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Organization History
The Amistad Research Center's ties to the
American Missionary Association (AMA) can be traced to the
AMA's roots in the coalition of abolitionists who came to
the defense of the Amistad Africans. Under the banner of the Amistad
Defense Committee, abolitionists and attorneys, with help
from former President John Quincy Adams, took the case to
the United States Supreme Court, which ruled that the Africans
were free. The Amistad Committee evolved into the inter-racial
AMA, which rose to the forefront of the fight
for freedom and justice. The AMA founded hundreds of abolitionist
and anti-caste churches and schools among African Americans,
Native Americans, Puerto Ricans, Appalachian Whites, Asian
Americans and Mexican Americans. Distinguished colleges and
universities that emerged from these efforts include: Atlanta,
Berea, Dillard, Fisk, Hampton, Houston-Tillotson, LeMoyne-Owen,
Piedmont, Talladega, and Tougaloo.
During World War II, the AMA established
a Race Relations Department on the campus of Fisk University
to improve human relations through research and education.
The Amistad Research Center was established as a division
of the Race Relations Department in 1966. By 1969, the Amistad
Research Center, now incorporated as an independent institution,
had become the official repository for the archives and institutional
records of AMA, transferring its operation to Dillard University
in New Orleans in 1970. The Center eventually outgrew its
space and moved to the old United States Mint building in
the French Quarter, and in 1987, the Center moved to Tulane
University.
Today
The Center is housed in Tulane University's
Tilton Memorial Hall. From its beginnings as the first archives
documenting the modern civil rights movement, the Amistad
Research Center has experienced considerable expansion and
its mission continues to evolve. The history of slavery, race
relations, African American community development, and the
civil rights movement have received new and thought-provoking
interpretations as the result of scholarly research using
Amistad's resources. The holdings include the papers of
artists, educators, authors, business leaders, clergy, lawyers,
factory workers, farmers and musicians. The collection contains
approximately 250,000 photographs dating from 1859. Literary
manuscript holdings contain letters and original manuscripts
from prominent Harlem Renaissance writers and poets. The Center
is guardian to more than 800 works of African and African
American art, including works by several internationally renowned
19th and 20th century African American masters.
Mission
As the nation's largest independent
archives specializing in the history of African Americans
and other ethnic groups, the Amistad Research Center is dedicated
to preserving America's ethnic heritage by providing a home
to the manuscripts, photographs, oral histories, books, periodicals
and works of art that contain the history of peoples, of nations,
of beliefs and dreams, of a past worth sharing with the future.
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