St. Louis American) (B11/F7, 8; B18/F3, 4)
Whitfield, Owen (Vice-President, UCAPAWA, and leader of sharecroppers) (B5/F19; B6/F3-9; B7/F1, 4, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15; B8/F2, 24; B17/F5; B28/F8; B29/F6, 13-15, 34)
Whitfield, Zella (Mrs. Owen) (B5/F4, 5, 11-14, 16-18; B6/F5, 11, 14; B7/F7; B17/F5; B29/F34)
"The Widow Levi" (B13/F15; B14/F4)
Wilkens, Roy (NAACP Legal Fund - Assistant Secretary) (B11/F4)
Williams, Sidney (Executive Secretary, The Urban League of Cleveland) (B2/F7, 10, 13, 14; B5/F6; B7/F15; B11/F8; B14/F4)
Wilson, Margaret Bush (Vice-Chairman of The Progressive Party of Missouri) (B4/F20)
"With Orchids On My Shoulder" (B13/F7, 24)
Wolfe, Thomas (writer) (B18/F12, 21)
"A Woman About Town" (B12/F3, 5, 6; B14/F4, 5; B15/F15; B17/F28)
"A Woman's Fear of Cancer" (B12/F7, 11)
Women's Issues (B26/F37, 41, 42) (See also Equal Rights Amendment and Forest City Manufacturing Company strike)
"A Wonderful Woman" (Play) (B14/F8)
Works Progress Administration (WPA) (B7/F13)
Works Progress Administration (WPA), Federal Writers Project (B18/F28)
Works Progress Administration (WPA), script for radio program titled "WPA Prints" (B27/F7)
Wright, Cleo (See Sikeston, Missouri, Lynching)
The Writers' Conference in the Rocky Mountains-University of Colorado (B18/F12, 21)
Writers' War Board (B11/F5; B13/F7; B18/F3)
Writers War Committee (B2/F4)
Yarborough, Emmett (Cropperville Camp secretary) (B5/F8, 9, 11)
Yarrow, Clarence and Margaret (Directors, AFS summer work camp - Cropperville) (B7/F1-5, 7; B8/F2, 4, 24)
"Yaas'm" (B16/F40)
Zimmerman, Orville (U.S. Congressman, Missouri 10th District) (B5/F1; B6/F7)
"Zorella's Hat Goes To The White House" (B12/F15-17; B16/F38; B17/F5)
Title
Inventory of Fannie Frank Cook Papers
Status
Completed
Author
EAD by Jaime Bourassa using ArchivesSpace
Date
2016
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the Missouri Historical Society Library and Research Center Repository

Contact:
225 S. Skinker Blvd.
St. Louis MO 63105 United States
314-746-4510